« first day (723 days earlier)      last day (4452 days later) » 

00:00
@sehe That's rather funny.
Samuel L Jackson read it too.
Kill me. That web course has PHP in it.
@CatPlusPlus haaaHAA!
:D
qox
qox
00:16
@StackedCrooked in that case, how would you ever use Java on Ideone?
Oh wait, Main.java. meh.
00:36
00:58
@CatPlusPlus What web course?
Hi Everyone
I've got an application design question.
I imagine it is one of those open-ended questions that solicit lots of opinions and debate
@Rapptz: I was wondering if it was even appropriate for that.
@Rapptz: Thought it might just be a good chat discussion
It says it's fine in the FAQ programmers.stackexchange.com/faq
@Rapptz: Not good for chat?
01:11
Well no one is here.
Yeah, it is kind of quiet
Notice how everyone's gravatar is faded except us two and the robot.
Does that indicate that they haven't been seen in a while, or that they just haven't written anything in chat in a while?
latter I think.
I've never actually asked a question on any stack site.
01:14
Yeah me neither.
I love answering questions
I haven't answered in a while either.
Whenever I think I've got a question, it either seems inappropriate, or I feel like I already know what people will say.
That's the problem when you spend a lot of time here.
Do you develop desktop applications?
01:22
I program for fun. I'm not really in Computer Science. I'm in biomedical.
Ah ok. So you don't use C++ at work?
Depends. I use C++ to make some tedious tasks a lot easier on me.
I see. What operating system?
Windows but I can use Ubuntu too.
Most all of my work is with Linux
Applications related to 3D graphics and animation
although I prefer the math/algorithms side of things
the human factors are tricky
01:29
I always wished I could make a game but I feel like that's too hard.
Yeah. It can be.
Depends on the game
Having a good idea for a game is hard enough
the mobile market has opened some opportunities for relatively simple games to be popular
if you have a good idea
I have a concept but no idea to back it up so I'm not going to be able to do anything about it.
2D or 3D?
I prefer 2D to 3D.
That typically makes it easier.
It's all about states
01:35
I guess. I don't think the graphic concept is hard.
Programming a game generally comes down to defining the game state, and then defining transitions between the states.
Just have to think in very small steps.
object-oriented design helps a lot with that
Currently trying to find out how to make a coloured box in HTML without messing with my current CSS.
I haven't done much web programming
It seems like such a mess
but I guess that's true of anything you aren't familiar wth
I know what a div is
It's simple.
and you can specify the div style to give it a particular size, position, color, etc.
01:42
Yeah. I could try a div but I don't know how well that would work.
01:54
2D Makes game development monumentally easier.
The amount of time and energy it takes to make a 2D game feel spectacular and amazing will only make a game in 3D seem like a pathetic fart in the wind.
It's usually recommended to start developing a 2D game because you can achieve results fairly quickly while hammering down all the things that go outside of the neck-breaking math that 3D demands you have to know.
You don't need that very nice physics simulation, you can hittest everything based on lines and points and 2dboxes and even maybe some polygon hitting or two. It's a million times easier to immerse someone in a 2d experience because it's easier for the person to be convinced into the fantasy you're spinning for your game.
It's also much easier to artistically style a 2D game, because 2D lends itself to the idea of art that we've mastered for centuries: paintings, pictures, drawings. All flat art, things splashed onto a surface.
That an texturing and shit on 3D is it's own bag of F.U.N.
Yes. developing a 3D engine is very hard
02:12
@VaughnCato And it's exactly what I'm doing. :3c
@Insilico And nobody in the last half an hour upvoted despite having those diagrams? Damn, the weekends are really that dead.
Why doesn't SO support tables again?
@Mysticial So there are people wasting their time on Stack Overflow on the weekdays? :-P
@Rapptz Shit I can totally use tables.
Almost every single one of my answers with benchmarks can use a table.
86
Q: Is there any markdown to create tables?

leoraIt seems like a lot of people try to display tables in SO questions but don't do a very good job. Is there any markdown syntax that supports creating a proper table?

02:35
Tables would be nice. ASCII-drawing tables is a pain in the ass.
ignored feature-request lol
Reddit has a very nice way of doing tables from MultiMarkdown.
> "What happen if 2 threads at the same time calls EnterCriticalSection..."
I think that part of the question alone demonstrates a very deep misunderstanding of how multithreading and critical sections work.
damn... re-reading my answer on the loop-question really shows how much I sucked at writing answers during my early days of SO.
One of these days.
@Mysticial Hehe, I've had that too.
When I stop caring about unlocking votes, I need to go back and fix up my answers to the loop and denormal questions.
Especially the loop one. That answer is really difficult to read.
02:38
@Insilico It really looks like someone is just throwing threads at some problem because threads are better or something.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Probably. It doesn't help that online tutorials (and some books!) for these kinds of things generally suck.
Sucky online tutorials reproduce like rabbits.
I have a quick question:
on writing
um... how should I say this
oh fuck it, nevermind... I don't even know how to ask a stupid question.
just ask
I cannot
fix these warnings
Why am I so bad? =[
02:49
@Rapptz I was trying to see if I can get an opinion on any weaknesses of my writing style in my top 5 answers.
Table flips.
Well.
Everyone has their own writing style, why does it matter?
This is when you know it's break time.
I kinda know what they are. What of course, it's harder to spot your own problems.
@Rapptz Well for one. If you compare my answers to the loop and matrix questions.
The loop one is very difficult to understand. (partially because I sucked at writing answers back then)
I did something similar with some of my classmates a few months back.
The first thing they commented on was that the use of pre-processor confused them.
So I stopped doing that.
All this time on SO, we write so many answers, but we get little feedback on how effectively written the answers are - aside from the number of votes.
0
Q: Measuring throughput (MBytes/sec) of L2 cache in C

Amber ArrowayThis is an assignment and I am trying to write a C program that measures the data throughput (MBytes/sec) of the L2 cache of my system. To perform the measurement I have to write a program that copies an array A to an array B, repeated multiple times, and measure the throughput. Consider at leas...

Would appreciate if someone can help me there, thanks
=( or any pointers will be fine too
@Mysticial if you are not busy can you please have a look at my problem??
03:00
Okay so I just added a diagram and a possible way to solve the OP's problem. I'm pretty sure it has no race conditions (assuming the "pseudo-functions" are implemented properly).
@AmberArroway It'll have to be after Tuesday. Since I have an exam that'll determine whether not I drop out of school.
@Mysticial why would you want to drop out??
@AmberArroway I don't want to drop out. But by rule, I have to if I fail this exam.
@Mysticial What kind of exam is this?
03:02
@Insilico Ph.D qualifying exam.
@Mysticial Oh. Good luck!
ooh! I am sure you will do well
anyone else who has some knowledge of cache?
btw @Mysticial my problem seems pretty simple =)
@AmberArroway "Seems" is the keyword here, no?
Sometimes the problem ends up being more complicated than it looks.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: I had no idea what the previous topic meant, so I changed it to something meaningful... oh, nevermind. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [nonsense]
@Insilico that depends on the person who is solving the problem.
I find it hard doesnt mean others would
03:05
@AmberArroway Sure, but you don't know that for sure, by definition.
I understand some of what I need to do. I just need some guidance on how to calculate the throughput
have you done any coding with caches??
@AmberArroway Depends on what kind of cache we're talking about.
Processor caches are for the most part invisible to me until I have to diagnose performance problems.
stackoverflow.com/questions/12769157/… have a look at my question =)
its just to measure thethroughput, nothing too hectic
however, we havent got any information on how to calculate that
Ah, I usually use QueryPerformanceCounter() for timing purposes on Windows machines.
nooooooo, the code I have posted already has the getTime() etc
have look =)
03:10
@AmberArroway Unfortunately I won't have time for that. I need to get homework and applications and my research paper done. I would like to publish said paper in a peer-reviewed journal sometime soon.
2 minutes of your time lol
7 mins ago, by In silico
Sometimes the problem ends up being more complicated than it looks.
@AmberArroway I'm probably the only one in this room who's even remotely interested in answering your question. But I'm busy until after Tuesday.
There's plenty of other people on SO who might be interested.
@Mysticial it seems like it
@AmberArroway My time is quite valuable to me. Especially if my reputation as an academic rides on getting my homework and applications and my research paper done.
03:12
@Insilico instead of arguing you could have finished reading the question and no you dont owe me anything.
please don't go down that road...
@AmberArroway Or I can get my research paper done for publication in a peer-reviewed journal, which is worth at least an infinite times more than answering a stranger's question.
@Insilico if you say so
@ScottW lol funny.
Well, since my RAID array crash, I've bought a new motherboard,processor,memory and 4 new drives. Running an Asus P8Z77-v Pro/Thunderbolt, 16GB 2400 RAM, i7 4 core 3.5Ghz CPU and a 2TB Raid 10 array. So far it's pretty sweet.
How is everybody doing?
I just skip ahead when I see hardware specs these days.
03:15
@R.MartinhoFernandes LOL, why?
Also, seems one of my roommates left torrents on during the night. Fuck.
@Chimera Because I have no idea what half of them mean.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does that cause issues for you with your ISP?
@Chimera No, but it leeches all the bandwith and makes web browsing painful.
@AmberArroway If you honestly want a good answer to a question like this, you just about need to write the code in assembly language (or a very close semblance thereof, using compiler intrinsics). For one thing, to get solid, meaningful results, you need to control the alignment of your code pretty tightly. Without that, you can get pretty wide variation that has little or nothing to do with the data or how it's cached at all.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah. You can't disconnect that computer? :-)
03:18
@Chimera What, walk into their bedroom and pull the plug?
@JerryCoffin Hi, but as I mentioned in the question that it is an assignment so I have to use the C code provided =(
@R.MartinhoFernandes Where's the router? Just unplug his cable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, I thought maybe you had access to the router/switch..
@Mysticial It's wireless.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Then disable the wireless if you're on ethernet. :)
Or block his MAC address.
@Chimera Configure it to reject connections except from specified MAC addresses (not including his, obviously).
@AmberArroway Well, I (for one) lose interest pretty quickly when the task is cast in such a way that it eliminates any possibility of getting really meaningful results.
@JerryCoffin Yes, I know what you mean, but the lecturer wants it done this way and to make things even worse he has no notes on this and I looked online for examples and cant find anything decent
@AmberArroway Does your lecturer and/or TA have office hours? You can take advantage of them.
@Insilico Yes and I went to see him but he said he cannot give any more information than whats provided simply because the student has to learn somehow. Which is partly true and I want to learn but there is nothing to learn from
@AmberArroway If you haven't gotten the message already. Nobody in the room is interested in answering your question right now.
03:26
np
@AmberArroway Sounds like your professor believes he gave you enough information to complete the assignment.
Is there a way to invite a user from SO to a chat?
FINALLY!
I figured it all out and got rid of all of those annoying C4005 warnings
@ThePhD #undef that shit.
Turns out I have to program directly against the Windows 8.0 SDK and not bother with any of the June DirectX 2010 SDK nonsense.
03:31
@ThePhD How many macros are you using?
FUck all those tutorials that said otherwise.
@ThePhD Oh okay.
52 mins ago, by In silico
@R.MartinhoFernandes Probably. It doesn't help that online tutorials (and some books!) for these kinds of things generally suck.
@Insilico Yeah it wasn't my own shit. I'm careful enough to avoid it. Just, people saying 'OH YOU'RE USING DIRECTX11 and VS2012? NO PROBLEM JUST GET THE JUNE 2010 REDIST/SDK.'
There is one critical difference, though:
D3DX* no longer exists.
Essentially, all the DirectX utilities and structures are -gone- (D3DXVector, etc., or at least that's what I'm gathering from including the right headers and trying to use anything D3DX* related)
Glorious, glorious warning-free compile. All mine, Allllll mine.
Sounds like OpenGL would have been easier... :-P
It would have been.
I -have- a working OpenGL engine
But I'm trying to master D3D
But my god, this shit is way more complicated.
std::function is a dirty liar.
Back to trying to make my own callbacks.
03:46
What happened?
@ThePhD There's DirectXMath, which is much better.
@EtiennedeMartel Sounds like a plan
user406009
What's wrong with std::function?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think I'm doing something wrong with how I set up my callbacks, but as far as I'm looking at references and stuff, apparently I'm doing it all wrong.
My god, you're the archetypal noob. "This doesn't work on the first try, so I'm rolling off my own".
4
03:49
@EtiennedeMartel I've been haggling with it all day, so no, it's not my first try.
It is the first time I've ever used std::function ever, though.
std::function<void (const DisplayDevice&, DisplayModeCollection&, DisplayMode& )>

Is the type declaration for the callback. The function I'm setting it to is a class function:

std::function<void (const DisplayDevice&, DisplayModeCollection&, DisplayMode& )> best = &DisplayDevice::SelectBest;
@ThePhD This looks like a non static member function.
Did you try std::binding it?
The type declaration is for how it is called
Sounds like a job for std::mem_fn.
@EtiennedeMartel Yes, that's the point. No, I didn't try std::binding. I was under the impression (perhaps incorrectly from this resource, the example, at the end) that I didn't need to bind it:

http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/functional/function
user406009
03:53
Hmm, it works.
user406009
user406009
Are you sure your function is labeled const in the class declaration?
If it is a non-static member function, then there's an extra parameter for "this".
Yeah, @Lalaland might be onto something. Is SelectBest a const method?
user406009
Could also be a sucky std::function implementation. Can never trust those standard library writers.
03:54
`SelectBest` looks like this:

`void SelectBest ( DisplayModeCollection& available, DisplayMode& best ) const { /* ... */ }`
Backticks, why you fail me. =[
Maybe it's just me, oh well.
@ThePhD Markdown fails on multiple lines.
What's the actual error message you're getting?
It's a C2664 error originating from where I call the function, but throwing in the `functional` file:

error C2664: 'std::_Func_class<_Ret,_V0_t,_V1_t,_V2_t>::_Set' : cannot convert parameter 1 from '_Myimpl *' to 'std::_Func_base<_Rx,_V0_t,_V1_t,_V2_t> *'
I'm a bit stumped, to be honest.
user406009
Have you tried boost::function?
@Lalaland I don't have boost.
... Yes, I know. It's heresy.
In C++11, not really.
In C++03, going without Boost meant you had basically nothing but containers and a few measly utility functions.
user406009
03:58
C++11 "stole" all the best parts of boost. I remember there being a funny post about it on here.
Well, Boost still has asio and filesystem.
And optional and variant.
And exception.
How long until we have these for computers? wimp.com/prototypeengine
Wish things would just switch but oh well.
04:02
If you have a class like struct A { void f(); };
And you declare A a
Then you use std::function<void()> f = std::bind(&A::f,&a)
then calling f(), calls a.f()
user406009
Yeah.
So in the case of using std::bind, I don't have to put the
const ClassType& in the function<> declaration?
bind does a different thing.
04:07
Hello, I have a small problem with templates. How can I specify that a certain template argument is a scalar value of a dependent type? For example:

template <typename T, SomeHelper<T>::type Arg2> class A?
I tend to use auto when I use bind.
@ThePhD: right
when I prefix SomeHelpet<T>::type with typename, then the compiler expects a type
@VaughnCato I'll give that a shot
otherwise it will complain about a dependent name.
04:09
Well, progress: I'm getting a different error. It's still ultra cryptic, though.
I'm sure I can beat it up to get it working through.
@KarimA., A typedef in SomeHelper and typename in your line works.
@KarimA.: It expected SomeHelper<T>::type to be a type, but not Arg2
Maybe I'm supposed to be doing this differently....
Ok, here is the bigger picture: SomeHelper<T>::type is std::function<void(T)>
that signature varries a bit depending o T for std::function and I want to use a member function pointer as an argument.
04:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes, Crap, I always forget to do that.
Don't forget to instantiate the hell out of templates if you want your tests to make sense.
I had the error before that so I forgot.
.... Maybe
THis is why it's failing.
04:14
Oh nope but ti was a nice thought.
Don't use _Input as a name.
I thought if it was a private/protected class function it might not allow it to be called
and VC++ is complaining about it: error C2993: 'std::function<_Fty>' : illegal type for non-type template parameter '__formal'
I know that the standard library uses that style of naming, but the standard library does it because the standard library is the only code that is allowed to use it.
@KarimA.: Yeah, that's not a compile-time object.
@KarimA.: You'll have to use a member pointer as the type
04:16
could you please show me more-or-less how that syntax would look like?
Does the handler really need to be determined at compile-time?
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes, its something like a state-machine.
I've seen this working in boost's state machine
But not with std::function. std::function is inherently a runtime entity (because it employs type erasure).
04:18
is it? Why?
the signature is known at compile time.
But std::function is not a signature.
@KarimA. Yes, to the part of the code that creates std::function.
The other part of the code that only accepts std::functions knows nothing about how you created your std::function, and therefore doesn't know exactly what you've passed to it.
hmm.. I learned something new :)
I will try to use member pointer syntax instead and see how it works.
04:19
@Insilico Erm, the signature is right there in the type: function<void()>. It's the callable that is forgotten.
ok, it makes sense now.
Thanks!
@R.MartinhoFernandes Argh. I'm just having a typofest today.
I solved my problem by cheating, but it works, so I guess I'm good.
stern look of disapproval
04:23
function<void (DisplayDevice*, DisplayModeCollection&, DisplayMode& )> best = StaticSelectBest;
Static, all the way.
.... This is going to get old fast, though, because passing both the object I want to call with it plus the std::function is going to be annoying.
I just tried using std::bind and the compiler threw a tantrum.
@ThePhD: Can you post the section of code?
Wait, you're using std::function to pass arguments?
std::function is for storage.
(Now, where's that article when you need it... Oh, right, it's not written yet :S)
I'm creating a std::function and passing it into a function call which later invokes that std::function. I don't know if I'm doing it wrong, but I simplified it to get rid of the function call that takes std::function and just try to invoke ti directly, resulting in C2604
function<void (DisplayModeCollection&, DisplayMode& )> best = bind( &DisplayDevice::SelectBest, this );
DisplayModeCollection arf;
DisplayMode dm;
best(arf, dm);
04:34
@ThePhD: You are doing that inside a member function of DisplayDevice?
Yeah.
You can't call std::bind with less bound arguments than the callable needs.
using namespace std::placeholders;
blah blah = bind( &DisplayDevice::SelectBest, this, _1, _2 );
// should work
AFAIR, boost::bind does allow calling with only the first parameter.
So I need to bind with the parameters in advance?
No, you can use the placeholders (_1 and _2) , like I showed above.
That seems to do the trick:

http://ideone.com/pkASU
Ignore ideone's compilation status; it works in VC++ 2012.
So std::function doesn't work as advertised unless I do std::bind...
04:43
Wut.
I can only assume you have been watching the wrong adverts.
@ThePhD You're using Ideone C++ not C++0x ideone.com/jEnXe
@ThePhD That works fine. But you will notice that you need to pass the "this" object to it (foo in the example), which you mentioned you wanted to avoid.
I thought it would defalt to ++0x. My bad; I should read more. I apologize @Rapptz.
liveworkspace is better anyway as long as you don't need input.
04:46
I did that the first time around @R.MartinhoFernandes And it still failed.
@Mysticial Thanks, but I'd rather post on stack overflow than write a book. Writing and polishing a book takes forever, and I'm pretty sure unless I changed my name to Scott Meyers, nobody would buy the book.
Either you did something wrong, or VS's implementation is buggy (it wouldn't surprise me)
Flops.
Makes me want to just roll my own. I swear I probably could have figured it out to the degree I needed it to.
This felt like so much energy just for a delegate / callback. It almost makes me like C# more, and recall it's simplicity with a fondness.
Wow that starred message is so relevant right now.
@ThePhD You don't even know why it didn't work, so how do you know what to fix when rolling your own?
@ThePhD FWIW, the docs for bind mention this: "args - list of arguments to bind, with the unbound arguments replaced by the placeholders _1, _2, _3..."
04:51
@R.MartinhoFernandes Starting from the ground up usually means you can just implement what you need to work like you want it to. I know what I wanted and I could implement it anyway I wanted to to get it working, which sometimes feels a lot more reliable than figuring out you can't use the examples as they are for what you're doing.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wasn't considering std::bind before because I didn't know it could bind class members, and it didn't show up in the std::function exxamples I looked at. Probably the major mark of prematurity on my part, but being at this all day just makes me feel like I could've got much more understand and speed out of rolling my own.
I -still- have no clue why these things failed as they did. The compiler errors are cryptic as hell and even running over an answer CatPlusPlus wrote in another question about std::function didn't help me much.
You could have gotten much more understanding and speed reading the docs.
And just dismissing compiler errors as cryptic as hell will also not take you far.
Yes, they're ugly, but they're not dismissable.
I used the compiler errors to do my searching for solution and to lead me to the docs I ended up at; I don't just dismiss them. I hadn't been using std::bind up until now, I probably should have looked at those docs when I made it there.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: I didn't know that std::bind required placeholders, so that's interesting
@R.MartinhoFernandes: do you know if there is anything like a variadic bind1st?
@VaughnCato What do you mean by that?
@VaughnCato It's a bit annoying sometimes :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes: bind1st requires a binary function
04:58
Oh, right.
No, not that I know of.
I guess it's a necessary evil.

« first day (723 days earlier)      last day (4452 days later) »