The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x0000003b (0x00000000c0000005, 0xfffff80168e8c930, 0xffff99026f136d20, 0x0000000000000000). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\MEMORY.DMP. Report Id: 5614beae-f357-42f8-9957-4eab1469de14.
Is there some tool to inspect the dump file or decode the error codes?
@kiltannen That site has a very bad reputation, mostly due to having a history of sporting outdated or incorrect information.
It's not as bad as it used to be, but still.
For reference, most people here would largely prefer cppreference.
2 hours later…
user7659542
5:48 AM
@Puppy exactly what I meant, you imo should (for the sake of example) poll the other device with a separate process not a thread. multiprocessing is more suited than multithreading for safety critical stuff
user7659542
having separate processes offers a better isolation than multithreading against eg segfaults
user7659542
I don't see in which case multithreading would be better than multiprocessing in safety critical stuff. The only non-negligible inconvenient I see is that you need to be careful with: race conditions and concistency
user7659542
and multiprocessing may be less performant because you have the overhead of performing system calls every time you want to perform IPC. Whereas with multithreading you have a shared heap.
Gather round kids, Gramdpa is going to tell you a story
Long ago, back when SO chat was an exciting new place, this very room you read in now used to be very popular. Never before had such a gathering been seen
The populous spanned the blob, with a near endless shifting rotation of great people
So vast were the numbers, an equally global group of room owners was required
The only sad part about such a vast gathering of people relaxing was the pull it had on scrubs trying to get attention on their shitty questions they had literally just posted without even trying to find an answer themselves
Things were hostile for many a year, with several times the great room being closed, but the people were strong, and resilient, and kept breaking open the doors
However, despite the determination of the people, the smurfs were legion, and endlessly ground away at the spirit of the free people
With time, new homes were explored, but the people wanted to stay united and so these strange lands were never made a true home
There came a time though, when the smurfs took great anger, and a critical mass of "fuck this shit" was reached. A large group explored a new land,and found it peaceful and free
They stayed, and found that their desire to return faded over time
Many a great mind now dwells in this distant land
A few travel to and fro, where their hearts truly lie, one can only guess, or you know, just ask them.
And that is the tale of how this place fell from it's greatness, into the dust-ball you see before you now.
I tell you younguns, do not feel complacent about the freedoms you think you have
@TelKitty no, you are being wrong. The semi-colons are mostly optional, if you chose to use them, when you don't need to, then they are redundant (because they are still optional)
There are times though the the semi-colon is not optional, such as when you wish to put multiple expressions on the same line
if most of the most operations are on the order of O(1), then wouldn't it be the case that the limit time should only be limited by the number of elements that need to be touched. what operation in the heap would cost the extra time
> Time Complexity: Time complexity of heapify is O(nLogn). Time complexity of createAndBuildHeap() is O(n) and overall time complexity of Heap Sort is O(nLogn).
well, I'm mostly interested in heaps, since it represents the average case for retrieval and insertion in most self-balancing graph structures. Also, a sorted array is like a heap. It's also easier to tap into since most languages use them in their objects to keep track of element location.
Also, heaps are the single most awesome data structures. They can represent data in several dimensions. They are great for problem-solving and what not.
In computer science, a heap is a specialized tree-based data structure which is essentially an almost complete tree that satisfies the heap property: if P is a parent node of C, then the key (the value) of P is either greater than or equal to (in a max heap) or less than or equal to (in a min heap) the key of C. The node at the "top" of the heap (with no parents) is called the root node.
The heap is one maximally efficient implementation of an abstract data type called a priority queue, and in fact priority queues are often referred to as "heaps", regardless of how they may be implemented. In a...
@sehe I'd be willing to take the seat off your hands, but I'm not sure I'm hear often enough either really... and I don't think this ghost town really needs it
I figure everything really just a graph. when we use contiguous memory we are adding another layer, where we impose onto the data a structure (that being index's). Using non-contiguous memory seems truer to form.
since the relationships will form an edge between nodes.
@Rick I'd say when we are using contiguous memory that's just an implementation detail. The only real difference made is a different complexity trade-off (resource/perf)
So there's this guy who has spent the last month and a half systematically trying to break my program in every way possible. He's found like 20 legitimate bugs so far. But half of them are really frivolous things.
He just reported that log(log(1)) returns a large negative number that depends on the precision instead of a log(0) error.
It returns a number that's really close to zero. If the precision is 50 million digits, it returns something on the order of 10^-5000100 instead of zero. Thus the subsequent log returns a large negative number instead of a log(0) error.
Oh, it takes an epsilon :) The question said log(log(1)), hiding that
@Mysticial Cool stuff. I would argue that it's not a real bug then. (Unless he ~asserts~ demonstrates that the call to log(1) is using inadequate epsilon in context).
@sehe The program only guarantees that each individual operation returns an error less than epsilon relative to the input. But it doesn't make that guarantee for the entire input. Thus it's possible to exploit numerical instability to cause larger-than-epsilon differences.
So the program is behaving as expected. But fundamentally, it cannot overcome the usual rules of numerical instability.
@sehe Yeah. So it's specifically documented that the program isn't immune to numerical instability. So it's kinda up to the user to know what they're doing and test their stuff at smaller sizes before going full scale.
@Mgetz Should be able to... Maybe if we put an artifical low visibility planet around a nice solar system, we can crash Hubble (oh wait, did they retire it yet)
One of the (frivolous) bugs he filed was that when you run a binary without the necessary ISA, it crashes on all threads at once - leading to multiple overlapping error messages.
He also filed one where the program wasn't properly handling a specific sequence of invalid UTF-8. So even there's a lot more ways to break the program than it appears.
@Mikhail I do try to keep the program from actually seg-faulting. But he does file on the quality of the error messages. And he also files bugs on every single system error that the program returns which y-cruncher doesn't recognize and forwards back to the user as an error code.
But probably like 1/3 of the bugs he has files (both legit and frivolous), are related to low-memory errors. When the system is out of memory, random WinAPI calls start throwing errors or outright crashing. And these are propagating through the program (which I don't always catch with a nearly formatted error message).
So certain security critical environments dont let you run apps that segfault. This is virtually impossible to enforce but is the official policy . We can only hope that the guy is from some nsa black ops site.
And then there are cases where there's no memory to even display the error message. And I don't particularly care enough to implement the whole safety block strategy where you allocate a chunk of memory upfront and free it on the first OOM exception to allow enough memory to at least display the fucking error message.
There are multiple places in the program where if you enter something invalid, it prints an error and returns to the previous window as if nothing had happened. But he found one case where the program would terminate after the error message instead of returning to the previous menu. He filed that.
A ton of the UI bugs that he files are related to warning messages that were not possible to hit prior to the custom compute feature. Basically whenever the program detects a very unusual situation that may cause problems or bad performance, it prints out a warning. These warnings were mostly for debugging and could not be hit with the built-in constants. But after I added the custom formulas, it became possible to legitimately hit them. Since I never took out those warnings, he filed on them.
And he would also file when the same warning is printed out multiple times. (asking me to de-dupe them)
I had to turn that one down because they were coming from different parts of the program. And no I wasn't going to add some sort of de-duping filter.
@Borgleader Definitely. Some of the bugs that he filed are probably hard to automate. Such as the log(log(1)) example. The program runs through cleanly with no errors, but the output isn't what he expected.
He has yet to find any "P0" or "P1" bugs. Those are the kind that can cause a world record attempt of a built-in constant to finish with the wrong digits.
An orthography is a set of conventions for writing a language. It includes norms of spelling, hyphenation, capitalization, word breaks, emphasis, and punctuation.
Most significant languages in the modern era are written down, and for most such languages a standard orthography has been developed, often based on a standard variety of the language, and thus exhibiting less dialect variation than the spoken language. Sometimes there may be variation in a language's orthography, as between American and British spelling in the case of English orthography. In some languages orthography is regulated by...
@YvetteColomb I thought we pencilled in Thursday afternoon/evening? :p I have a few things I need to take care of today, doubt that I will have time to visit the horses.
user3956566
@TelKitty oh darn, I wasn't sure. Yeh Thurs is fine. I can't go until I've let some tradesmen in and they've finished their work. due at 1pm, but when Sophia gets home I can go. Not sure if she has a short day or how long they'll be
@YvetteColomb Yeah, I am thinking more along the lines of 4pm - 5pm on Thursday, depending on your availability. Not very healthy spending too much time in the midday Australian sun.
user3956566
@TelKitty yep agree. That's fine. I might meet you up there, I'll get up there earlier and do some stuff.