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08:00
@sehe Is Clang ahead of GCC in C++11 support?
@RMartinhoFernandes Really. You can tell I haven't actually made the switch yet. Is there a link to the specific deficiency?
bob
bob
What would be the easiest way to concatenate the bit values of a int32, int16 and int8 (in that order) ?
@Maxpm Well, for a long time, clang was the only thing I could turn to for template aliases (and I thought it was the first with UDL?)
@sehe I have a few questions on SO making sure they're bugs before I report them..
@bob wut?
08:01
@RMartinhoFernandes still? I was under the impression their C++03 support (of which SFINAE would be a part) was pretty much done?
Ell
Ell
@sehe can't you substitute template aliases with perfect forwarding?
@RMartinhoFernandes Aha. I'll keep an eye on them. Subscribing to feed now
bob
bob
@sehe what's the problem?
@bob didn't find a duplicate question? Post a new one.
@jalf I don't use C++03 style SFINAE anymore.
08:02
@bob (a) please reply to specific messages (b) concatenate bits doesn't exist. Do you mean, in text representation?
@RMartinhoFernandes ok, so it's the C++11 part it fails at
that makes more sense
Yeah.
And I have at least one more bug I need to pinpoint and then report.
bob
bob
@sehe well what I want is to generate a hash of a tuple consisting of a int32, int16 and int8. So I have to put them together somehow... and not just their text representation, otherwise (1,11,0) would be the same as (11,1,0)
But I've been the lazies :S
Try this:
template <typename T>
std::string get_bits(T value) {
size_t size = sizeof(value) * CHAR_BIT;
std::string ret;
ret.reserve(size);
for (int i = size-1; i >= 0; --i)
ret += (value & (1 << i)) == 0 ? '0' : '1';
return ret;
}
Note: not sure it's ok - test it.
08:06
OK, installed Clang.
It took me a while to figure out that clang is for C and clang++ is for C++. ._.
@bob usually, you use something like boost::hash_combine
@bob also, just search on SO for a general purpose hash algo. You'll find several high voted once. No need to search specific
@bob backgrounder:
14
Q: Magic numbers in boost::hash_combine

larsmansThe boost::hash_combine template function takes a reference to a hash (called seed) and an object v. According to the docs, it combines seed with the hash of v by seed ^= hash_value(v) + 0x9e3779b9 + (seed << 6) + (seed >> 2); I can see that this is deterministic. I see why a XOR i...

as you can see they replaced your 'concept' of streaming bits with the more rational approach (rotating bits), since you'll be folding down to size_t anyways
All I did was use < instead of <<.
bob
bob
I already have the hash algorithm.
how about this, would it work ?
int32_t i = 0;
int16_t j = 1;
int8_t k = 2;
char* res= new char[32+16+8];
memcpy(res, &i, 32);
memcpy(res+32, &j, 16);
memcpy(res+16, &k, 8);
Bitshifts and sums.
Ell
Ell
@Maxpm it gave you a little arrow pointing to where the error is, didn't it?
bob
bob
08:12
@RMartinhoFernandes come again?
@Maxpm I think it is pretty useful. The first error names the exact line/column, and there is this pretty ascci art to make it stand out even more:
HelloWorld.cpp:6:31: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('basic_ostream<char, std::char_traits<char> >' and '<overloaded function type>')
        std::cout << "Hello, world!" < std::endl;

        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~
Maybe.
I wonder if it gives a decent error on a missing semicolon after a class definition.
@bob Just do whatever boost::hash_combine does.
seed ^= hash_value(v) + 0x9e3779b9 + (seed << 6) + (seed >> 2);
@bob You are doing an XY problem here. You shouldn't be trying to compose one 'large' blob of the constituent parts (it doesn't scale anyway). Use a standard, classic hash combiner.
Repeat for each of the values.
08:14
Indeed, it does.
@Maxpm But even GCC does, these days
Really? That's depressing. :(
Ell
Ell
@Maxpm yeah you get that for gcc
expected semi colon after class definition
@Maxpm Yeah. Don't you hate it when there are several good compilers to choose from
I do.
Ell
Ell
08:16
when I was a noob, I used to think "Well if you expect a semi-colon, just put it in for me and compile already"
4
FuckItJS removes erroneous lines of JavaScript until it compiles.
bob
bob
until you end up with a 0 line code...
@bob That's the dream, isn't it?
bob
bob
@Maxpm i guess
I'm still a noob :-( If the compiler is able to deduce what is intended, then it could fix it and compile - while still throwing up warnings.
08:19
@Maxpm it compiles?
posted on June 28, 2012

People who come to C++ (or C) from languages such as Fortran or Basic sometimes argue that the C++ way of doing things is counterintuitive.

Ell
Ell
@sehe I was thinking that but I didn't want to go onto the discussion of "compilation/interpretation is a property of the implementation not the language"
anyway brb
I don't often compile and use javascript. But when I do, I make sure my C++ is compiled to javascript
@sehe Until it's valid.
@jweyrich Clang apparently has the ability to do that. Well, it asks you first.
Or it will have the ability to do that. It was mentioned in some Going Native talk.
I remember I copied the Clang-style "arrow" error messages for my Brainfuck compiler. xD
It really is a nice touch on their part.
@Maxpm oh, that talk by Carruth? AFAICT, this has not been implemented yet.
08:27
@Maxpm Prompt reads: "Are you a noob [y/n]?" (followed by "Sign here to sell your soul: [.....]")
Hm.
I better get some sleep. It's nearly 6am here, and I have plenty of work to do after lunch. See ya.
You know what I still find strange? The fact that nothing shows up when I type a password into a terminal. Not even asterisks, which is what I would expect.
@Maxpm It's old as hell. I don't remember exactly where I first saw it, but it has been popular in quite a number of scripting languages. Hell, even MSIE will display toe-curling ascii arrows like that when it fails to render/parse an XML document
@Maxpm why is it that strange?
08:29
@Maxpm Even older. Search Stack Overflow/Super User.
@thecoshman Because it's nice to have visual feedback.
It is the terminal != stdin/stdout fallacy
@Maxpm Well, in general, nothing precludes visual feedback. Many apps do have feedback, but usually only when they specialize for full-featured terminal environments anyway (e.g. ncurses applications)
I know there's a function somewhere to tell if stdin actually is a terminal.
@Maxpm for what? surly you know what you are typing with having astrixes tell you that you pressed a key
@Maxpm isatty
Ell
Ell
08:31
does clang compile to llvm bytecode?
@thecoshman Right. That's what I'm saying. CLIs generally don't give me the asterisks, so it's harder to tell when I miss a character.
Ell
Ell
nvm, found it
@Maxpm just don't be stupid, type carefully
@thecoshman I'm not saying it's difficult, but that it could be easier and I don't know why it isn't.
@thecoshman Bwahaha: Says typo tyrape pyrate pirate
08:39
@thecoshman No, I don't know, and stop calling me Surly.
@sehe eye cains spill purrfectlee
I didn't think it was possible, but I actually found a dish with too much melty cheese on top.
@Ell disk management under computer management. Start menu search won't find it, you have to know it's under computer management
hey, does anybody here know how to concatenate a here document and a text file with a single command in Bash? The following doesn’t work, it discards the here document:
cat <<EOT message.txt | sendmail "[email protected]"
Subject: subjectline

EOT
Though man it was fun trying.
08:43
@KonradRudolph yup:
cat file.txt <<EOT message.txt | sendmail "[email protected]"
Subject: subjectline

EOT
@sehe That inverses the order :/
Also: (echo "blabla"; cat ....) | sendmail etc.
@KonradRudolph No it doesn't. You didn't state/show an order. You can specify it how you want it
@sehe Hm, ok. Well, I need the here doc first, since it contains the email header, then the message.txt
but the subshell might work
but it doesn’t :/
So, the result that I want to be sent to sendmail is this:
Subject: subjectline

<text of message.txt>
@KonradRudolph what shell? It works for me
@sehe Bash
08:49
Well, it works for me. Try on SO./SU...
@sehe What’s “SO./SU”? I’ve tried it on Mac and Linux now, doesn’t work in either
@sehe What you’ve posted above (the subshell) actually does work, but just because you haven’t used a here document! With a heredoc instead of a string for the echo, it doesn’t work any more
meh, XML
@KonradRudolph

4$ cat >message.txt
Test message.
5$ cat <<EOT - message.txt
> Subject: subject
>
> EOT
Subject: subject

Test message.

Note the `-`.
@KonradRudolph ermmm. Stack Overflow/Super User
@sehe ah, makes sense :p
08:56
@ecatmur good point, that helps. tell cat to read standard input
   With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.
@ecatmur Awesome, thanks. Should have been obvious!
@KonradRudolph rtfm ;)
indeed
… and the depressing thing is, I just needed this for some prank, not anything productive ;)
09:17
Quiet Please
09:32
Objective-C code gets really messy after a while
09:42
yep, that's WinAPI
@ScottW LPCTSTR, FTFY
Linux isn't much better.
I have a group of 2 mutually exclusive buttons, and I have no idea what I should call the class
any ideas?
TIOCGWINSZ!?
09:45
@ArnabDatta myGroupOfMutuallyExclusiveButtons
To date, I'm not entirely sure what that means. I think it's something like Terminal In/Out Control Get Window Size.
@TonyTheLion : thanks! :P
@ScottW too readable
Winapi fails at me :)
WinAPI is not that hard once you've figured out what their macro's mean
LPCSTR = Long Pointer to constant string
LPCWSTR = Long Pointer Constant Wide String
and the Long part comes from the 16 bit days
where you had segmented memory, and I think the Long referred to being able to cross segment boundaries
typedef double LONGLONG; Really?
double will do
for me
Any way to get rid of the temporary streams here while still using a standard algorithm?
0
A: Convert a vector<char> to a string with a conversion

Konrad RudolphYou were almost there; this works: std::stringstream sstr; std::transform( input.begin(), input.end(), std::ostream_iterator<std::string>(sstr, ""), ConvertHexToAscii); But unfortunately this instantiates quite a lot of string streams, which is inefficient. Ideally, the Conve...

09:59
@ScottW Might want to prefer std::wstring::operator+=.
aaarrgh, the cluster here is down, I can’t run my analyses, and I need the results today
@ScottW JUST TEACHIN YOU AN UNASKED LESSON
Just kidding. I also hate it when people tell me what or what not to do.
@ScottW wcscat.
@ScottW When I wanted to learn the WinAPI I figured I'd write my first test application as a C program. I quickly gave up on that idea.
I don't even know the C equivalent of std::map.
@StackedCrooked there isn't one
Als
Als
10:11
@Flexo Did you change your display name?
@Als yup
Als
Als
@Flexo The one you had was better :)
it's called, implement it yourself
It's called, just use C++.
C is a full DIY language
Als
Als
10:13
@TonyTheLion There's probably some c library which already did that.
besides some fairly basic stuff
@Als glib has one
Als
Als
20 secs ago, by ecatmur
@Als http://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Balanced-Binary-Trees.html
@Flexo, @ecatmur: Thanks :)
Als
Als
10:18
My vacation is coming to an end :(
meh
did you have fun though?
Als
Als
@TonyTheLion Yes, kind of. But you never have enough of fun don't you..
Can I have some undelete votes please?
1
Q: Finding minimal element in array, and its index

user1071136With OpenMP 3.1, it is possible to have a reduction clause with min: double m; #pragma omp parallel for reduction(min:m) for (int i=0;i< n; i++){ if (a[i]*2 < m) { m = a[i] * 2; } return m; Suppose I also need the index of the minimal element; is there a way to use the reduction ...

(it’s a good question, no sense in deleting it)
Als
Als
@KonradRudolph It is open not deleted.
It's not deleted.
What you smoking?
10:23
that was fast :)
It was probably the owner.
@Als hehe, true
does openmp support reductions on userdefined types yet?
The problem with OpenMP is that it is not open in the sense that matters most.
10:26
@RMartinhoFernandes how do you mean?
Open for extension.
At least not everywhere.
Open for extension.
there's a committee that develops it though isn't there? so it's open under whatever the terms of membership of that is
@Flexo No. OpenMP’s design sucks
it’s fundamentally designed to be unextensible, and not universal
it is a big failed investment
10:30
so much for "random"
Ell
Ell
@sbi thats interesting actually
@sbi That's almost as old as you are!
:P
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Mhmm?
@RMartinhoFernandes It’s just a marketing name, the “open” in “OpenMP” never had any meaning (besides it being an open standard, I suppose)
Wait, what's with the tagline? I'm not grumpy.
10:47
No, the problem with the tagline is why the fuck is “Apes” written with a capital letter A?
@RadekSlupik Capitalise All The Words!
Titlecase sucks in non-titles.
Meh, titlecase is ugly anyway.
strictly speaking, that was not 'title case' as 'all' and 'the' should not be capitalised in titles, unless at the start ofcourse
> All words are capitalized except for certain subsets defined by rules that are not universally standardized. The standardization is only at the level of house styles and individual style manuals.
It depends.
Title Case Is Going On, And It Sucks Donkey Cunt.
Windows <anything here> can go suck donkey cunt.
Well, yes, AFAIK there is not ISO standard on what exactly 'title case' is, but still convention is that the filler words are not capitalised
Clear case doesn't deserve to such donkey cunt
10:54
Use Git.
there are very few source control systems that would actually be worse then clearcase
Is Clearcase better than Fossil?
@thecoshman VSS.
I am so glad I said 'few' and not 'none'
10:56
@ScottW VSS deletes random files, right?
Just like MongoDB deletes random documents.
Radio channels y u use commas and not apostrophes.
It's fucking 2012, and we still cannot use a decent character set?
we have a really shitty doc revision system as well
RDS does have a euro character, but it misses an apostrophe?
@ScottW MS provides a tool to run weekly to check for repository corruption. It's certainly not a myth.
Instead, they should prevent repository corruption instead of checking afterwards.
@RadekSlupik Wut? How is a comma related to an apostrophe?
11:03
@RMartinhoFernandes All the channels use commas to represent apostrophes.
Are there any synonyms of “art”? Thesaurus only lists “fine art” and “artwork”.
bob
bob
what's the correct way to use threads in C++? Does it just use the C posix calls ?
std::thread, AFAIK.
Whether or not it uses POSIX calls depends on the implementation.
bob
bob
I've read that it provides little more than just mapping to the C implementation
11:15
Pretty sure Microsoft's implementation doesn't use POSIX functions.
Assuming they already implement it. xD
bob
bob
I'm on linux so I dont really care
so using say std::thread, how to pause a thread until it is waken up by someone else ?
sbi
sbi
@RadekSlupik I don't see a problem with that at all.
sbi
sbi
BTW, @RMartinho, I just sent you a mail.
@sbi hehe :p
11:16
@sbi Thanks, I saw it. I'll send you a reply after lunch.
Als
Als
@bob You are looking for a conditional variable or a semaphore
@Ell the problem is, in that time the compilers also expected '=', ',', 'asm' or '__attribute__'.
Ell
Ell
can someone take a quick look at my ChaMessage (pastie.org/4165141) and PlayerJoinMessage(pastie.org/4165136) ? The latter works, the former has a compile error - I don't know why, they are pretty much copy & pasted so I think I've just missed something obvious. (Boost::serialize stuff)
bob
bob
@Als not really, I don't think so. It's not about concurrent access, but rather about sleeping so as not to use cpu. Basically I have a queue that I only want to read from and process when it's not empty (and the one adding to the queue is in charge of calling the one processing it) rather than continuously and regularly trying to read from it
Ell
Ell
@RadekSlupik which message is that a reply to?
11:21
@Ell just click the gray arrow.
Ell
Ell
ahhh okay
Als
Als
@bob All of it can be achieved by: a semaphore, a mutex, or a Conditional variable
There is a difference between Busy Waiting and being blocked on a Mutex.
bob
bob
@Als which one? :)
@sbi How's work today?
@sbi And why are you sending secret emails to @RMartinhoFernandes?
If they're secret, why do you think he'll tell you about it?
bob
bob
11:24
@Als well if you're blocked on a mutex, you are probably regularly trying to hit it until it is free, right ? I mean I don't know how mutexes are implemented, maybe they're smarter than that ? Do you use cpu when you're blocked on a mutex ?
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay I will shut down my machine now, and then put into it this new, bigger HD, onto which the admins have already installed last weekend's backup of my system.
@bob if you are blocked on a mutex, then you are blocked
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay Why do you presume this mail is secret?
so you are not doing anything until you are woken up
bob
bob
@jalf but i mean internally, how does it know when it's free ? Does it regularly try to break free ?
Als
Als
11:26
@bob A while(1) loop is what defines what you said. Blocking on a mutex does not consume cpu cycles. That is the very purpose of them.
bob
bob
okay then
sbi
sbi
See you guys!
Ell
Ell
@bob it uses cpu interrupts or something?
bob
bob
@Ell ok, probably, thanks
but I am only used to using mutex for mutual exclusion. How can I make it so that a mutex blocks (makes it sleep) one particular thread, until unblocked ?
wouldn't it be simpler to just have a member thread.sleep() and thread.wakeup()
@Potatoswatter, the PE is a class and i use other methods from it with success so the object is initialized correctly... — Bruno Frade 4 mins ago
Ell
Ell
11:30
@bob what are you trying to use a mutex for?
What you need is a condition variable.
bob
bob
@Ell I'm not trying to use a mutex for anything, I've been told it was the correct way to go. Here's what I want to achieve :
It just happens that a condition variable requires a mutex, but that's secondary.
bob
bob
Basically I have a queue that I only want to read from and process when it's not empty (and the one adding to the queue is in charge of calling the one processing it) rather than continuously and regularly trying to read from it
Or a semaphore, but they're isomorphic.
@sbi ok, well, I sent a reply before lunch :)
Now I'm going to have lunch. Later.
11:32
@bob it gets signalled
bob
bob
ok @RMartinhoFernandes, so now the questiion is, how to make a condition variable in c++?
at the lowest level, it hooks into the OS, and puts the thread in a sleep queue, from which it is removed by the OS when the lock is released
bob
bob
well that's what I want @jalf, to make it go to sleep until awaken by another thread
because I think that it's more efficient to make the thread sleep between every two reads of the queue, rather than deleting and recreating the thread everytime, right ?
@bob tehn use the tool provided for that: the mutex/lock/semaphore/critical section
Als
Als
@bob Just simply use, std::mutex
11:34
@bob very likely.
bob
bob
so what's the correct tool for what I want ? mutex/lock/semaphore, ... ?
under the hood, they're really all the same. The difference is just in the api they present to the programmer. In the standard lib, you create a mutex, and then create a lock object around it to lock the mutex
when the lock object is destroyed, the mutex is released
@bob A condition variable is a condition variable. In C++11, std::condition_variable :v)
bob
bob
Yes I understood that they're all the same, but which one gets the job done the easiest and most efficient way, given the problem I just described ?
Als
Als
@Potatoswatter Perhaps a semaphore is a better choice given that @bob needs only a signalling mechanism
11:38
@Als No, a work queue is the classic case for a condition variable.
bob
bob
isn't a semaphore a counter as well ?
A binary semaphone is just like a mutex. A mutex is used to control the "signal" part of a condition variable.
Als
Als
@Potatoswatter Because you would want your threads to be blocked when no jobs are pending and stuff like that..I believe
bob
bob
in my case there are only two states, either you're the queue is empty or isnt. It's not like there's 5 threads accessing the same variable, and there's a need for keeping track of how many are using it at the same time
so everyone agrees on a condition variable then ?
@Als There is no way to force the consumer thread to start when the producer unlocks the mutex. The producer can sit spinning unlock/lock and the consumer never runs at all. So, a single mutex is insufficient.
bob
bob
11:42
so everyone agrees on a condition variable then ?
now the question is.. how to do it in c++ ?
Als
Als
@Potatoswatter Yup, A combination of mutex and semaphore or perhaps a conditional variable which essentially uses the mutex anyway.
6 mins ago, by Potatoswatter
@bob A condition variable is a condition variable. In C++11, std::condition_variable :v)
bob
bob
what's the syntax to use std::condition_variable
by the way, c++11, I don't think I have that
:(
Als
Als
@bob: You will have to find that out.Try things and come back to ask specific Q's.
Essential skills of the programmer, part 421: looking up documentation.
bob
bob
11:45
would it be possible to just manually add the header and its source to my project ?
I don't have c++11...
Als
Als
@bob You don't have it or you cannot/not allowed to use it?
bob
bob
I can't use it
and I don't have it
and I'm not allowed to
Als
Als
@bob Then just use posix
bob
bob
how does posix make a thread sleep until awoken ?
Als
Als
@bob This should help:
1
Q: condition variable

likeITeveryone, can somebody please explain the principles of condition variable in synchronization of the processes of operating systems, thanks in advance P.S. please be as simple as possible, I found some info using google but I'm not satisfied

11:48
@RMartinhoFernandes part 1 FTFY
@RMartinhoFernandes Essential skills of the programmer, part 422: if it ain't on google, see IBM's manual.
bob
bob
@als this one I had, but no info about making threads sleep
@bob It sleeps when you call pthread_cond_wait.
Als
Als
@bob You are not going to see a sleep() specifically anywhere, You will have to read and understand it.
11:51
If you see a call to the actual function sleep, kill it with fire. Also the A-hole who wrote it.
bob
bob
what would be so wrong about it ? Isn't it what this is all about in the end?
Man… is there a cure for the Javascript blues?
@bob Emphatically not. Multithreading is about correct synchronization, everything else follows from that. There is no way to write a correct program using sleep.
4
Als
Als
@bob I think the problem here is you are trying to learn concepts on teh internet and a chatroom, You cannot do that you need a good book for that.You can and should only ask specific doubts and problems in forums or a chatroom
4
bob
bob
@als no, I do have the concepts, it's just been a while so I've forgotten about them. let me read the info you've all given carefully and I'll come back to you. Thanks
Als
Als
@bob Yes that will make it lot easier for everyone.
11:57
> The problems earlier this morning were traced to simultaneous hardware
faults on two network switches.
wow, we have a really huge network – and a simple hardware fault takes it all out

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