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19:33
@Mgetz Many of them can.
the usual trick is to take advantage of some circumstance the stdlib maintainer cannot rely on
Have you guys ever wonders if compilers are able to optimize the code where you return a large structure but only access one of the members?
I'm pretty sure they can't but I wish they could :-(
they can
big_settings_object gui::get_settings() const
if it's simple enough
@Puppy I'm not going to say I haven't thought about it for some filesystem code... but honestly I still feel I'd be better using std::string because most paths are short
19:35
@Puppy It would need be in the same compilation unit
@Mikhail First the function needs to be inlined. Then the compiler needs to do the SRA optimization followed by DCE.
@Mikhail LTO is fine.
@Mgetz I don't like using std::string since paths are not strings.
also std::string is fucking terrible
@Puppy I'm starting to use std::filesystem::path
If the function isn't inlined, then no. Maybe at sufficiently high levels of IPO if the function is used only once and is not extern, then the compiler will change the definition of the function. If it's used more than once, the compiler is less likely to multi-version the function.
@Mysticial Okay so, std::pair get_data() {return {4,2};}; but only access .second
Unfortunately, though, typically its std::pair get_data() {return {one(),two()};}; But you can't get rid of one() or two() because they might have side effects
nwp
nwp
19:50
The compiler should be able to just check.
20:18
What is up
nwp
nwp
20:40
A ceiling?
nwp
nwp
Uhm... a direction? A word? Please tell me, I'm bad at riddles.
20:56
@Mysticial what do you know about Intel Xeon Scalable Gold?
@Mgetz It's just one of the Gold-branded Skylake Xeons?
 
2 hours later…
23:00
I can count on you guys right?
There might be a moderately reasonable question on how to sort 1 million inputs on the form 'ABC123' in the next day or so, please be lenient and helpful.
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