@kbok Personally, I'd keep the "first" position open as a wild-card. I don't want to have to wall someone urgently but then say, "Oh, actually, there are those people from an internet chat room who I promised first wall four years ago, so you have to wait."
That sounds like an OS scheduler implementation to me. Not per se a problem in your code. The OS decides which thread will run on what core and if the rules of thread/CPU affinity are adhered to, it will stick that thread on the same CPU each time.
That is a simple explanation for a fairly com...
@TonyTheLion Because there's no way that could possibly, ever, account for such a ridiculously large difference in the running time.
you're right in that the OS scheduler does introduce an element of non-determinism into the system; but wrong in that it certainly could not be the cause of the OP's results.
@DeadMG Someone asked about this once. But that should be fairly simple with just a hard-coded set of nodes. Even a balanced tree should be easy to do.
I want to show that it's quite possible for a large chunk of the containers and algorithms library to execute at constexpr, with the possible exception of random-access
@LucDanton Right. But a static binary search tree is also a super specialized data structure. Certainly not for common use, but sometimes you do have static data that can benefit from being arranged elegantly.
@DeadMG The thing is, you can of course make the function int(int n) { return 2 * n; } into a constexpr, but what's the point if you're not actually using it to perform static initialization?
Same for the lists. Abstractly each member function may be constexpr, but it can never be used in static initialization.
I really don't know that much about constexpr, so forgive me, but if you had a constexpr std::list, I don't see why you couldn't do vector v(list.begin(), list.end());
@DeadMG It depends first of all on what you mean by "constexpr std::list", and secondly, remember that those containers perform dynamic allocation. So there's a very limited amount of constexprness that you can get out of that.
You really need to start over entirely with a whole family of static containers.
To be specific, the hypothetical use case is that I have a given collection of statically known values (like integers). Can I arrange them into a useful static data structure?
Linked lists probably make no sense, because they're no different from an array if the collection is not mutable. You might as well just increment an index.
@KerrekSB Compile-time associative containers, certainly. Just to make sure: meta-programming in the type space, which is not what 'static' always mean. (But I'm sure there are ways to easily map to the other meanings.)
@LucDanton To be fair, I'd probably use std::array<int, 4> const a = { 0, 1, 2, 3}; as a perfectly functional static array... but yes, that's the basic departure point.
I encourage everyone involved in this discussion to experiment wildly because apparently it's not clear enough that constexpr functions aren't that great for metaprogramming.
@Aardvark Because literal types are new and nobody is sure they will ever amount to anything. Implementations are free to ensure that closure types are literal types when/if it proves useful and easy enough, and then Standardization can happen.
I encourage everyone involved in this discussion to experiment wildly because apparently it's not clear enough that constexpr functions aren't that great for metaprogramming.
That would make constexpr functions something else entirely than what they are right now. So you'd be reinventing TMP while simultaneously reintroducing the need to reinvent (current) constexpr function.
Examples of useful constexpr functions: min, max, abs.
does anyone know how RAR revovery volumes (.rev) work? I have 6 100 MB parts, and one 100 MB recovery volume, and if I delete any one of the 100 MB parts, it can still reconstruct the whole thing with the .rev
@DeadMG My compiler regularly dies during function invocation substitution on trivial expressions, while I have seen some pretty impressive metaprograms.
then with unrestricted constexpr, it's a lot simpler
for example, look at the macro hacks we have to do now to get a string at constexpr, and imagine how hard it's going to be to generate a regex match function at compile-time with TMP.
but in unrestricted constexpr, it doesn't have to be that way because you can implement a (hypothetical) unrestricted constexpr function in any way that you want- imperative, or OO, or functional.
whereas TMP can only ever be the hardest pure functional thing ever
The problem I have right now is that the only thing in common with your suggested change and what we have now is the constexpr keyword as applied to functions.
what I'm proposing is the same as what we have now, it just supports more stuff.
if you have a pure functional data structure or whatever in the current constexpr, it's not going to be invalid or incorrect or possibly even suboptimal
@LucDanton parameters are at the right level for influence the return type: they are basically a type+name pair. Arguments are the wrong level: they are the actual objects/references passed.
@DeadMG The regexp compiler is a good example. As the input regexp can get arbitrarily complicated, presumably so becomes the returned value of the compiler. What type holds such a value?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was kidding. Pick whichever author switches around the usual definitions of 'formal X means Y as opposed to actual X' for some value of X.
all that it would take is that constexpr objects support (constexpr) virtual functions, and then you could already write it with the current constexpr.