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00:17
The address of the variable in the function, and the address of the variable assigned to outside, can be identical as they have non-overlapping lifetimes: the temporary bridge cannot have its address taken, and it sharing the other two variable's address cannot be detected. This, I think, makes it impossible to detect it happened (in theory) under the standard: in practice, if the variable in the function and the variable assigned to outside have the same address, odds are you are witnessing NRVO. — Yakk - Adam Nevraumont May 4 '15 at 15:57
thats some high IQ stuff
 
15 hours later…
nwp
nwp
15:03
If you have 2 links on the desktop on Windows 10 with the same name (different locations, all users and current user) you cannot move the icon because Windows gets confused about which one you mean. This used to work fine.
It even depends on where exactly you move it. If you move the all users link to the right of the local user link it works fine, if you move it to the left Windows gets confused and just puts one below the other.
 
7 hours later…
21:43
Assuming modern compilers and stuff, when accessing many elements in sequential order from an std::vector using the [] operator, can I expect the compiler to automatically generate SIMD intrinsics to spee this up? In release mode with -O3 of course.
21:58
I assume the answer is yes: godbolt.org/z/ro61oWGfK Too bad I never really learned assembly.
you can just think "vectorized" when you see xmm ymm or zmm
luckily we will never need anything larger than zmm0, etc. because we barely get consistent processors with AVX-512
22:57
It's not that simple, luckily there are flags that tell the compiler to tell you when it failed to vectorize.
Sleep I need, n8 floks!

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