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02:27
LSD should not be in that list it's not an amphetamine
This room has too many lurkers
Instead of lurking we should be plotting the revolution against the evil corporations that employ us.
how would this revolution work, by creating other companies?
That wouldn't be a bad idea for many industries
Eventually we do this
An alternative to corporations would be flat organizations like Decentralized autonomous organization
A decentralized autonomous organization (DAO), sometimes labeled a decentralized autonomous corporation (DAC), is an organization represented by rules encoded as a computer program that is transparent, controlled by shareholders and not influenced by a central government. A DAO's financial transaction record and program rules are maintained on a blockchain. The precise legal status of this type of business organization is unclear.A well-known example, intended for venture capital funding, was The DAO, which launched with $150 million in crowdfunding in June 2016, and was immediately hacked and...
02:40
Also we need to stop our country (but virtually every country) from being sold out to communist China.
Decentralized autonomous organizations provide a real alternative, in that they would be more effective at corporate governance. They would generate more wealth for shareholders and create more products for the public. They would reward talent over social climbers and prevent an organization from becoming top heavy.
The last part is a tautology as the organization is, by design, lacking a hierarchy.
yeah that's the point
What if the problem isn't social climbers but that some social climbers don't make it?
Also that C++ doesn't have strong types
03:00
that depends if someone wants to move up the social economic ladder that a good thing. If someone wants to concentrate power through social means that is problematic.
You ever read Brave New World?
I have so many stories, many that probably shouldn't be communicated over a public chat, from my recent sojourns to Tinder and Chicago's IVF clinics.
But if you know anybody funding companies in the embryology space, would be really interested in partnering up.
no, but I get the premise. it's like George Orwell 1984 but with tech
Perhaps the same genre, but substantially more relevant. As an American, I assume you haven't read 1984 :-)
I have seen the movie and read the book.
It's frustrating to hear some people whine all day but do nothing. As if they expect the whole world to change for them because they whined.
03:06
but I would argue people want more transparency and they want to be observed by the state.
@Mikhail you don't want a strongly typed language, they are no good.
I believe Warhammer taught us to prefer order over chaos, you fucking heretic
it's a balancing act you need both.
I wonder how many Warhammer references I can make until somebody confuses me for a Republican and I get flagged
03:20
It also avoids portability. — Pete Becker 2 mins ago
which compiler worth using doesnt support pragma once?
Even on compilers that don't support it, it won't choke compilation.
Also there needs to be an easier way to make an initializer list of base classes, for example this is the shite I'm considering now. for (const auto& filter : {static_cast<filter_t&>(soldity),static_cast<filter_t&>(bounding_box)}) {//code}
Absolute garbage
Because I'm paid 1 nickle per line of code, maybe I'll add to the constructor some lines that "register" each filter into this list...
all those static_cast hurt just looking at them
Its going to be worse when I my static analysis tool tells me to make them static_cast<const filter_t&>
03:29
unions might help clean that up
I don't see that way
I ended up throwing one of these in boost::container::static_vector<cca_analysis_functions&,filter_count> filter_list;. But now I have a constructor, where I wanted compile time introspection.
why do you need static_vectors?
purformance
But really because this data will be copied a lot, could potentially appear in structures that are duplicated many times.
I guess that makes sense, but if it's going to be used throughout the entire lifetime of the application wouldn't another structure make more sense.
I've gotten into the habit of using them everywhere (which is the real answer to your question).
Also the reference version was too hard so now its pointers, but they aren't owning, so w/e
As our new tech lead, I may have to fire me
03:42
I think you know the boost api too well lol.
If I didn't know it, I could be doing business activities like drinking with clients :-(
that is actually a valuable skill. Getting clients to like you.
I do software because I'm not good at that
Also first time I used std::for_each
const auto clear_all_filters = [](cca_analysis_functions* functor) { functor->processed = false; }; std::for_each(filter_list.begin(), filter_list.end(), clear_all_filters);
Code quality going way down hill
for_each, almost seems useless with all the tools C++ gives out the box.
I believe Mr. Coffin had a few page rant about it on his blog
03:49
yeah I mean C++ gives you pointers and iterators, all these python and javascript conventions make no sense here
Those language don't have conventions, they have coping strategies.
well C++ is a beautiful language with lots of tooling out the box. I think people are too willing to jump on to the lib framework bandwagon over taking the time to simply understand how to use those tools and how they work in the hardware. However, C++ has a lot of tooling, it can get overwhelming to master and still build something useful at the same time.
04:05
First off tooling is usually used to refer to the compiler, linker, etc. Second off, I can onboard people from non cs majors to do basic stuff in about 2 months, faster if it's just tests.
Underlying problem is the best deva can't do certain tasks with he right speed.
I don't hold in high regard people with cs majors. You face several challenges, onboarding people. First, they have to learn the code base. Second, they have to know how the language works. If they are talented, you might not be able to make use of it, depending on the work environment. Hiring people is a huge investment because all of these things take time just to get up to speed.
Its easier to onboard CS majors, especially if you can find some that have worked with the exact same libraries, or tasks as you need. Problem is the $$$
04:22
everything is a give and take pay less and offer more job security freedom/control on certain projects.
That's pedestrian. If you were one of the evil corporations that we should be conspiring against, you'd offer H1B sponsorship. You can actually tell that the big C++ shops offer more than their share of these.
Well, those H1Bs are supposed to be for a unique talent, those companies abuse them for their bottom line outsourcing skilled industry. I'm tempted to move to Indonesia and work as a contract because the cost of living there is so low and quality of life is so high.
Everywhere is beachfront property.
Weather is always warm.
You could try South America
I aspire to follow in the footsteps of my hero John McAfee
Are any South American countries stable
All of them are fine, except Venezuela
04:36
I hear people get mugged in Argentina, Mexico, all of them in fact
Got mugged once in Chicago, once in St. Paul. I don't actually know how safe Indonesia is compared to those places. Costa Rica was nice.
You actually mugged, I have never been mugged. I don't envy you.
Well, I saved a bunch on rent...
That reporter/model want's John McAfee because he is dangerous and rich.
so you basically want to be a rock star
04:51
You basically want to be the Led Zeppelin of cybersecurity.
With the main difference being the groupies are slightly more intelligent
Not really, but failing my dreams, I at least want switch statements in C++ to not do fallthrough by default. Or maybe we add a keyword like options that behaves like switch but without the fallthrough.
just use a map
A better C++ developer would recommend I use an unordered_map
yeah but I doubt it's a bottleneck
or use an array has your map
These are pretty shit suggestions. In all seriousness one of the better ones would be to always use if statements.
05:03
if statements are terrible, the array map is not bad, unless you want to use a bitmask
its a fucking switch, an array map of functions would need to be populated somewhere else, probably outside the closure.
yeah it would be on the heap, but consider you switch statement and what it will be compiled down into anyway
^ Lizard, not snake ^
if you use a constant size array you won't even have worry about that
because you already know the arguments of your switch statement, it will be on the stack since it's not a VLA
05:26
I want something like a boost::static_vector to avoid memory fragmentation but that's accessed like a set. I wonder what the best way to clear a std::set, and avoid memory allocation.
05:36
boost::container::flat_set?
So, flat_set has continuous storage, but its heap rather than stack. Also its clearing performance is still O(N*(look_up)), aka clear all elements by doing a lookup
I'm thinking llvm:SmallSet
`SmallSet - This maintains a set of unique values, optimizing for the case when the set is small (less than N).

In this case, the set can be maintained with no mallocs. If the set gets large, we expand to using an std::set to maintain reasonable lookup times. `
Also because I'm an idiot, std::set has a clear()
Anyways, malloc-free containers are something that the std:: needs to mainline
06:06
Also more ideas, so one wacky thing C++ might benefit from is a "double return", the use case is to replace macros. For example, pastebin.com/raw/HnxR5jU1
 
3 hours later…
09:16
@Mikhail You can also use a stack allocator with std::set. See also Howard Hinnant's article on this.
 
3 hours later…
12:42
hi everyone
 
2 hours later…
14:28
I know right, lizards have eye lids and ears, snakes don't.
Also lizard's head is very ... err ... lizard like.
Also the legless glass lizards are just hilarious to look at. Maybe it's just me.
 
1 hour later…
15:47
Hi, I have some experience in structural programming. I know basics of data structures, algorithms etc. But I have never done OOP programming before. Which C++ book would you recommend to learn basics of OOP?
16:05
5
Q: Why does this C++ function definition not require curly braces?

csgosmorfI was reading Stroustrup's "Programming -- Principles and Practice Using C++" and found that he included a function without the main curly braces without explaining himself and online people say it is impossible. I have compiled the code and it works totally fine. void f() try {} catch...

TIL
@Borgleader lolwtf
@weno oop is overrated
16:25
if we had a string "YMK" and we swapped Y and K resulting in the string "KMY". Now if we converted "YMK" to a base 26 int what mathematical operation would be equivalent to a swap of Y and K in "YMK"?
int ymk = 'k' + 'm' * 26 + 'y' * 26 *26; int k = ymk % 26; int m = (ymk / 26) % 26; int y = ymk % (26*26); int kmy = y + (m * 26) + (k*26*26);`
dam thanks @JerryCoffin!!
17:09
Oops--I got one point wrong. It should be int y = ymk / (26*26);
@JerryCoffin yeah I was getting KYK now I get KMY, sweet! However, how you recognized that and how you did that so fast blows my mind. Different level.
 
2 hours later…
19:01
@Mgetz Can you show example of your usage in cpp/winrt code?
hmm ok, you dont use it for ctors tho do you?
didn't need to? I didn't have anything that could throw
I try to avoid throwing in Ctors due to destruction issues
yeah i was just curious
that whole "partially constructed objects are not destructed" thing
Yeah I mostly used it to reduce indents and because winrt code throws that hresult exception very liberally
19:29
Hi everyone,
Can anyone give me some keywords please. I want to transform a web service from PHP to C++. Using Apache it is very easy with PHP. As Cgi is not a good option, I don't know any productive alternatives for Apache in this case.
Honestly, I'd prefer to convert whatever critical section you have to C++, and use node.js or something else as main server. Many of this custom build C++ services have problems with scaling, logging, an compatibility with standard tools. You're also increasing the the $$$ per developer by 50%.
our main problem here is scaling. our service is getting slow as the number of requests increases
Is it actually serving the requests, or is it some computation that your service is performing?
Hey guys, anyone interested in helping an orphan do his homework?
well it does some computations per request... which is considerable
19:38
is it really the computation that's the issue, not some IO, either disk or network?
Guys, here is my code
And I want to give each student a array of marks
@MostafaShahverdy Making that computation happen in C++ is a reasonable strategy, but getting rid of nginx/django is a it is unlikely you have the time/energy/motivation to implement the infrastructure for a real web server.
@PeterT computation
how can I do that in the implementation?
@Mikhail the good point is that my service is doing a simple task. but it needs to be able to change scale
19:40
I'd get the critical section into C++, you can distribute the critical section through something like ZMQ
@Mikhail will it have the same result (or at least close to) using Cgi?
@WaelAssaf new Mark[marksSize]; is essentially of type Mark* while the left side you're trying to assign it to students[i].marks is Mark**. Also the Mark in the front of line 74 doesn't make sense syntactically
You'd do something like CGI->C++
I haven't done this work in a decade, maybe the php guys can give you a more up to date opinion.
Thanks for the reply highly appreciate it, the problem is I shouldn't use ** in this exercise. Only a single pointer.
@WaelAssaf then make Mark* marks[]; into Mark* marks;
~~or Mark marks[];, really the same thing at that point~~ nbm, that's wrong
19:45
@MostafaShahverdy for most web tasks unless you're scaling to million or billlions of users C++ isn't needed
@MostafaShahverdy maybe it's the calculation that's the problem, do all calculations need to happen in real time why can't you precalculate the results and store them
there are random other tasks... but be careful
@PeterT What if I have to declare the size of marks at runtime?
@WaelAssaf Mark* marks = new Mark[some_size]; is fine
@Mgetz well I'm talking about billions of requests per month
19:47
@MostafaShahverdy per hour
@PeterT And then I ascribe it to the marks of the students.. Damn how could I not think about that.
@WaelAssaf you can assign it directly, I just thought I'd illustrate the types. Consider also storing the size somewhere, since you can't really re-calculate it afterwards from the Mark*
@Rick sort of everything changes as time goes by. but this can be another approach too
@MostafaShahverdy if you can precalc or just do eventual calc that would work
@Mgetz well maybe in the far future
19:50
@MostafaShahverdy so the only place I know for a fact that uses C++ for web is the MS account login
maybe google logins
literally every other webservice I'm aware of on the planet uses something else
what other options do I have?
a) put it in a queue, and return the queue id
B) precalc what you can
c) fix the algorithm to scale horizontally better then profile and optimize specific chunks
@Mgetz options about this
@MostafaShahverdy servers are all about managing cache and fetching the results when you need them. That's where you should focus your efforts. If it's search queries think elastic search, if its records think redis, if it's assets think browser local storage
if it's an internal service maybe you can move the service-boundary off the network, to IPC or even within one process
19:53
@MostafaShahverdy Python, hack, C# etc
@PeterT we have loads of clients
HHVM is probably a natural transition for you since you're on PHP
php is shit, but you got to work with what you got.
You can use Hack to make it less shit
and help the VM be faster
Hey guys why is it a thing to hate on PHP?
19:55
Anyway, giving advice this general without knowing the specifics might not be too helpful
I am asking for a friend
Because there's no good reason to like PHP
If you have the authority, switch something like Node or Go. With node, you can write native modules in C++.
@WaelAssaf because 98% of the examples on the internet for PHP are horrible and will get you hacked?
@WaelAssaf because it was really shit early on, and made its bad name with very unskilled people writing lots of code with it
it's not the worst thing ever, but it earned its reputation
19:56
When a language has to introduce """magic quotes""" you have a problem
@Mgetz also works with C++
Mostly agreed, but does not Laravel or Symfony core make it more stabilized and neat in coding?
@Morwenn hence why I'm discouraging them from using it as a web facing thing
@WaelAssaf In addition to requiring tons of "hacks" for security, its hard to profile compared to django.
@PeterT so true
@WaelAssaf I don't personally like it, but people use it a lot and hiring PHP devs is among the cheaper workers you can hire.
Example of the kind of Hello World program you can find x)
@Morwenn now I need bleach
4
^ literally printed on toilet paper
I wouldn't be surprised if it as a troll site to try to harm C++
19:59
@Morwenn run by the rust illuminati?
run by the PHP witnesses
would rust be good for server end?
@Morwenn cursed webpage
I mean, by its merits not really, by it's ecosystem kind of
thats about as bad as most opengl tutorials (that mix like, deprecated opengl 1.1 with new opengl 4.x stuff >.<)
20:01
it is
@Rick assuming you mean typical web back-end, because otherwise "server end" is a bit broad
you should see the CMake code I've been exposed to at work, which mixes three different ways to make Qt work
@Rick Not any better than C++, its more annoying to use, with little advantage.
@Mikhail mostly agree, but as always the ecosystem plays a role and the crowd it grew out of is more web-focussed. So it has a couple tooling advantages
20:04
@PeterT I heard that rust has a good ecosystem to take advantage of GPU and other parallel workloads.
That is a good point.
@Rick No. Its junk. No templated GPU language.
but yeah, for production you'd still have to find actual people to write the code, where you run into the issue of a probably rather small hiring pool, especially outside the US
+1 for job security, -2 for web dev work
@Mikhail Only -2? You must be feeling amazingly generous today.
I mean, I made most of my money doing it, although that was like 2009 when EC2 was just starting up.
20:11
@Mikhail Some things boot really slowly--it's still just starting up! :-)
Stop SaaS-ing me
sassy sussex
Bet you can't say sæs 5 times really fast!
sassy sussex sexting
20:27
It seems to be a segmentation fault
full code: https://pastebin.com/1n3LkL2b
Again, I just want to give each student a dynamically allocated array of marks and then display them.
*Any help would be greatly appreciated.*
@WaelAssaf Terrible code won't fix
class Student {
...
Mark* marks;
...
students[i].marks = new Mark[marksSize];

this is essentially the changes you need
Is there anyway to represent 1000000000000000 - 0.01?
@PeterT The change he needs is to not write terrible code, not to fix exactly how he's using his terrible code.
you want to guide him through everything you find objectionable? go ahead
20:29
I’m storing it in a double and losing precision (the result is 1000000000000000)
it's just a simple exercise assignment, I wrote shitty code for those too
@PeterT Thanks a man you are a life saver. How can I repay such a kindness?
pay it forward, and help other beginners when you get the opportunity
3
"pay it forward" you are clearly a planner. Most of us pay as we go.
I don't really know what all the idioms mean, I just use them as I see them used.
20:38
I saw a really interesting algorithm yesterday, it switched between union find and graph traversal to find the shortest path
but in the graph traversal, it generated all the edges and nodes in the search space
@PeterT I can't agree. I'd even go so far as to say that you should never use the array form of new (anything on the order of T *t = new T[number];).
I thought it would be slow, but it was the fastest algorithm for that particular task
@JerryCoffin if you're going to suggest to him that he'd use std::vector he's going to have to argue with his instructor most likely. Does it suck? ye. Are we going to fix this here? no
@PeterT This may well be--an unfortunate number of people do teach C++ badly. But even if you're not going to use std::vector itself, you should study its design to learn how to do the job well. Rather than using array-new, you want to use operator new to allocate raw memory, then use placement new to construct objects in that memory (and, finally, directly invoke dtors to destroy the objects).
20:48
/cc @Mysticial
right, for "excercise 3" I'm going to talk about placement-new? I don't think so
@PeterT I'd certainly hope not (placement new obviously should have been covered in lesson 2)! :-)
I hope that's after lesson 0 where we get the students to write their own OS and complete C++ runtime
@PeterT No, that's why I said "won't fix"
I'd still like to think "perfect is the enemy of better"
20:55
I'm your enemy
you are correct
@Borgleader haha
that's a good one
I'm a friend
but "Not informing people that there's a vastly better way of doing it" is the enemy of "Them doing it a vastly better way that doesn't encounter these problems in the first place"
I prefer understanding
sometimes it pays knowing how to do things the wrong way before knowing how to do them the correct way.
Otherwise, you won't recognize the value of why something is better. Things are known by their opposites
21:04
@Rick I don't particularly object to the general idea of "lying to children". I do, however, object to doing so without at least a minimal warning that what I'm telling you will do for now, but it's really wrong so you'll want (need) to un-learn it later.
And yes, that does apply (to at least some degree) in the case of real children. My six year-old son (for one example) routinely asks questions about The Flash (for one example). And yes, when I answer them, I pretty routinely mention the fact that much of it doesn't really work with real world physics. I try not to be obnoxious about it (I don't want to ruin the show for him), but knowing it's not real is also good.
That a good point, but children and people don't learn from instruction alone. They are primarily built to learn from experience. So there can be a miss match in a child's understanding. When experience does not match reality.
For example, a child touches a burning pot of water, parent yells at him after the fact. Is the lesson that he shouldn't hurt himself or is the lesson not to go near boiling water, or not to explore. On the other hand, a parent lets there child touch a cup containing hot water, there is an alignment of expectations and theory. that being water can get hot and that your parent is providing advice that matches reality
reality is complex and there are too many things that can come into play. Simple lessons with simple examples can provide clarity where real-world outcomes can be opaque.
21:59
@Rick You don't need to know why X is better than Y if you never use Y.
22:12
(removed)
@Puppy Tis better to have arrayed and index out of bounds, Than never to have arrayed at all.
how are you going to know what a vector is if you don't know what an array is and how it works?
Also we blame somebody for calling it std::iota
we do?
its more of a suggestion
@Mikhail APL's fault, for using (a Greek Iota) as the symbol for the same task.
22:25
I knew you had something to do with it
@Mikhail That was Kenneth Iverson, not me! All I did was point out that given the programming language landscape of 1962, with only COBOL and FORTRAN available, if somebody wrote up another language it would almost certainly be taken seriously, even if somebody were to intentionally make it as unreadable as possible. His seeing that as a challenge most certainly is not my fault though!
@Mikhail what would you call it
@Rick That seems almost boringly obvious: sequence_of_numbers_starting_from_1_and_extending_to_n_with_increments_of_one_unless_otherwise_specified_that_is_not_related_to_any_part_APL_in_any_possilble_way
I would never use it if that were the case.
as it is, it's only slightly shorter than a for loop
std::series
@Rick For shame! How dare you base anything on simple convenience or the code being readable?
@Mikhail Should clearly (along with std::parallel) be one of the available values for the first argument to compute_resistors_effective_resistance.
23:03
is that what you wire up to std::generate?
series would push it over the top before i would start golfing it
series(begin(vec), end(vec),0) vs int i= 0; for(int d: vec)vec[++i]= i;
wtf is that
std::iota(ids_h.begin(), ids_h.end(), 0);
AHHH STOP PINING
series is too long is what I am trying to say
the code you wrote will fail for more than 2^31 elements, also ++i=i <- look of disapproval
yeah well if I used size_t it would have made it longer
this would have made more sense, int i= 0; for(int d: vec)vec[i]= i++;
since I would have been missing the 0 index
23:20
@Rick it's impossible to say what happens with either, since they both have UB. Range-based loop seems wrong for this, but if you insist on using it, I'd consider: int i=0; for (int &d : vec) d = i++;. Not great, but at least it has defined behavior.
I wouldn't actually use it, just illustrating to Mikhail how the name "series" would be a terrible choice, but your solution is shorter and more correct nice! :-)
I don't think it can be made any shorter than this
int i=0; for (int &d : vec) d = i++;
how about going backward after going forwards?
for (auto it = vec.end(); it-- != vec.begin();) cout << *it << endl;

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