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00:05
talking about prototyping ...
looking at my old code, I have found a few of 'weird' variable names, I wonder if I copied and pasted the code from web somewhere ...
00:53
@Mysticial: will an E5-26xx V4 processor work in a single-socket LGA-2011-3 mobo? It currently has an E5-1620 v3. I understand V4 processor should be compatible--but do dual-socket processors only work in dual socket mobos?
Oops--original is an E5-1603, for whatever that's worth.
01:53
Tried to run this code I have written 5 years ago, got linking error instead ... talking about IDE with no backward compatibility ...
02:18
@JerryCoffin yes they will
02:51
@Mysticial Ah, cool.
Does anyone actually use xcode for C++?
Because there is a whole bunch of C++ specific compile options in Xcode, it's so weird.
03:34
@Mysticial So as you know, I believe programmers should use (more or less) trailing edge CPUs, to subtly encourage them to write code that will run well on everybody else's equipment. That tends to hurt compile times though. So my new idea is to have a box with lots of semi-slow cores, so performance on most normal code will be (more or less) like trailing edge hardware, but it'll still build fast. So I'm thinking something like a dozen cores a ~2 GHz should work nicely...
@TelKitty If they're sane, they avoid XCode. If they can't avoid XCode, they won't stay sane very long...
@JerryCoffin At work I build code my code on servers that have, depending on the model, 16 - 64 cores. That's so nice that I never want to build on my laptop again.
But then there's also a test platform that tests the code on very old servers that have only four cores.
Developing on fast machines and automated testing jobs that run on old machines. That works pretty well.
However, since I normally don't debug live on those old machines I might miss some things.
@JerryCoffin I would not blame my insanity all on xcode, MSVC, vim & eclipse all contribute their fair share in developers craziness ...
Also just fixed an issue where symptom has little to do with the problem itself.
04:03
^ Nice talk. He nicely explains the subtle performance differences between different hash table designs.
04:53
90 minutes though
05:06
How old is this "old" project?
Does it matter? Any code should be written once and work forever :p
Best 90 minutes of your life :P
@StackedCrooked I wasted the last 4 hours watching my basketball team torch the NBA finals. It was great!
05:29
I would be learning how to control this new drone if the ground is not so wet. So working on some code instead, which is also great because I have not touched programming seriously for at least 8 months.
What do people think of the idea of a foldable RV/4WD/camper van?
It's like a regular RV/4WD/camper van, until it reaches the camp ground, with a press of a button, the back of the vehicle can unfold and extend ... becomes 2 story and has a much bigger living space?
Thoery is similar to this
06:12
This is kinda random, but isn't C++ an invalid identifier in Lounge<C++>?
depends
Templates should take a type. Unless C is an instance of a class that overloads operator++ to somehow return a type?
nwp
nwp
@J.Doe Those are the things that are invalid :(
Gonna try out Arch on an old laptop. Downloading the image right now. I'm kinda excited :P
06:30
Good sleeping pattern lately? @abu ... also missing doing this 2 ppl. A tamed kitty is never a good kitty!
06:48
@Mysticial Wasnt a waste if it was great :P
@StackedCrooked allow me to be skeptical
07:43
@TelKitty you talking to me?
07:55
@ABuckau 👍
also, you can make clickable emoji, this is amazing ...
@J.Doe It could return a literal type instead.
 
2 hours later…
How much of Linux did he write again?
Initially? 100% ;)
Maybe Linus is a whiner, I mean, a lot people whine about something because they have to use those things so very often. If he had written Linux in Java, he would be spending all his effort whining about Java ...
But thank god, he has not written Linux in objective C, because otherwise he might be sitting in a rehabilitation facilities right now, trying to recover from heart problems and mental disorders.
I just don't understand why he argues against the C standard.
The C standard defines the C language, not gcc.
It compiles your C programs?
I wonder whether gcc is always in sync with C standard
Is g++ always in sync with C++ standard, newest version anyways?
09:55
In the end the compiler gets the last word.
Didn't know type punning through unions isn't allowed in C. I thought that was a C++ rule.
I recall reading that Linux heavily makes use of gcc extensions.
Which probably isn't a great thing.
10:08
Maybe that's why it's called GNU/Linux :P
10:50
@StackedCrooked I think he didn't quite adapted google's map properly though
He's have sacrificed a lot less bits for the early hash test if he instead used 2 bits to identify how many 16 element buckets away from ideal the element was.
11:16
@fredoverflow Because this is basically the main use case for that language feature ;p\
user7659542
@Mgetz What type of issues are you actually referring to? I'd like to dive into them :)
user7659542
Do you mean typical stuff like all variables that are not static arent allocated inside your .bss memory segment and are therefor not initialized with the value 0 and may thus contain garbage?
12:42
@TelKitty He whined about Java anyway
As a whiner, he probably have whine about a lot of things.
Did the phd change handle?
13:00
@traducerad VLAs inconsistent implementation requirements, not deprecating or removing or even providing replacements for functionality that's known bad like strtok and strncpy etc. These are easy items to fix, they have implemented versions such as strlcpy that do solve the problems. C11 has completely broken atomics that have some very strange semantics to the point that no implementation is technically compliant (they use C++11 behavior which isn't broken).
@StackedCrooked IIRC it's been a constant battle between Linus who's lazy and the rest of the team that wants linux to be a bit more portable
1
A: Use Boost to compute ECMA-128 64bit CRC

Mark AdlerLook carefully at 62ec59e3f1a4f00a and 9d13a61c0e5b0ff5, digit by digit. Do you see a relation between those two?

Just the right amount of nerd. When the author of zlib points out visually that two CRCs are bitwise inversions of each-other
@Mgetz I shudder at the thought there is probably a reason you knew this
 
1 hour later…
14:29
@Mgetz What's so broken about strncpy? Beyond C strings, anyway
user406009
14:42
@Puppy It doesn't null terminate by default
user406009
Also, the zero padding is super dumb and pointless.
ah, so, C strings so bad even C stdlib can't do them right/properly?
pretty much
user406009
C strings do have one neat advantage
user406009
Their binary representation is very straightforward
user406009
14:47
Great for FFI and stuff
it's a serialization format basically
so you can serialize a thing to a C string, and deserialize a C string into a useful string
user406009
std::string is a landmine when you try to share it between binaries/libraries
and don't try to concatenate C strings, I mean, wtf
15:00
length prefix is a much saner way of doing a binary representation
or passing the length along with the pointer
user406009
The real question is what size integer to use for the length
user406009
C would have probably used 16 bits, thus screwing us over for all eternity
same size as the pointer (when passing explicitly
though back then they'd probably use unsigned int
15:20
@Lalaland How about a variable length encoding?
0|0000000 = 0
0|1111111 = 127

10|000000 10000000 = 128
10|111111 11111111 = 16383

11|000000 00000000 01000000 00000000 = 16384
11|111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 = 1073741823
15:32
or like utf8's run length encoding
sbi
sbi
15:52
Folks, is there any updates necessary to this answer with C++14/17?
(I can make that answer CW if you feel bad about adding content for which I gain rep.)
sbi
sbi
16:08
Oh, and in other news, I just put a 300rep bounty on this question of mine. Go for it!
16:28
@sbi I don't believe these updates affect that answer.
16:59
@sbi is that the max?
17:34
@sbi how is SerializedFooBar constructed?
 
1 hour later…
19:02
@Puppy It sort of can. The problem is that strncpy is really intended for only one purpose--creating the buffer of data for a file name in a UNIX file system. This has a fixed maximum size, so NUL-termination is only needed if the string doesn't fill the buffer. They didn't want to leak information from a previous file name (if any) so it's always zero-filled if it doesn't fill the buffer.
When that's exactly what you need, strncpy is fine and dandy. The problem, of course, is with putting it into the standard library when it really only has one good use.
19:58
Wasn't like half of Chrome's memory allocation calls due to strings? The more C++ way to copy substrings involves memory allocation which might not be desired.
20:11
Also chrome is famous for placement new
-4
Q: Why don't people build games for Linux?

coreprofileWhy don't people just click the build button for Linux in Unity Engine or just compile the game for Linux in Unreal engine? Is it really that simple or is there a reason they don't do it.

/cc @Mysticial @milleniumbug
20:25
@Mikhail that's been fixed, at least if you are talking about 25k allocations per keypress thing
hey guys, opinions on glog, boost log, spdlog(github.com/gabime/spdlog) or other alternatives?
Logging is really important for the current application I'm building and it'd be great to nail it on the head on the first go for picking the right framework
From experience I felt the python logger's interface is very very intuitive; not sure if there exists a similar interface(that's established as well) in C++.
spdlog seems promising, but it's not a hugely-backed equivalent
compared to glog/boost log
20:59
> A lot of times, a std::string is being passed as a const char* (using c_str()), only to be converted back to std::string. Using base::StringPiece or passing a const ref to a std::string all the way is much more efficient
N O I C E
21:23
boost's filesystem library has been immensely disappointing so far in terms of supporting symlinks: stackoverflow.com/questions/50778660/…
21:55
Now, you gotta rewrite everything in Python
nwp
nwp
@Mikhail clang-tidy has a check for that.
@Mikhail Python has been too good to me; I need to go back to reality and write some real C/C++ :)
@nwp Yeah, but its impossible to do that across compilation units :-)
hey btw mikhail your comment is actually going in the "other" direction; I want it to not get resolved
I'm too lazy to read your full question
22:00
I figured, hence I gave you the tl;dr here
@OneRaynyDay std::experimental::filesystem::symlink_status
> Effects: Same as status(), above, except that the attributes of p are determined as if by POSIX lstat().
@Mikhail seen it; doesn't have a last_write_status(file_status status, ...) interface :/
So, directory_entry has a ` mutable file_status m_symlink_status; // for exposition only; lstat()-like`
right; but I can't get or set the file's stats through last_write_status even if I have the file_status object, it just doesn't expose any interface for me to change the times
Okay but the results of lstat are in that object correct? But the issue is that it's private right? You might be able to write a friend.
22:20
@Mikhail I have not dug into the details of file_status object, but I would imagine so :O
According to scott meyers, friends are also quite smelly, but without any further assistance from boost maybe that's the only solution
22:32
Getting at a classe's private parts are the paradigmatic use of friends
Alternatively, you can "fuck the police" and use memcpy
The only reason I'm friends with anyone is so I can get at their private parts
sorry, had to
Even Alex?
don't @ him please
Better wait for the edit time to expire
ANYWAYS, your info is in a private member, go write the friend and then an angry letter to the C++ standard's committee
yup; I'm writing the friend as we speak
 
1 hour later…
If only he had used std::array
@milleniumbug "I wish C++ was easier to write, darn"

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