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21:00
lol what a bunch of tryhards you are
hides in the closet
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG wuut?
great I learned a new word today!
But yes, beer does contain female hormones. Else what would give you this permanent pregnant-looking belly? :))))))
21:01
Now bow.
Ell
Ell
why won't quantum computers be invented?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes and no. No, I don't think it's reasonable to blindly assume Moore's law will continue that long (I believe for it to do so, we'd need memory cells smaller than a single atom). This is more to establish a minimum point at which it's even reasonably conceivable, and concluding "far enough out that I doubt I'll ever care."
Ell
Ell
They already exist don't they?
@Cicada To a woman? Never!
That came out wrong.
@Ell Yes, but nothing close enough practical to really even count as a proof of concept yet.
21:04
@JerryCoffin Nah. There is a commercial quantum computer out now, they programmed it to solve TSP, I think.
@Ell Prolog.
@JerryCoffin for a 128 bit harddrive to come even remotely close to using the address space you'd have to have millions of bits per atom.
the problem with quantum computers isn't that they don't work, it's just that it's hard to keep them working :P
@DeadMG There are a couple of people with things they're calling quantum computers, but most researchers don't really agree that they are. They do work to optimize a few of the problems quantum computing should, but can't do everything a quantum computer is supposed to.
21:06
@MooingDuck Millions. How generous of you. You need to buy new words.
I have a sort of design pattern/architecture question:
> Templeton
what
@R.MartinhoFernandes at "millions" it would be on the same scale as the mass of our solar system. (277million to be precise) Which isn't impossible...
@MooingDuck I can't wait for IPv651
21:08
I'm using part of an API that has a class that consists of a flag and a couple fields, then if the flag is set to one particular type, there's a reference to another class with a bunch more fields
well
@MooingDuck What material would that solar system-sized (well weighed) hard drive be made of?
in many ways, I would be very wary of putting upper limits on future information technologies
Something close to 99% of that mass is hydrogen and helium.
The code I'm writing needs to set up a bunch of instances of that class
21:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes that calculation was made based on hydrogen.
after all, Moore's Law was predicted to end long before today repeatedly
initially, IIRC, it was only going to last 10 years, but it's been what, 50, 60?
@DeadMG I am quite confident in discarding ridiculous masses for hard drives.
so... what would be the "right" way to go about setting up all my instances?
Well, the other side of it is that a current computer can't even generate all the addresses in a 64-bit range in any reasonable period of time. If you generate addresses at 10 GHz, it still takes 500+ years just to generate them all.
@BrianTempleton I don't see what the problem is.
21:11
@JerryCoffin Maybe "a" current computer, but our total computing power could easily handle it, and in isolation perhaps even some of our supercomputers wouldn't have too much issue with it.
@DeadMG How's your life going btw. Did you get a job?
@Cicada Still working on that.
oh, what the fuck
19 prisoners arriving tomorrow?!
21:12
slow clap
it was going swimmingly
also what pun?
Xeo
Xeo
54 secs ago, by DeadMG
@Cicada Still working on that.
Well... right now I have this sort of procedural code, where I create a new instance of the API class, then set a bunch of fields, then if its that one specific type, I have to call another function that returns a new reference to the other class, then set a bunch of fields there, rinse and repeat a whole bunch of times
Xeo
Xeo
To the question "Did you get a job?"
Ell
Ell
@JerryCoffin what do you mean generate addresses?
21:13
@DeadMG True -- just for example, a few thousand processors can do it in six months. Unfortunately, that requires a memory bus around the speed of a CPU core, which we aren't even approaching yet.
@Ell Enumerate all numbers from 0 to 2^64 -1
@BrianTempleton great. Do that. I don't see why you're telling us.
@JerryCoffin Well, for one, if you consider all cores, most procs sold today could be looking at 12GHz, not to mention getting more than one instruction per cycle.
is there some more object oriented way to do it? create some kind of wrapper class or something?
@BrianTempleton this is not the place to be asking that question anyway
21:14
but also, if one 5Ghz core could do it in 500 years, then it'd only take 1000 for six months- not a few thousand, and last I checked, our supercomputers are more like 10-20k procs
@BrianTempleton What the hell, man.
I'm using C++!
@BrianTempleton probably, but without a much better description, nobody could tell you
do you even know what the desired properties are?
"more object orientated"?
21:15
@BrianTempleton this is a lounge, not a help-site. Post a StackOverflow Question
@DeadMG Yes, internally -- but the memory bus is much slower (15x). Worse, it's not growing nearly as fast as core speeds either. Worse still, even as memory bandwidth improves, latency improves much more slowly.
for one, "more object orientated" is really quite subjective and not useful for anyone, and for two, there's no reason to assume an OO solution would actually be better, and for three, what makes you think that a function generating them is not object-orientated?
@JerryCoffin True... but generating them doesn't require writing them to a hard drive, it just means generating them :P I get your point about memory being deathly slow, though.
@BrianTempleton when you write the SO question, be sure to show your code or pseudo-code, or else it will be closed.
I don't have a function generating them.... just a whole bunch of repetitive code with slightly different values for each parameter
> orientated
what
Ell
Ell
21:17
argghh god, who uses a checkbox to paste text!
@BrianTempleton If the values are constant then what else could you possibly do?
they have to be written somewhere.
so unless you can generate them, which you can't or surely you would have done that by now (?) then there's nothing more
hmm
I don't think I'm explaining this right at all
@BrianTempleton (1) I already said that (2) Explain it right in a stackoverflow question, not in a lounge
@Cicada Yes -- not a word. Another that bothers me that I used to hear a lot in bars/clubs was "conversating" (or even "conversationalizing") instead of "conversing".
21:20
yep
Silly GitHub is not triggering rebuilds of my site :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes Your website auto-rebuilds itself on Checkin?
That's pretty badass.
@ThePhD That's pretty par for the course.
@ThePhD Well, it's supposed to anyway...
I dunno, I would always do something like explicitly rebuild the stuff and refresh the site manually.
Cache was always a pain though.
Saved all the stuff I had just updated, decided to be memory efficient and not reload the page. :c
bandwidth efficient?
Probably bandwidth efficient.
21:24
Hello all, I am trying to compute the first set bit in an integer and wrote this small assembly language function, does anyone see anything wrong with it ?

http://pastebin.com/UwVAuNF1
its 2 freaking lines of code and should work fine !! :@
I think I'll have to install Jekyll and test locally to discard the possibility of there being errors. Thought the last time it happened, I got an email about it. Dammit, I have absolutely no idea what is going on.
Not enough jQuery.
Don't write naked functions if you have no idea how naked functions are supposed to work.
@angryInsomniac You're not writing any result.
@angryInsomniac 64 bit code?
21:26
@CatPlusPlus With titties and condoms
Ow. Naked function, no prologue, ret. That's bad, right?
@MooingDuck nope 32 bit
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes
@R.MartinhoFernandes bad how exactly ? I dont really know a lot of asm, I just looked up a really fast way to find the highest set bit in an integer
well
inline assembler is really bad
21:29
And not-working for 64-bit.
@Cicada You're looking for an internship for when?
it's not portable, even to 64bit, the optimizer can't handle it, and writing assembly sucks
there are intrinsics for a reason- use them
@EtiennedeMartel A 6 months (or more) internship starting in january 2014.
@Cicada That's a long time to wait. Or is that, like, when you're done with school?
I am playing with Visual Studio but its kinda slow to write code,... especially I can't do any refactor/generate method stuff as in IntelliJ or stuff... it's like I need to write all the code myself
21:30
Ah, dammit, I need Ruby for this.
posted on November 20, 2012 by Eric Battalio

The Visual C++ build experience survey (http://aka.ms/cppbuildsurvey) has almost passed the 250 response mark on the way to 500 responses. Thank you to everyone who has already provided feedback. To those that have not yet had a chance to take the survey, please consider spending ~10 minutes sharing your thoughts with the team. Your help is appreciated and does make an impact. And as a bonus,

@ThePhD Yeah it's what they call the "projet de fin d'études" (end-of-studies project ?)
@DeadMG hmm, will prolly have to us intrinsics then
WTF, don't bother flagging Feeds.
jeez, I've been on it for more than one hour and my dwarf fortress game hasn't started yet.
21:31
5
A: Find most significant bit (left-most) that is set in a bit array

ArkkuThere are multiple ways to do this, and the relative performance of the different implementations is somewhat machine-dependent (I happen to have benchmarked this to some extent for a similar purpose). On some machines there's even a built-in instruction for this (use one if available and portabi...

@Cicada Oooooooooooh. Cool. I wish they did that in America. Instead of making people just take more useless shitty classes.
@kbok it? Oh, generating a world?
@ThePhD Don't worry, we have these too. Probably even shittier than yours. (Ever heard of Prolog?)
@Cicada Prolog? Noty.
Prolog is the future.
I'll give my babies to Prolog.
21:33
@Cicada So faaaaar away.
An Apocalyptic Future, maybe.
@Cicada Can I hold you to that?
@ThePhD some colleges do that. it's common for architects and doctors and such
@MooingDuck this, and "preparing for the journey carefully"
Wait, who flagged Feeds' stuff?
21:33
@EtiennedeMartel I know. But it might actually be 2013 since chances are I'm going to fail this semester and therefore leave uni :D
@MooingDuck Residency sounds badass.
@EtiennedeMartel that's at least two people
Or rather, looks badass.
It's like, mandated experience.
@kbok Sometimes I think I prepare for the journey too carefully.
@Cicada You don't seem too stressed out by that eventuality.
21:34
And I always forget to save the setup.
@kbok pft, no skills, two dogs, two cats, six of each seed, one of each alcohol, one of each meat until out of points. Also change all defaults from 5->6.
@Cicada Don't fail, you can do iiiit!
@EtiennedeMartel It'll be terrible in terms of job opportunities in france, but it'll be excellent for my health.
How do computers perform left and right shifts?
@Kian barrel shifting usually
21:35
Do they literally just move the bits along one
@Kian yes
@Cicada I guess leaving France might be a good idea.
@Kian Yes. But all simultaneously.
how long do international transfers usually take?
still haven't got my refund from Linz :(
@MooingDuck Which defaults?
21:36
How does the hardware work?
@DeadMG Close to instant?
@EtiennedeMartel s/might be a good idea/is an absolute must/
@DeadMG Few minutes. I believe the transaction takes no more than a few secs, even.
Nevermind, I found the Wiki page for barrel shifters
@R.MartinhoFernandes everything that it defaults to five of.
@DeadMG You're fucked.
21:37
@MooingDuck Oh, you mean what comes with the default setup?
Ah.
man, that refund is like, five hundred quid
I could really use that moneys :(
Qlobally uni - oh wait.
according to the wiki bringing two birds along is a good idea too
I'm trying to get my girlfriend to login as root on the linux netbook, via facebook. tough :)
> Left double-click the self-extracting executable (SFX) downloaded from Step 2 and choose a directory (without spaces) to install the DevKit artifacts into.
Fuck you shitty software writers.
21:39
Is there some weird compiler option that ya need to set to make compiler intrinsics work ?
Without spaces. =l
@angryInsomniac probably not. What compiler?
@R.MartinhoFernandes fuck installers
Unfortunately, most common end-users don't know how to manage extracting a Zip and double-clicking the .exe.
@angryInsomniac I think there is an "Enable intrinsics" button, but I'm not sure since for me they've always just worked, but don't forget they are declared in a header and you have to #include it.
21:40
@Cicada The issue is not the installer (it's not an installer, it's a just a 7z archive). The software in it will not run from, say, \Program Files, no matter how you install it.
I don't understand how - internally - a program cannot handle a directory with spaces.
@DeadMG intrin.h , included that , but for some reason it just complains and says it doesnt know what BitScanReverse is !
@R.MartinhoFernandes fuck software
@ThePhD failing to wrap parameters in quotes
@ThePhD No fucking idea. Yet it happens.
21:42
@ThePhD system("myprogram", usercommandline); returns error "myprogram cannot open file "C:/Program". myprogram cannot open file "Files\myfile.txt".
@ThePhD Being written by an ignorant fuck that is dumb enough to not know about abstraction, or being written by an ignorant fuck that is dumb enough to know about it but prefers to reinvent stuff badly.
.... what's start for, exactly? o_O;
@ThePhD I meant System. Tells the OS to do stuff.
SYSTEM
Bold, Italics, and Capitalized?
That's like a Fus Ro Dah or something.
21:45
@ThePhD and ANGRY
Lol, I actually wrote a program that made text seem really fucking angry.
I was experimenting with the idea of text as particles.
It was really fun.
I wonder if I still have it.
I never actually got the Dah part.
NOPE, I lost it.
Fus Ro Dah ~ Said the lord ~ Fucking cool ~ Oh my god
@angryInsomniac Because it's _BitScanReverse.
21:48
~~~~~ Tilde Tilde Tilde ~~~~~
@DeadMG Dat Underscore
@DeadMG That ... is what I am writing :D
trust me I checked it all :P
Wtf is going on here...
Did @Cicada's madness spread?
@Borgleader Just Skyrim's theme.
I'm almost 500% sure this is going to bite me in the ass somehow later....
I should const it.
@Borgleader Listen carefully to the song Fus Ro Dah ~ Said the lord ~ Fucking cool ~ Oh my god ~
Fighting Dragons on Skyrim, which was supposed to be one of the highlights, is boring as fuck.
question
No you cannot be a lesbian
if you're opening a file from the same directory and then writing the same file, is there a way to write over it completely?
21:54
for example, you have a directory like
i eat poop.txt
server
client
then you run server and client, and put i eat poop.txt, then you take i eat poop.txt
Giving a shit and taking a shit.
From my experience, it tends to massacre the text file. And you don't wanna know what's in that textfile!
Reciprocity.
yeah, except I tend to take a shit in the toilet, so where do you want me to give a shit, the toilet?
21:56
Until it floods, and then you're like "Hey man whoa whoa, I'm sorry I gave you so much shit, can you just chill?" And you talk it down while you slowly reach for the plunger, a murderous glint coming into your eye...
you put way too much thought into this shit
I'm reading 200 bytes at a time though, that might be an important detail
What. No. If you want your file to be in a consistent state, use locking of some sort.
I'm still unsure on what the hell you're trying to do
sbi
sbi
Hi, I have another question about std::bind(): I want to create a functor foo(bar) from foo(baz,bar), with baz fixed at functor creation time. Anyone?
21:57
@sbi Have you tried logarithms?
Helpful as always.
@sbi bind(foo, baz, _1)?
@sbi std::bind(foo, baz, _1);.
sbi
sbi
@Cicada Yes, but they give me the gout.
Thanks, @R.Martinho, @Dead.
by the way
shouldn't you be at home or something and not still dealing with bind?
@DeadMG He's probably at home but still dealing with it.
21:59
fair enough

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