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15:00
Does IA-32 still have dedicated 16-bit registers? Or have they been changed into 32-bit registers?
the segment registers are still 16-bits
I mean, e.g. does AX still exist as a 16-bit register?
Or is access to AX silently converted to EAX.
user784668
@StackedCrooked It is.
CS, DS, ES, SS.
user784668
@StackedCrooked It aliases with EAX, though.
15:03
@StackedCrooked it's the same register, just extended.
x86 is a series of computer microprocessor instruction set architectures based on the Intel 8086 CPU. The 8086 was introduced during 1978 as a fully 16-bit extension of Intel's 8-bit based 8080 microprocessor and also introduced memory segmentation to overcome the 16-bit addressing barrier of such designs. The term x86 derived from the fact that early successors to the 8086 also had names ending with "86". Many additions and extensions have been added to the x86 instruction set over the years, almost consistently with full backward compatibility. The architecture has been implemented ...
@rubenvb Your mom spilled a glass of water on your laptop while you compiled clang?
When will onebox learn fragment identifiers?
@sehe lol. no. I thanked everything in my immediate surroundings for helping me complete the task.
you must be raised calvinist
or hippie
I was just being silly.
15:07
@ecatmur So passing a 16-bit parameter can't be slower than 32-bit parameter. E.g foo(uint16_t) vs foo(uint32_t) .
user784668
@StackedCrooked Your compiler will pass a 32-bit quantity anyway unless it's really weird.
@StackedCrooked Most instructions come in 16-bit variants with the same cost. There may be strange cases where you have to extend 16-bit to 32-bit though.
user784668
@StackedCrooked That's because push <16-bit GPR> doesn't exist anymore, and if the argument is passed in a register instead, 32-bit mov avoids a partial write, and therefore possibly a stall.
Guys this looop runs 10 times right? `for(int i = 0; i<10; i++)
The i is incremented when the entire loop finishes?
15:15
@MohamedAhmedNabil Pen. Paper. Try it.
If I receive receive a data buffer of the network as std::vector<uint8_t>, and I know that it is actually a list of repeated vlan-tags (I.e struct VlanTag { uint16_t etherType; uint16_t data; } ). Then how can I obtain the data? ntohs(reinterpret_cast<const VlanTag*>(buffer.data())->etherType); is UB AFAIK.
I will try it myself i just wanna check when i gets incremented
at the start of loop or at the end
@MohamedAhmedNabil Try it
I wouldnt come here if i hadnt
@MohamedAhmedNabil Read a book. This has been said numerous times.
15:16
The for loop is the thing that confuses me the most
I am reading books and refrences
You don't go into the biology room asking 'how to breath' either
But i cant get this into my mind
I had a really bad teacher in school
Well, we can't really help that, no? Give it time. Patience goes a long way
Its one thing that confuses me
Strangely you feel the need to mention it multiple times, though
15:18
if the condition is i<10 and i cout<<i; it should print 10 right?
or am i doing something wrong?
user406009
@MohamedAhmedNabil for (int i = 0; std::cout<<"I incremented\n" && i<10; i++) { std::cout<<"in loop " << i<< "\n";}
@StackedCrooked If you specify AX as a src/dest, the read/write will only use the bottom 16 bits of EAX (or RAX). That will often involve at least a possible slow-down though: first, the instruction needs an operand-size override prefix, which means it's longer and (probably) can only be decoded by the "complex" decoder. Second, it can lead to a partial register stall, at least on some CPUs.
@EthanSteinberg ...no.
Im having a fight with my school teacher :S sorry for any disturbance.... He is giving out the wrong info
@MohamedAhmedNabil sounds like your teacher is correct.
user406009
15:20
Shoot, used && in wrong place.
for (i=0; i<10; i++) {body(); } is roughly equivalent to i=0; while (i<10) {body(); i++; }
1
Q: Can I cast a char* buffer to an object-type?

Isaac ClarkeI ask this question out of curiosity rather than difficulty, as I always learn from you, even on unrelated topics. So, consider the following method, written in C++ and linked with g++. This method works fine, as everything is initialized to the correct size. extern "C" { void retrieveO...

i will never be 10.
Doesn't mention standards enough though.
@SamDeHaan if i do this for(i=0, i <10 i++)
15:20
At least not in the loop body.
user784668
@CatPlusPlus It will be right before its destruction.
@MohamedAhmedNabil the loop body will be run for i = 0... i = 9. And then it will exit.
@SamDeHaan and then after the loop ends i `cout<< i shouldnt it be 10
i doesn't exist outside of the loop.
@MohamedAhmedNabil outside of the loop? Yes. Assuming that it exists and it's not scope destructed (IE you declared it before the loop).
15:22
@SamDeHaan Yes that is what i meant
@MohamedAhmedNabil But if you do for (int i = 0... then i only exists in the scope of the loop
@SamDeHaan so it will be 10 outside the loop?
@SamDeHaan i know
If you define loop variables outside of the loop you're doing it wrong.
@CatPlusPlus i know its not right but theriotically i must be equal to ten before the loop can end
@MohamedAhmedNabil Yes, if you declare i outside of the loop. The loop exits when i < 10 is false, when i = 10.
15:24
At last some justice
So what are you arguing about really? Yes, logic still works correctly, nothing has changed in that regard.
My teacher kept telling me that it wont go to 10. Once C++ sees that the conidtion will be false if i is incremented it stops
@CatPlusPlus No one argues. Moham is allegedly arguing hist teacher. Very very helpful stuff
@ecatmur Given that the VlanTag has struct has an alignment of 16-bit, and that it meets POD requirements I'm inclined to conclude, based on the given answer, that the reinterpret cast is a fine solution. (Which I think is not true according to the standard.)
I just needed to get some coverage on that. I wasnt sure if i was right. Thank you all :D
15:26
@MohamedAhmedNabil That's interesting. How will "C++" "see" that when you do for (char ch='1'; ch!='9'; std::cin >> ch);
@MohamedAhmedNabil If your teacher was right, it would be able to predict that the next char to be read was going to be '9' and somehow not read it :)
@StackedCrooked Not UB as such.
@StackedCrooked Is uint8_t a character type?
@sehe :D Thats not the first time we argued, but really everyone here is great :)
user784668
@ecatmur Maybe.
@sehe you sir are a genius
15:29
@ecatmur I don't know if it is guaranteed to be so. But most likely yes.
@StackedCrooked Although I heartily recommend using static_cast (twice, via void*) rather than reinterpret_cast. It works in this instance due to the nature of the types but you needn't rely on that.
I'm thinking [basic.stc.dynamic.safety] is relevant here.
@MohamedAhmedNabil That's inflation redefined
@LucDanton What is the difference?
user784668
@LucDanton Isn't reinterpret_cast on pointers now the same as two static_casts?
15:32
@StackedCrooked In this case they happen to be the same. In the case where they're not the same, the reinterpret_cast has implementation-specific semantics.
Now that I think of it this rests on the assumption that uint8_t is a character type.
@Fanael In some cases, yes. The rest of the time, no.
In Hell++ std::uint8_t is an integral type that is not a character type and you violate strict aliasing, lol.
We dropped off the top 20 :( (goggles.sneakygcr.net)
Is L"foo" an UTF-16 string in VS?
@SamDeHaan and how many of those top 20 are MSPA?
@ecatmur ... nuuuumber one?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's wchar_t at least. Not sure if that immediately makes it UTF-16.
15:38
@StackedCrooked Yes, the type is guaranteed by the standard. I was talking about the underlying data (i.e. would é be 0x00E9?).
user784668
@LucDanton Is the source type of a cast relevant at all? The strict aliasing rule seems to be about attempting to access the stored value of an object through a glvalue of some type, the cast source type doesn't matter, I think.
@SamDeHaan Tells you a lot about goggles, not so much about 'we'
Even about:blank is above us!
@Fanael The cast doesn't matter per se. What matters is how many times a glvalue is accessed through different types.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd assume that it depends solely on the encoding of the source file. I'd say a literal is, well, the literal value represented in source (for strings, I know counterexamples)
15:42
Filling the vector counts as accessing through std::uint8_t. Reading after the cast is reading through the struct.
@sehe What? The encoding of the source file influences that?
@R.MartinhoFernandes See edit
@sehe No, it's not. A literal has the value in some execution character set.
Wait, is UTF16 even acceptable to a compiler?
GCC relies on iconv so can work with a lot of things.
Well, supposedly. Not that I've tried.
user784668
15:44
@LucDanton I have, it works.
user784668
@sehe Hell++ requires the source to be BMP files.
@sehe Even if I have an UTF-8 encoded source file, L"foo" should still use up 8 bytes (assuming 2-byte wchar_t), not 4.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That doesn't contradict it, though, does it? If the source is in UTF16 and you present a string literal L"WOOT", that would be presented as a wchar_t[5] containing the UTF16 codepoints for WOOT. Now, how you use it is up to you, of course it changes meaning when you print it as latin1
The encoding of the source has no relevance.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ermm. Good point, but what encoding do you expect? (I'm afraid that is your question)
15:46
The question is if L"é" has two wchar_t with 0x00E9 and 0x0000 (UTF-16), or something else.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not on the type, but surely on the charset/encoding?
Hmm, that might be a bad example, btw. é in latin-1 is 0xE9...
I.e. I'd expect a 1:1 mapping of the source characters, optionally widened to wchar_t size
That's silly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Among others. It can be combined
@R.MartinhoFernandes Therefore it is exactly what I expect :)
15:48
@sehe No, it's not.
It is not like the standard has always defined Unicode support. Quite the contrary
Is Hell++ actually a thing, or just a running joke about abusing the standard?
3
@sehe I'm asking about VS in particular.
user784668
@Collin The latter.
If I write é in the source, I want é when running.
15:48
@Fanael This saddens me
@sehe At the source level it's not that bad.
user784668
@Collin Why? Nothing prevents you from writing it.
But I'm surprised I got a real answer about that
@LucDanton Given that uint8_t is a character type, we can use 3.7.4.3:2 to get an object pointer and 3.9.2 to point it to an object; but per 4.1 dereferencing it to an rvalue seems to be UB
@Fanael Sounds like a lot of work :-P
15:49
If the source and the execution have different character sets (not really a stretch), that would be a recipe for disaster.
user784668
@Collin Sure, you'd need a good OCR.
@Collin But so rewarding
@ecatmur You can always cast via void*, this is not a sticking point. I'd like a quote on uint8_t being a character type however.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yup. Exactly. I think I've witnessed such disasters on more than one occasion
@ecatmur 4.1 doesn't contradict, due to the magic of trivial types + character types.
15:51
Jan 19 at 23:23, by DeadMG
but the basic idea behind Hell++ is a Standard-conformant C++ compiler which goes out of it's way to be as unfriendly and surprising and annoying as possible
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does it eat kittens when you leak memory?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Didn't @CheerAndHTH write about the sorry state of affairs on Windows in his book: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/10?m=4797817#4797817
@LucDanton hm, where?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I remember reading that, but I always sort of figured there was some pet project about it that had actually been started
Nah, no one's crazy enough.
15:52
@LucDanton typedef unsigned integer type uint8_t; // optional
@R.MartinhoFernandes LOLcode exists
@ecatmur 3.8 through 3.9. Lots of isolated paragraphs, sorry.
There is the matter of the storage being suitable, e.g. alignment though.
@Collin Not really the same amount of madness.
@LucDanton well, that goes without saying.
@ecatmur Which is why I said it last!
15:54
It's like comparing being an eccentric to Cthulhu-induced madness.
@LucDanton hm, I guess the underlying-bytes copying language works for me.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Dammit. I posted the wrong link there: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/10?m=4279638#4279638
The 'worst' is that in the case that std::uint8_t is not a character type, you can still grab the actual bytes and write the object representation (magically bringing to life the trivial type we care about), then read the objects. Of course that means there's no point in having std::vector<uint8_t> at all (since we can't read/write while our type is alive) and we'd still want std::vector<unsigned char>, but there you go.
@sehe Erm, "Bastard"?
@LucDanton Yeah, you need std::is_same<uint8_t, char>::value || std::is_same<uint8_t, unsigned char>::value || std::is_same<uint8_t, signed char>::value>.
15:56
Aye.
Might as well just use vector<unsigned char>.
uint8_t will never be the same as signed char, btw. :P
3
@R.MartinhoFernandes A very good point.
@LucDanton so I guess the copying-bytes works because the (trivial-typed) object is there in potentia even if you haven't formed a pointer to it yet?
Yeah, you can actually form pointers in very different ways and still be conforming.
The constraints are always worded in terms of 'accessing a glvalue'/'lvalue-to-rvalue conversion'.
Where there are constraints on forming a pointer is in conversion of pointers to base.
16:12
Jan 19 at 23:23, by DeadMG
but the basic idea behind Hell++ is a Standard-conformant C++ compiler which goes out of it's way to be as unfriendly and surprising and annoying as possible
So it is like IE9?
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe wut?
gvim makes you scroll through the compiler output, vim simply vomits it at you.
@Xeo O damn. Misdirected. It was intended for the Cat.
2 hours ago, by sehe
@LucDanton It's funny, and also a good reason to use Vim in a terminal: cut down on time wasted with slow screen updating... /cc @Xeo
^ @CatPlusPlus had been intended to cc you
What slow screen updating?
@CatPlusPlus try compiling TMP in gvim - get an error. Screen updating: le slow. Enjoy
16:23
I don't compile from vim.
I'd rather see a epileptic-fit inducing whirl on the terminal than watch a gnu-supported horror-movie plot :)
@CatPlusPlus Oh, I'm lazy. I just love doing @: to repeat that :mak!
@CatPlusPlus also, unbeatable feature: :colder for time-machine error review (in case you think, where was that error I got earlier, when I tried X, reported again?)
Good morning
How is everybody on this fine Monday?
Shit. I was thinking this was Friday.
Sorry to burst your happy thought bubble. :-(
We just reached a milestone in our project, and that's why it felt like Friday.
16:34
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well congrats... good news!
So now we can go back to heavy duty slacking. ;)
user784668
Fuck, who's spamming stars?
Not me. My stars are platinum-coated and reserved only for top-quality messages.
I starred some... messages that I think are worthy.
Ell
Ell
hey.. whats up with gnu?
16:46
nothing, how about gnu?
Ell
Ell
haha that was quick :L
user784668
Why there's no easy way to initialize a Mersenne Twister with the output of random_device?
std::mt1231432455345 thingy { std::random_device{}() }?
Y'all like my new avatar?
user784668
16:51
@R.MartinhoFernandes That results in 2^32 possible seeds. I'd like to have more than that, preferably 2^1231432455345 - 1.
Ell
Ell
@chimera It's RPG maker!
@Chimera It's LLVM!
It's a Chimera
...hasn't it been that before?
@SamDeHaan Yes, it has.
I got tired of the C++ avatar.
Ell
Ell
16:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes You seem to reach this often on Mondays. I recall similar status updates from last monday :)
@Chimera did you enter with a round of stars again?
user784668
I guess I could write my own seed sequence that's non-conforming, but works fine with all the implementations I have access to.
@Ell Lol... looks like we found the same image..
user784668
But that's a hack.
@sehe Yeah, not all of them though. I saw some stagnant ones and saw comments that I liked. Not exactly the same as I did before.
16:56
@Fanael Hmm. mt19937 uses a 32-bit seed. How do you expect to get more than 2^32 possible seeds?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah is there a mnemonic for that? mt13397 is probably the worst name for any library class ever
@sehe You got it wrong.
Xeo
Xeo
so hot x_x
Anybody got an idea for a nice cold dinner?
Ell
Ell
jelly
sausage trifle
Milk and cereal.
Ell
Ell
16:57
gaspatcho
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought about milk noodles, but we got no noodles :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes um right. 'I had no idea' :)
@sehe I won't star more than 1 message at a time if starring several at a time causes problems.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes (milk and cereal) Milk and cereal, cereal and milk, cereal and milk, cereal and milk (in the mornin...)
16:58
Chicken burritos
But, since you insist, I think mt388876 is equally bad
Ell
Ell
@LucDanton was having that all the way through summer!
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes By filling its array (semi-)directly. It's a MT19937, so it has 2^19937 possible states.
@LucDanton Bunch of stuff in a plate. Sounds delicious.
Ell
Ell
It is delicious! And I don't like salad
16:58
@Chimera Well, you got to keep the goal in mind. The starboard is intended for message of lasting interest, that you wish others to be able to 'pick up' even as they come to the room at some later time
@R.MartinhoFernandes Served cold and very refreshing, too.
Ell
Ell
It's probably the only salad I would choose to eat
@sehe I understand.
@Fanael Are you saying that sizeof(std::mt19937) > 2kb (19937 / 8 ~= 2492)?
@Fanael states != seeds
Xeo
Xeo
16:59
@LucDanton Sounds yummy

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