My code is quickly becoming functor hell, where to protect resources, everything is a fucking functor
There is some way to use structured bindings to return a lock (lifetime) and the buffer, but I don't know enough C++ or alternatively it won't build on MSVC 2017.
That is not the issue. The discussion is about how to enure that all accesses to a buffer go through a mutex. If threading wasn't a concern we'd just access the buffer.
Also, I haven't gotten to multi-threading yet. For Multithreading to be done right you need to learn to distribute workloads evenly. That's probably going to take me a month just to get to it.
@Mikhail you are for sure much smarter than me :-). But C++ has a lot of tooling and mastering them for me will take some time. A good solution requires knowing the tool and how best to model a solution around that tool. I'm not there yet unfortunately.
I've noticed that C++ gives you a lot of control and a lot of power. But it doesn't trust you with it, so it has a lot of conventions to help direct you in the right directions. I'm sure It can be master, it just requires time to learn the rules well.
I also found it makes me a better thinker, with respect to memory and how that data is represented and used. Just started using Visual Studio I love how you can see the bits and bites. This is a level of detail I wish I knew existed earlier. Go is cool too. but C++ is where it's at.
Also, performance is a real thing in C++. It's not some abstract thing based on some underlying assembler that's apt to change.
That's what's been happening, there will always be someone somewhere willing to do the work for less, but companies are just exporting these skills outside the country. I don't think that's going to be happening anymore.
Also explaining it is part of the job. I am also trying to get better at that too.
I need to get better at telling jokes and mixing some humor into my explanations.
Today I had a code review at a new position I started almost 3 weeks ago. I was assigned a task working with my company's own CMS and a senior dev was supposed to do the code review.
My employer joined in during the review. While we were reviewing we came upon some sloppy mistakes on my end. Ne...
@Borgleader They're either holding back to watch Intel or they trying to shift the demand curve to match their yields.
If you release a 16-core at launch, everybody is just gonna buy that instead. Now your demand is 100% for the 8-core die. And there's no way to get rid of all your 6-core dies unless they hold them until the R5 line.
The way to counter that is to raise the price of the 8-core die high enough to shift the demand back to the 12 core.
But that's just gonna piss people off.
The reason why Intel's 28-core Platinum chips are so expensive is because of yields. So Intel is pricing them high enough to shift the demand curve to match the yields.
If the 16 core thing does become a thing, I anticipate that the bandwidth bottleneck will be worse than the Intel HEDT 16-core even for AVX512 workloads.
@Borgleader That doesn't make a ton of sense. Why can't the boss just contact the university directly to get a confirmation that the person graduated?
For that matter, I lost my Masters degree certificate when I moved back to California. But any employer can easily just talk to the university.
That's kinda what background checks are for. Some universities may require that you sign off to allow them to tell the employer of your status, but that's not an issue.
@LucDanton It was on CppCast a year or two back. Maybe Boost Outcome? Where you get the .value() and if you don't service the error code, the result object (with either result or error) throws on destruction?
I wonder how much does 1k facebook likes worth in monetary value? I mean this woman has an army of haters and she's making a comfortable living out of it.
Do you make more as an influencer if you have 10 million 'friends' rather than 10 million dedicated haters?
One of the most inhumane photo taking places in the world: some country's customs at airport. It's like, you are crammed like a cattle on a long haul flight for more than 20 hours(business or first class get bigger enclosure, but still, it's not an ideal situation), you are tired and almost in hallucinating state, with under groomed appearance. Then you are made to appear in a photo. That's brutal.
Fuck, my code is too complicated. Like I changed 120 files yesterday as part of refactoring. But wrote almost nothing. The people I work for don't understand that code needs to be tested. Not to mention, that some of our equipment will literally catch on fire if I have bugs (mostly shutting of fans on heating elements before the heat sinks have cooled down).
So, people complain about Electron eating all their RAM. This machine learning model evaluate as 800x800 image. The model is ~400 megabytes in RAM, the DLLs to run it occupy about ~700 megabytes. Total memory to run what is essentially BLAS exceeds 1.5 GB.
@Mikhail People used to complain the emacs used too much memory. One supposed expansion was "Eight Megs And Constantly Swapping". Most people can hardly imagine trying to boot with only 8 megs of RAM anymore, not to mention thinking of running a program in it without having to use virtual memory.