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00:07
Also static_assert should have built-in common error codes, like invalid argument etc
00:54
I wonder if the argument scan for the fmt library is O(n) where n is the number of arguments. For example if you have "{3},{2},{1},{0}" will it do an O(n) scan to find the location of the 0 argument at runtime?
 
1 hour later…
02:13
My guess is that it walks through the string, and when it encounters {n}, grabs argument n, and adds it to the buffer. So yes, it's linear on the length of the format string. But I'd be surprised if it looked in the string for arg 0, and substituted it, then looked for arg 1, and substituted it, and so on, which would be roughly O(n * m). Could be done, but I can hardly imagine anybody who was even halfway competent doing things that way.
Is there some version where everything is done at compile time?
@Mikhail I'd have to look. Obviously it would be restricted to string literals, but (much like with printf) that's undoubtedly the vast majority of real use. But, also like printf, you're also allowed to read a string from a file, and use it as a format string, which obviously can't be scanned at compile time.
Yeah obviously, but in this case I mean figuring out the substitution, like those compile time regexes I heard so much about
Somehow a big part of my day was low level string manipulation. Big change of pace from identifying gleason grades (biopsies) in 2014.
Wasn't Rapptz or somebody else an MD pathologists?
@Mikhail My guess is yes--but it's mostly a question of whether somebody who's into that sort of thing had a weekend to waste on it (yet) or not. Honestly though, I entertain considerable doubt about the utility of doing so--99% of the time, it's associated with output, which is going to be slow anyway, so as long as you avoid gratuitous pessimization, you're unlikely to gain a whole lot.
@Mikhail I seem to vaguely recall somebody being, but no longer have an recollection of who it was.
Yeah I think it was that guy that helped the PhD but I also don't remember, would have been fun to get compare my grading with his. Oh welp. Biomedical imaging life is over. Now it's all about micro optimization, bike shedding, and linked list node locality.
One day, though, I hope to go back to my baby making machine. Goal is to charge the babies for the cost of being born.
02:26
@Mikhail Just sell them into slavery for an appropriate period of time.
@JerryCoffin No motivation, we take part of their salary, call it a "student loan" or something
@Mikhail But why settle for part when you could take all?
Well, they are known to break when you take one too many kidneys
@Mikhail Student loans: driving up the cost of education for decades and counting. And now it looks like they're going to be "forgiven", so the increased cost is paid by the rest of us instead of the people who actually incurred the debt.
@Mikhail Of course you must maintain your slaves' physical condition for them to do work.
On the other hand, there's certainly no shortage of science fiction where people are raised simply to act as organ donors (or similar).
maybe not: find the point when work value will ne less than organs.
02:31
@ABuckau They also have nutritional, perhaps even ceremonial value
@JerryCoffin It's certainly unfair to the people that already paid them off or made difficult life decisions based on having large loans. For example, I couldn't go to CMU because that school cost too damn much.
is it tho?
Yes it is. Next question.
I think the inequalities that student loan forgiveness brings up make it unlikely to pass.
does (hypothetically) me not paying my loan affect your loan? fair, no, but your outcome is what you agreed to asnd expected
not fair, but you got what you asked for.
Okay, but I think the unfair thing is whats messing with people. It also makes for poor social engineering because it benefits the children of affluent but perhaps more narcissistic (if you look at which families hold the loans).
how so
02:40
You need to look at how the lowest quarter of the population doesn't have student loans because they couldn't get into expensive colleges
In some ways student loan forgiveness it the ultimate reward for narcisistic boomers who didn't give a fuck about their kids
youre not wrong.
You could become the next billionaire by raise an gigantic army of 8 kidneys babies. But you need to be monopoly, you don't want competitors to drive down the cost of kidneys. Imagine how much you could make by selling 6 kidneys each from 3000 babies.
I also boosted the performance of my code by replacing the output format with 2 tabs and 2 spaces instead of the original 10 spaces
Thanks to COVID-19, our piece of rural land is now worth at least 50% more than last year. A couple of neighbours on the same road was sold recently, at almost twice the price we spent last year to buy ours. Yes, they have better sheds, but sheds are not houses and their land areas are similar to ours.
Last one sold in less than a week, contract was signed 2 days ago.
(Rural land) neighbourhood land sales on fire, people ditch the city and heading towards rural area in herds </sensational_claims>
I need to go back to mow that gigantic piece of fierce looking lawn now ...
03:34
@Mikhail That's exaggerating the situation a bit.
And yes, I realize that getting nuance into a size that fits here isn't easy--I'm not accusing you of dishonesty, or anything like that.
There is a fair amount of dishonesty (or nearly criminal levels of ignorance) among other people though, such as basing things on what's being paid back instead of what's owed, so they claim the bottom quintile is only responsible for 2% of student loans, for example.
03:58
@JerryCoffin Its an interesting case where the far left (make everything equal) and the right (responsibility) should agree.
04:46
@Mikhail Maybe in theory, but lets face it: they'll disagree purely on principle. In this case they're both largely wrong though. The problem for the left is that people aren't all equal intellectually, and giving everybody a chance to go to college wont' change that. The problem for the right is that by making it easier for more people to go to college, job requirements have risen to the point that most people are left with little choice but to at least try.
When only 5-10% of people went to college, high schools provided a usable education, and there were quite a few perfectly decent jobs for people with only a high school diploma. Nowadays, it's pretty routine that the guy who makes lattes at Starbucks (or whatever) has a bachelor's degree, which makes it hard for people without a degree to get jobs that are even halfway decent jobs.
On the other hand, a lot of the attempts at improving equality backfire horribly as well. We've done a lot to get disadvantaged youth into colleges--but kind of overlook the fact that they have a much higher dropout rate than those who qualify purely academically. And when they do drop out, many end up back in crappy jobs, because they don't have a degree--but now they have tons of debt to pay off. Better to get a degree from a community college than drop out of an elite university...
05:04
Best universities in Australia are public universities.
If you want the best, shouldn't you give equal opportunity to all? This way, you have a larger base to select.
IMHO universities and hospitals should not be profit making.
If you want advance in society, university should be public. If you want a fairer society, hospital should be public.
If everything in your society is aimed at making a profit, your society will end up in a very treacherous place in hell.
05:35
@TelKitty To a large extent, at least as things are typically run in the US, "public" leads to equality--but everything being about equally mediocre. Private isn't (at all) synonymous with "for profit" either. In fact, many private hospitals are not for profit organizations.
 
2 hours later…
07:32
@JerryCoffin There are other ways to look at the devaluation of a high school degree. The lense of technology technology (and loss of manufacturing) and income inequality. But right now the context isn't that relevant. Right now there is a social engineering question: "should we forgive student loans". And the the top 2 quartiles holds 75% of the debt payments, and especially the top quartiles. Are we going to forgive engineers in SF who make $150k a year their $600 dollar month payments?
@JerryCoffin But what is really happening is that political science graduates who just got elected are the ones with the most outstanding debt :-)
Yeah--my own take is that what should probably happen is that student loans should be changed so (at least in the future) they're more like most other debts, and can be forgiven under bankruptcy. Right now, most people seem to fall into one of two camps: either believing we should forgive virtually student debt across the board, or we should leave things exactly as they are--and I don't think either of those is particularly reasonable.
I just don't understand this weird prevailing attitude I see people have on twitter where they talk all day about student loan forgiveness, but don't waste a breath on how to do student loans in the future
But the bankruptcy system is already there for debt in general, and although it's undoubtedly sometimes abused, it at least provides some kind of framework for making meaningful decisions about the conditions under which debts can/should be forgiven, and (for example) things like how much of your assets you lose in the process to at least help discourage rampant abuse while keeping poor decisions from destroying people's lives.
like how shortsighted of a policy position. "Let's just do loan forgiveness every 5 years or so" or what exactly is their proposal
@JerryCoffin Yeah every single person I've spoken to has said this. But I think they forget that the majority of the loans are held by the government. So this would mean our government would need to figure out how to distribute millions of loans.
07:42
@Mikhail That's another point: I also think the government should get out of the business of making student loans.
It's not really another point. It's the real reason why student loans can't be treated like other loans.
@PeterT When you get down to it, most of them pretty clearly want it to be "forgive my loan, and enough other people's that nobody will think badly of me for it, but other than that, fuck it."
@PeterT I think the same people want to greatly increase the educational subsidies. For example Bernie lost my support when he wanted to legislate our university (which has no money) to be forced to take all students for virtually free. It was even more fun because he wanted the states to pay for a federal law.
Right, I see people complain about the tuition, but rarely do I see sensible policy proposals for it. (I don't count "just give out more loans" as sensible)
maybe it's just the selection of stuff that filters through
@PeterT Giving out more loans is pretty much what drove up tuition in the first place. Maybe they should have paid attention during at least the first day of Economics 101: fixed supply and increased demand leads to higher prices.
07:48
Some people would say it goes against traditional economic theory as many of these degrees have been portrayed as useless gatekeeping or proxies of socioeconomic status rather than merit.
@Mikhail Can't or at least haven't been. But the simple reality is that you can't squeeze blood from a stone, and a guy living under a bridge with no taxable income isn't going to pay off his student loan either.
But I think for these reasons the problems are likely to persist. It makes a lot of money sense to get a degree, even if it takes you all your life to pay it off. We just used to be kinder to our posterity by keeping prices low. Then the boomers happened :-)
@Mikhail Even if somebody could prove that were true, it wouldn't change the basic economics. Basic fact is that if we make more money available to universities, most of them are going to figure out some way to take it--and the easiest way for most to do is to raise tuition.
I don't really follow. We make the money available because we live in a world where we need to get a degree for reasons that don't correspond to education or productive capacity.
@Mikhail The "why" doesn't change the situation for the university. For the university it's a simple situation: what is the rate of tuition that will maximize my revenues? In a semi-balanced system, raising revenues too far will reduce revenue due to reduced demand. But today, demand remains high regardless of cost, so they continue to raise prices.
08:03
Yeah and the demand is due to forces that are traditionally associated with inelastic goods. AKA you must get a degree.
I just think that while we can restructure the student loan system to eliminate the government and even let loans fail, we'd still find that students will actually tolerate quiet high loans. Certainly, much higher than they are today, its just that it makes life miserable.
@Mikhail Point is that a lot of the requirement for a degree isn't that most jobs actually need it. It's simply become a vicious circle: employers demand degrees primarily because they can (and do) now assume that almost anybody without one must be an idiot or a psychopath. And high school seniors all feel obliged to sign up for college because it's the only way to avoid being assumed to be an idiot or a psychopath. And round and round it goes...
Thats certainly the motivation, although a non-ironic reading of the situation would say that maybe the degrees are useful and required :-)
What we really gotta figure out is how to get the public to start funding our schools again.
There are certainly jobs for which requiring a degree can make sense. But people getting degrees in things like medicine and engineering aren't the ones crying for their loans to be forgiven. And sorry, but there aren't many jobs for which a degree in political science or feminist studies is honestly of much benefit.
Yeah but judging the merit is a different question :-)
^ This is part of the problem in the USA, other part is that the actual total has gone up.
I mean we could be like some pays de merde like France with endless sociology degrees but at present we can't afford it :-(
08:26
@Mikhail I can't say I follow the situation elsewhere but that's not very similar to how things look here in California.
Yes, especially at UC, funding has gone down--but not nearly so drastically. Tuition has risen far more than state funding has dropped.
Did you read the article?
>> In response to funding cuts, UC and CSU increased tuition dramatically.
These funding cuts have been felt most strongly at the University of California, where funding per full-time-equivalent student fell from slightly more than $23,000 to about $8,000.
Y I K E S
Said to be in response to funding cuts, yes. But look at the graph. CSU (in particular) hasn't had anything that could possibly be called a dramatic funding cut.
No wonder California has massive income inequality, people I know in trades are throwing molotovs into windows they repair by day. Probably know too many people in Oakland.
Looks like a 50% change?
@Mikhail At CSU? The high looks like ~27% and the low 20%.
Well. It's time for me to sleep. But I think the ultimate problem doesn't stem from people getting shitty degrees (that is a different problem). Its that cost of education was allowed to grow out of control while in parallel funding dropped. Solving the funding problem is always easy, we make the boomers pay. Solving the absolute increase is a harder. One solution may be to cap tuition. You cant sell yourself into slavery, so you shouldn't be able to sell yourself into student loan debt slavery.
08:37
But you also have to look carefully at how those numbers come about to make much sense of them. Much if it isn't from the legislature cutting funding. It's from ever-increasing percentage of foreign students. Non-natives have always paid higher tuition and received less state funding.
I want university accreditation to be linked to not going over a tuition number :-)
So maybe foreign students actually helped make the lack of general fund spending?
Which is even funnier because we fucked over our kids by selling them out to the Chinese? Then finally kicking out the same Chinese we spent money training...
As the article mentions, California actually did comparably well in terms of keeping funding...
Anyways I need to go soon. But I always wonder who pocketed the difference. Maybe illegal immigrants or something :-)
@Mikhail Mostly California has shifted funding from the "elite" UC schools to community colleges.
08:56
Morning
@Morwenn Hello!
09:39
I am overhelmed with small tasks on hobby projects
09:51
Hi, guys. Nice to meet you all. I am new here.
10:12
Are you sure? There's several times CPP in your name, you've got to be an expert
New in chat here lol. My knowledge in C++ are strange. I like to dig in clang
As in read the Clang source code?
Yes (but mostly llvm), also writing LLVM passes, currently trying to dig into MIR (machine intermediate representation). It is cool to know what is going on inside IR, due you can understand wtf compiler was thinking about.
Also trying to read C++ spec sometimes. It is good written, but toooooo big lol.
And constantly growing up
I was annoying my friend with my findings in C++, so I decided maybe I can just annoy stackoverflow questions.
Template argument deduction, overload resolution, name lookup. Rate from worst to absolute worst. I'd say TAD, overload resolution and then name lookup, because the last can involve the others.
Name lookup is kind of more understandable than overload resolution though
The partial order of overload resolution is hell
At least name lookup can be summed up to "fuck you ADL"
Also something about different kinds of named entities not actually shadowing each other
But that should soon be fixed as a DR against C++20
> As discussed individually below, 63 Core issues are resolved, as well as 21 points discussed on the reflector but not (yet) on the issues list.
 
7 hours later…
17:24
7
A: Converting binary to decimal integer output

Anvar KurmukovThere is actually a much faster alternative to convert binary numbers to decimal, based on artificial intelligence (logistic regression) model: Train an AI algorithm to convert 32-binary number to decimal based. Predict a decimal representation from 32-binary. See example and time comparison be...

17:37
good afternoon
18:22
yo
Nay, not so.
My work is having a winter recess, so I'm off from 23ish to 3rd. I plan to spend the entire time working and shit posting.
Tell them that you'll work for half the pay, as long as they let you continue to work
I'm already paid for the time and it doesn't count as vaction days.
but they're not letting you work
those monsters
18:29
Anybody compared nixos vs gentoo?
I read a good article on slant about that
let me see if I can find it
18:51
nope can't find it
19:01
it doesn't exist
nixos sounds like gentoo but has a little caching capabilities, although the real difference will be how well the packages are maintained.
 
1 hour later…
20:34
So if a derived class has a construct that is really supposed to pass all its arguments to a base class is the any good way to avoid explicitly writing out the arguments? In this case I'm using the derived class as part of a variant and the derived class communicates the type.
maybe something like B(const A& item) : B(item) but without explicit
user7659542
@Mikhail shit posting during your time off. How does that differ from the usual posts?
user7659542
:p
I used to be a contractor (kinda)
user7659542
so?
On an unrelated note I wrote a review article about my research where I cited all my 50 papers and google scholar added those citations. Also the article was on arciv so it doesn't go through peer review. Nothing is stopping me from doing this once every few months.
20:49
@Mikhail Save yourself some trouble: every few months, push another "paper" to arxiv that does nothing but cite the survey. Really need to work on some way to get combinatorial explosion going there though...
@JerryCoffin That lame. The C++ template metaprogramming way would be to instead repeat my name fifty times in the author list, instead of the body of the manuscript.
user7659542
urgh...
user7659542
It s really time to build a product and market it
user7659542
All I need is a good idea
I've elected to use signed addresses to represent memory locations, this is both a solution to an unsolved problem in computer science (what happens when you subtract 2 pointers) and the ultimate act of bikeshedding.
@traducerad I thought you were selling your body for the last few years?
user7659542
20:54
Apparently there is not so much done in the financial industry, where they combine trading and AI because passive investing still outperforms active investment strategies
user7659542
Maybe build an ai-based tool as an indicator and not as an unilateral decision maker
@Mikhail Hmmmm...maybe push some papers under various aliases, and then stir up controversy by having them start arguments with each other.
user7659542
@Mikhail yes, I still do. To you. Forgot about that?
user7659542
It s more of a renting than a sale
user7659542
because I know you like being dominated
user7659542
20:56
ok back to the product idea:
user7659542
But entering the financial world is extremely complicated I think
user7659542
I have been thinking about a 3D AI-based security scanner for airports
user7659542
which would help operators that have to look at those screens all day long to make sure you don t carry weapons or anything like that in your bag
user7659542
but dunno... I m not very convinced by the idea myself. And I think object recognition is always a difficult thing
user7659542
I should read more scientific publications from various domains to try to see what research is going on in other fields. Maybe I ll find something innovative that way
21:36
Basically that already exists, and the security field is mostly a scam (aka you don't get caught for not working until some terrorist blows something up)
22:12
22:52
So I have this code where sometimes I need to return a single item but other times I need to return a vector of items (many, like 32). But I'm thinking how crazy would it be to do something like std::variant<single,std::vector<single>>, kinda reminds me of python :-)
Really the motivation is to iterate over items in a for each loop, with support for iterating over a single item
@Mikhail I'd just return a vector, which might sometimes contain only a single item.
Not memory efficient, not to mention you're hitten' the allocator.
for (auto items : polymorphic_instance->get_items()) but sometimes it only one item
A more maniacal code would look like polymorphic_instance->do_item(&results), that way, much like vegas, whatever happens in do_item stays in do_item.
@Mikhail Oh, for a case like that just return a little "Range" struct that sometimes refers to all the items in a vector, and other times just a single item.
Is there some way I can shoot myself in the foot by using a generator?
But honestly, 99% of the time, unless you honestly expect to see a zillion of these in use at once, or generate tens of thousands of them per second, just returning a vector won't hurt a thing.
22:58
Yes, I expect a zillion of them, they are nodes and stuff in a big 'ol graph
@Mikhail In that case you're probably justified in writing your own allocator to support them.
I am or did
@Mikhail In which case, supporting the single-item case efficiently should already be handled.
Maybe I suck, I mean you can return ranges that are pointers to the nodes in the allocator.
Ugg, fuck. too high IQ.
I'll just combine std::visit with some copy and paste
@Mikhail When I've dealt with big graphs, I've typically ended up with one big allocation for the data, and each node just contains something like a pair of iterators (or an iterator and length) into the big allocation. In a fair number of cases, those are combined into another linear structure, so the node just contains a single integer index into that linear structure.
23:08
yeah I wanted to do that but can't break the api
fucking real jobs where you can't rewrite everything
If that breaks the API, it was poorly designed and deserve to be broken.
and other mature things to say :-)
Although it matches your SO Winter bash hat
@Mikhail Recognizing when something is broken is mature. It becomes immature when/if you insist on immediately rewriting everything that's broken, but that's rather a different/separate question.
You're technically correct but only because you split those two concepts at the last minute. My assessment of your statement hinges on if "deserve to be broken" is an immediate call to violence :-)
ugg fuck I need to keep coding
fucking compiler speeds improved
peace :-)
23:26
@Mikhail I didn't split them at the last minute. It simply never occurred to me that anybody would conflate the two until it became clear you had.

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