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00:00
Most of Boost doesn't require any setup.
@Feeds Feeds posts the Robot's stuff?
@DeadMG Hmm. Guessed so. There's something silly about fonts, I remember. Something about having to have a font registered with any window that uses it or so. Damn, my memory is bad. And I usually stay clear of UI programming
@MooingDuck Yup
@JerryCoffin Sue him
@MooingDuck Old though.
I'm already rendering with the font with DirectX
I'm glad someone competent is writing about Unicode for once
3
00:01
I just can't convince Windows to treat the text in the edit control with that font
Yeah, his github is on the Feeds list.
@DeadMG It's not. The most common problem is creating the font as a local, and letting it go out of scope, so the control can't use it when needed.
@Mysticial Gis github blog feed RSS is
@sehe whoa that's cool!
@JerryCoffin I used unique_ptr<HFONT__, ...>
00:01
@DeadMG Code
> author's note
 I wrote this as a quick snippet I can drop on StackOverflow questions from people having trouble getting their multi-dimensional dynamic arrays to work in some way or another.

I'd like to point that solutions to this problem already exist:
 * std::vector<std::vector<T>>: it's a very good solution if you don't need contiguous storage. It's also your best shot if you want jagged arrays.
 * boost::multiarray<T, 2>: another very good solution that works just as well with arrays of even more dimensions.
user406009
God that's annoying. My project euler solution only starts showing glitches at 10^10. FML.
@JerryCoffin You're not actually implying my psychic hunch could be right, no? I don't like to touch windows GUI stuff with a ten-foot pole :) LOL
@Lalaland GAL
@CatPlusPlus You mean, you're glad that competent person is out of the lounge, for once? Doing something useful (gasp)?
even with unsigned longs longs, 9030460994 * 9030460994 overflows
00:05
I wonder why.
@sehe I don't know, it's 1AM and I just woke up.
When things fail at large sizes... not too unfamiliar in my world... hehe
@JohnSmith Gee. We can tell whether you have 64bit long longs
@sehe ?
@Mysticial Stop bragging about your penis already
2
00:07
long long is guaranteed to be 64-bit or more. And I'm not aware of anything that has 128-bit.
@JohnSmith 2*log(9030460994)/log(2) = ? Someone with math ability should see that
@sehe The long long one ?
You just need 128-bit CPU and 82 exabytes of RAM
Easy.
I've no clue how big longs/unsigned long longs are. again, not a CS guy
Guys you are pretty sarcastic :(
00:08
i assumed it'd be big enough to hold as high as 10^18
@AlbertoBonsanto No we're not. Ever.
4
@JohnSmith 10^19, I think.
@DeadMG Sure sure
but 9billion * 9billion is out of that range.
@JohnSmith But you know about binary integer representation, right? You also know about finite capacity? So you know a long will have some finite number of bits...
@DeadMG Depends on whether it's signed or not.
00:09
you need 33bits for over 4billion, so 33 + 33 = 66, which > 64.
@sehe Of course - I just thought it'd hold
10^19 needs unsigned 64-bit to hold.
i am using unsigned long longs
therefore, there are no implementations which can cope with >4billion * >4billion, at least, not right now.
uint64_t
00:09
which i assumed were 64 bit yes?
@JohnSmith I'm afraid I've got bad news
@JohnSmith Not big enough.
as I have just demonstrated, you would need ~a 66bit integer.
@Chimera note he's multiplying them
@JohnSmith unsigned long long only goes to ~10^18
00:10
Any compilers/libraries support 128 bit ints?
@Chimera yes
welp, poopy mcscooperson, I am shit out of luck
No, nobody ever uses numbers larger than 64 bits.
@MooingDuck on a 64 bit machine?
@Chimera I've seen a __int128 type, can't recall which compiler
00:11
@AlbertoBonsanto And 1 million equivalent answers :) What a semi-cute gravatar can accomplish
user406009
Doesn't SSE have some 128-bit registers?
@Chimera yes, we had long long with 64 bits even on 32 bit machines.
@MooingDuck MSVC reserves it but doesn't implement it.
Just use GMP.
@Lalaland Yes, but they're vector, not scalar.
00:11
GCC, I heard actually does support it now.
2
@sehe I think it is not so fast to find the algorithm is pretty crazy
@CatPlusPlus +1, I recently used it with the c++ wrappers for the first time. It was a breeze for me
@Mysticial according to this page only on certain processors?
@MooingDuck That's what I thought so too, but someone proved me wrong recently. Gimme a sec to find that comment.
@sehe Certainly could be. Unfortunately, it's hard to guess from the code he posted.
Ok, with those stars, I leave you. Good night all
are there any homebrew C++ functions out there for (a*b)%m where (a%m)*(b%m) isn't enough?
@JohnSmith probably
2 mins ago, by Mooing Duck
@Mysticial according to this page only on certain processors?
00:15
5
A: gcc intrinsic for extended division/multiplication

hirschhornsalzFor gcc since version 4.6 you can use __int128. This works on most 64 bit hardware. For instance To get the 128 bit result of a 64x64 bit multiplication just use void extmul(size_t a, size_t b, size_t *lo, size_t *hi) { __int128 result = (__int128)a * (__int128)b; *lo = (size_t)result; ...

fuckdiddlyshitbucketes
I'm actually rather sick
I also thought it required 128-bit hardware. But that answer has it working on x64...
@sehe G'night.
I haven't tested it though.
@DeadMG night
@Mysticial aperently clang also supports __int128 on 64bit
00:16
@Mysticial I believe the situation is that it works on x64, but you can't specify an integer literal larger than 64 bits.
So all that's left is MSVC... what a surprise!
so a long long is 4 words? What is the word size of x86-64?
@Mysticial I am surprised, they had 64bit on 32bit processors for quite a while.
@Chimera on most systems a long long is 16 bytes, which is... yeah 4 words.
@MooingDuck MS doesn't care. There isn't enough demand for 128-bit integers.
@Mysticial but it's copy-paste! :(
00:17
Yeah there is. Fucking love 128-bit integers. :(
@MooingDuck No, it's 8 bytes, which is 1 word on 64bit and 2 words on 32bit.
@MooingDuck But that's too hard for them.
I didn't even know it existed, I wrote my own bigint library.
@Rapptz I didn't know that wheels existed. So I invented a wheel.
*Note I shouldn't be talking...
:)
I've never had a need for 128-bit integers directly.
Everything usually fits into 64-bits or needs all-out bignum.
You should do more project euler.
00:20
@DeadMG wait, that's what I meant to say :( Stupid brain
@Rapptz everyone wrote a bigint library.
Just to give an idea of how easy setting a font can be, here's how it works in MFC (and raw API isn't much different). In the class definition: `CFont font;` and in response to a menu entry being selected:

void Cedit_fontView::OnViewFont()
{
CFontDialog f;
if (f.DoModal()==IDOK) {
font.CreateFontIndirect(&f.m_lf);
GetEditCtrl().SetFont(&font);
}
}

I'd hope it was at least as easy with something more modern.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, I'm using the raw API, and it seems to indicate that it should be something quite similar.
but when I actually execute it, nothing happens :P
I resorted to a horrible code dump question
think I'mma go to bed and let the Interwebs solve my problem
Yo momma's so ugly, that she often finds it difficult attracting members of the opposite sex.
SNCR :) Night
@sehe night
Just tested and what I have above works.
00:31
What's DOD?
From this question:
0
Q: Optimizing using DOD while keeping an OOP approach

McBobIm reading about DOD and believe that its a great way to optimize your app to be cache friendly. However, when providing API for users, I believe that it is more easy to deal with OOP (or at least pretend to deal with OOP). I've created the following test prototype (below) to demonstrate the app...

Data Oriented Design
ah
Never heard of it in that acronym.
dodoop
00:52
what's it called where you put lots of logic in one complicated class rather than using polymorphism?
"Shitty programming?"
struct {
   char mathop;
   float left, right;
   void evaluate();
};
@Mysticial no, I'm trying to recommend it to avoid double-dispatch
double-dispatch?
@Mysticial you know how virtual functions call a function depending on the runtime-type of a variable? Double dispatch is where you want to call a function depending on the runtime-types of two or more variables.
oh you want to avoid double-indirection?
00:56
class wolf : animal;
class bunny : animal;
animal* ptr1 = new wolf;
animal* ptr2 = new bunny;
bool eat_me =  ptr1->check_can_eat(ptr2); //how to implement?
Why is it always about animals?
Wouldn't you just use dynamic casts in the method to check if the types work out?
Or is that what you're trying to avoid?
@Mysticial in a giant switch? What if you miss one?
@Mysticial it works, but it's ugly and error prone
oh ic...
You could make an interface called "EatableByXXX".
But that's Java more than anything...
@kbok Sup.
user1357851
01:03
many ways it can be done.
user1357851
you can have a virtual function in animal
user1357851
then inherit it by all animals
user1357851
make it pure virtual in animal so it can not be instantiated
@Telkitty bool wolf::check_can_eat(const animal& rhs) {if bunny, return true, if bear return false;}
@Telkitty it can be done, but isn't as easy as you imply
user1357851
I did not say it would be easy, LOL. But that is how I would approach the problem.
01:07
@Telkitty I've been trying since I mentioned it, keep getting infinite loops
user1357851
@MooingDuck which does?
@Telkitty you need to call a function that's a virtual member of both animals. C++ doesn't offer a way to do that.
I don't think this is elegantly doable with an open set of types.
At least in C++
@CatPlusPlus that's correct.
user1357851
@MooingDuck but when you call: ptr1->check_can_eat(ptr2); you are telling the program to call the function implemented in wolf.
user1357851
01:09
maybe you need to dynamic_cast the ptr1 ptr2 first
@Telkitty and passing it an unknown animal. Can the wolf eat the unknown animal?
user1357851
that's why you need to dynamic_cast ptr2
user1357851
it is like real life, normal people won't eat the thing unless they know what they are >_<
@Telkitty in a if-else-if-else-if? That's slow. And you might forget one
user1357851
dynamic_cast, test for null
01:12
@Telkitty dynamic_cast to what? You don't know the other animal's type!
You'd have to try to dynamic_cast to each animal type one at a time
user1357851
well unless someone else here can give a more elegant solution ...
user1357851
lunch ...
@lalaland any luck with your problem
@Telkitty typical solution seems to be "avoid this at all costs" or "have a closed set of types"
I'm such a fool :( "I'll just do some long due clean up on my blog before I go to sleep". I am done now. :S
@MooingDuck Alexandrescu has a whole chapter dedicated to solving this on his Modern C++ Design book. It's not pretty.
01:21
@MooingDuck On my screen it looks like you're talking to yourself.
Hmm. Validated all the flags.
01:33
@Telkitty Here's how to do it with two derived types known ahead of time. Typos or mistakes here usually result in infinite recursion.
01:48
I don't understand this guy question it's very very ambiguous
 
2 hours later…
03:48
Wow, that Linus guy is really angry about C++.
04:16
Can someone here quickly willing to look at a line of code thats causing me some trouble?
Im not even sure if this is the right place to ask tbh.
Well, just in case someone stumbles in: int carryCheck = unsigned char(old_A) + unsigned char(value) + carryBit;
expected primary-expression before ‘unsigned’
expected ‘,’ or ‘;’ before ‘unsigned’
Xeo
Xeo
function-style-cast expects a simple-typeid, aka a single word.
Use static_cast
Going to guess that having unsigned[SPACE]char is messing you up.
... Yeah, what he said.
Interesting. Is that a part of the C++ standard, or a compiler specific thing?
Im using G++ 4.6.3 btw
Xeo
Xeo
Standard.
Huh. That code apparently compiled for someone. Just wondering, as I'm somewhat new to C++. Thanks :)
Xeo
Xeo
04:24
(unsigned char)(old_A) would work, or (unsigned char)old_A, aka C-style cast.
Well, static_cast seems to have done the trick. Thanks again.
Xeo
Xeo
Or a typedef unsigned char uchar; and then uchar(old_A)
@ThePhD try googling up erik naggum's rants (RIP). :-)
Have you ever given an answer that is just slick to the question, but by the time its posted another total wtf-answer was accepted and you feel like a tree just feel in a forest with no one was there to hear it?
sometimes. but most recent i posted an answer that i think is pretty nice
0
A: Should I use static or inline?

Cheers and hth. - Alfstatic has two relevant meanings: For a function at namespace scope, static gives the function internal linkage, which in practical terms means that the name is not visible to the linker. static can also be used this way for data, but for data this usage is deprecated. Still, constants have int...

but while i wrote that a lot of other answers had been posted, and a rather minimalistic answer had been selected
04:36
Anyone here familiar with chinese remainder theorem at all
i don't care for the rep, but people reading might think that 5 upvotes means good and 0 upvotes means bad
@JohnSmith i once was familiar with it. i won a nut-cracker in wrought iron for solving a problem based on that theorem. the only thing i remember now, is that my main source was Donald Knuth's "The Art of Computer Programming"
Well I have the last few digits of Fib(N) and I want to somehow figure out what the value of Fib(N)%b is without needing to calculate the full value of Fib(N)
just go straight from the last few digits to the equivalent value mod b
well it's easy to go from say 3 last digits to value mod 1000.
or for that matter to value mod 2
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Yeah, that was a pretty deep answer. Right up the ally of what I was talking about.
well what I mean is that I have this big loop, and each iteration I just add the previous two, all mod 10^9, each time
but each time i also need access to fib(n) mod 1.5*10^9
and don't know how to get there
04:40
i think you can't, not without using very special properties of the particular function
@JohnSmith i would simply compute that also along with the mod 10^9. no big deal
i don't know how to keep track of fib(N) mod 1.5*10^9 each iteration
Dijkstra's Algorithm
what is predecessor in step 2 ? :/
This is me thinking I've not drank too much this evening: Are you using a closed-form Fib function ?
04:46
I am looking for a way to keep track of fib(N) mod 1.5*10^9 with each new N
without needing to actually calculate the full value of fib(N)
@JohnSmith compute it module 1.5*10^9. i'm sorry i don't see the problem with that. to add two numbers modulo N, when they're already modulo N, just do (a + b) % N.
it isn't working though when i do that
maybe you're exceeding the range of the type you're using?
user406009
Wait, is (a+b)%N == (a%N + b%N)%N?
yes
why the hell isn't this working
ffs
04:55
Can't sleep. halp
@Cicada I don't think I can be of help, I've woken up not too long ago.
@JohnSmith too little coffee!
There HAS to be a way to iterate across these values
@Cicada too much coffee!
it's driving me NUTS
why the fuck
anfksjnfj.
04:57
@JohnSmith Memoization?
not the problem here
I mean, that's the only kind of caching I've seen for fib, ever
@LucDanton Also today is starting with a compilation course, which I'll gladly skip
I seriously am going to fail this year
@Cicada maybe, you can count morons jumping over fences? you have to visualize them. start with just a really big (like maybe infinite) flock of morons on one side of the fence.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf but why morons ;_;
they're jumping over to get to the other side
04:59
lol
> But the one thing I would change the most from a markup language
suitable for marking up the incidental instruction to a type-setter
to the data representation language suitable for the "market" that
XML wants, is to go for a binary representation.
This man.
This man makes sense.
This is why internally C# and it's XAML counterpart uses BAML when compiled into applications,
@ThePhD Well, yes it does (unless I'm missing something?)
because Binary will always smoke Text by a long shot.
Depends on your needs.
05:11
I suppose it does,
but I still just prefer the straight Binary.
For storage.
Not when you want to be able to manually edit your files.
@ThePhD No, of course not. Long since refuted.
@JerryCoffin Oh, goodie. That seemed the most trollerific Stroutsup I've ever seen ever.
Actually, that would be the most trollerific thing ever, period.
@Cicada I feel I could still edit binary though, with some like a Hex Editor...
Then again, it'd probably be unavailable to anybody who didn't have a concept of binary...
It's filled with bullshit and it's pretty obvious it's not real.
huh, apparently the deprecation of static for namespace data, was removed in C++11
05:18
@ThePhD Oh no you wouldn't, believe me. it's a pain.
@CatPlusPlus But then again the same could be said about C++.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I made countless '"static is deprecated" is deprecated' jokes about that.
@Cicada Well, as long as the text I'm reading isn't XML.
@ThePhD Go edit compiled protobuf.
I had to deconstruct SOAP blocks and parse escaped-string XML.
Greatest time of my life, let me say.
protobuf..... Google time!
05:23
Your life must be sad.
Wow, protobuff looks sexy.
Why haven't I ever seen this stuff?
It looks amazing.
Oh my god protobuf uses UTF8 by default.
I love this.
05:48
Okay, is it just me, or is this just sheer insanity, trying to overlay a linked list on top of a vector:
0
Q: How to point to actual element not just the the array address?

user814628I have some like so: struct Node{ int value; Node *left, Node *right; Node(): value(0), left(0), right(0){} } std::vector<Node> nodeList = getNodes(); I want the above to make a circular buffer. So nodeList[i].left = &nodeList[i - 1]; nodeList[i].right= &nodeList[i + 1]; ...

@JerryCoffin For some people the underlying memory layout is not obvious, and they genuinely believe vector/list are just a representation of the same data.
@Cicada Well, I suppose in a purely abstract way they're even right -- but where did the utter fascination with linked lists come from? They're a fairly crappy structure, suitable only in very limited circumstances. Despite this, people (especially on SO) seem to treat them as the be-all and end-all of data structures, using them to implement everything from sets to dictionaries to ... well, I'm not even sure what this guy thinks he's doing...
> but where did the utter fascination with linked lists come from?
CS courses, obviously :)
From what I understand he wants both O(1) access and neighboor lookup.
this[1], done.
@LucDanton lol
05:57
It even works in the face of iterator/pointer invalidation!
@Cicada Well, I suppose expecting (or even hoping for) them to teach something that stood even a slight chance of being useful would be pretty futile.
Is this a worldwide constant?
@Cicada There are apparently a few exceptions, but widely scattered and hard to find.
06:48
0
A: How to point to actual element not just the the array address?

Cheers and hth. - AlfYou can just make a std::vector<int> originalData = getOriginalData(); Then to sort it while preserving access to the original order, simply sort a std::vector<int const*> itemPointers; which you can initialize like this: for( auto&& x : originalData ) { itemPointer...

^ My best guess about what the OP really wants. I suspect that even if the guess is right, the OP may disagree. :-) Because the question sounded like hooked on the idea of linked lists.
such depth, such richness and complexity, in a minimal utterance
Well, it's a follow up to a previous conversation. It makes sense in context!
i guess that shows the power of abstraction :-)
You know what Hemingway said: brevity.
> internal compiler error: Segmentation fault
06:58
ICE: segfault
:D
I don't want my compiler to be witty!
user1357851
Oh really? Sometimes I hate auto-completion.
Cool, I managed to reduce to a very small case.
user1357851
When the computer/phone second guess me wrong :x
Ahhhh, DeadMG and Robot aren't here. D:
I was gonna start on the road to make my own Memory manager.
And I wanted their input before I did things The Wrong Way.
07:06
what would a memory manager be ?
A place where I allocate all my objects from pre-allocated space.
That is, I'd reserve a chunk of 20 Megabytes for all my Matrix objects. Then, instead of having Matrix inside my Node class, I'd have Matrix*
You can't find an allocator in boost or other library that already does that ?
Not sure. Never really wanted to look at other libraries for my Memory needs.
Up until now I've just been doing the new thing.
@ThePhD You might want to consider Boost Pool.
@JerryCoffin And if I'm not using Boost? ( AKA, I'm totally suicidal? :D )
I think my first design choice is whether or not I want to store a reference to the Pool within my composite objects to use,
or if I just want to make a global Pool and just make a bunch of new-like functions, such as PoolNew() or something
07:15
hum, do you want to allocate custom objects only, or do you intend to use stl containers ?
@ThePhD You can use Pool separately from any other part of Boost (it's a header-only library). If you really want to avoid Boost in general, you could also consider (For one more example) Loki's small object allocator. It's mostly abandoned in favor of Boost Pool though.
@J.N. I am using 0 of 0 STL objects in my code right now, save for my String class which subsets from basic_string (really because I was too lazy to just do my own char* underneath, or make it scratch-spacey and mutable 'n' shit)
@JerryCoffin Yeah, I'm trying to avoid using any libraries at all really (Goddamn GLEW is still nagging my legs because {reasons}, but I'll figure out how to get it out eventually) (of course I'd still use STL facilities, though I tend to avoid the objects themselves). Most everything I'm rolling by myself, so I'm actually interested in writing my own implementation.
@ThePhD: well in that case forget what I said about allocators, you can get inspired from one, but they won't help
DAMNIT I didn't get it in before the edit time finished
Goddamn.
I'm mostly trying to avoid getting too object-oriented with my stuff, to avoid the (not really noticeable until my project would get big) pitfalls here.
well ... I guess those are the kinds of pitfall you optimize for after measurement
but now I don't what you are coding
07:32
@ThePhD In that case, you probably want to do some reading: Modern C++ Design, chapter 4 and Advanced C++, §5.5 look at rather different problems, leading to different solutions (but both worth considering, at least IMO).
@ThePhD Most of this is about how you define your classes, not how you do the memory management itself.
howdy folks
anyone on visual studio?
I'd like to be able to copy an entire solution with all relevant projects
Copy the solution folder?
as in copy paste the files ?
Cicada, afaik projects do not necessarily live in the solutions folder, nor do included source files
J.N. yes, correct
Find them, CTRL + C -> CTRL + V
If you're missing something, the copied solution won't build.
user1804599
07:46
Good morning.
ThePhD, no clean way to do this?
Why would you want to do that anyway
@jamesson Clean? What does that even mean? How can CTRL + C get any cleaner?
Cicada: for tranxport/sharing
First of all, not having your projects in a folder close to your solution (aka children or sibling or not too far away) is just insane.
07:47
If you need somebody to copy your directory tree (and your solution files), put it in some kind of Version Control maybe.
If someone else needs libraries with that solution, then just tell them to get the libraries
@ThePhD, I was hoping for a simple solution, but I guess vc is as simple as it gets
no worries
"You will need Boost and MyHomosexualLibrary to make this work, available at [Boost.org] and [FlamingFaggots.ass], respectively" > README.txt
ThePhD: Stay classy, bro XD
@JerryCoffin Yes, but the later slides show that the Matrices on the class are 'allocated' elsewhere, as are the vectors and other things. This implies the memory is allocated not-on-the-class, either through the use of new, placing it on the heap, or in some kind of pool (the objects in the presentation were all grouped together, implying there were cache's or pools for these things)
user1357851
it could get more messy: i.e. using remote procedure calls on different servers
07:52
I haven't gotten into RPC yet and it sounds like it'd be bitchin', in the not-so-party-style way.
Hm. That makes me wonder.
Hmmm....
@ThePhD you could use an std::vector to store your matrices. It will have the properties described in the slides
you'll need to preallocate it to avoid having your objects being moved around
std::unordered_map<std::type_info, void*> Pools;
Wow that's just ugly, eww jesus christ what's wrong with me.
template <class T, int Size> class PoolOf { public: static std::array<T, Size> Pool; };
I think I'd elide that int Size
I'd want it to dynamically resize in case I hit the limit.
ah
07:58
Of course, over a certain limit I'd error.
Or throw
be careful because any std container will move the memory on resize
@ThePhD Most of it isn't about the memory manager. It's basically saying that (for example) instead of class A { int a, b, c}; std::vector<A>, that in a lot of cases, it's better to write it as std::vector<int> a; std::vector<int> b; std::vector<int> c;. Quite a bit of that is heavily hardware dependent though. He doesn't mention it there, but another method that can be highly effective is replacing link-based trees with heaps.
Heaps replace memory accesses with cheap math, and give denser data by eliminating pointers.
@J.N. or just boost::pool, really
@Cicada No Boost, no fun!
@Cicada suggested that already, @ThePhD doesn't want to use pool
07:59
C++ without Boost is like a pile of shit without the flies.

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