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06:01
Looks like it's actually working...
Oh wow, a whole module dedicated to addition
@Pubby Yeah.
It's not a big module though.
Only 2020 lines long.
Includes out-of-core addition for operands on disk.
Which has a lot of buffering to manage.
There's two modules for multiplication. The bigger one has dependencies on all the major multiplication algorithms - each of which have their own module(s).
@Mysticial What is the majority of code (largest modules) doing?
@Pubby gimme a sec to put together the entire dependency chain of the multiplication module
@Mysticial I meant the majority of code in all of y cruncher, but multiplication would be interesting too.
06:12
@Pubby The multiplication module (along with its dependencies) is the largest module.
Oh, that's crazy
He wrote "in different browsers" when talking about C++ code
all these answers are horrible
@Mysticial Welcome to C(++), where it takes several thousand lines of code before you can multiply
06:14
he codes in C
Multiplication Wrapper             - 9204

    APIs                               - 9,427    (used by all other modules)
    Checksum Hashing                   - 951      (also used by other modules)
    Random Number Generation           - 393      (also used by other modules)
    Swap File Pointer                  - 707      (also used by other modules)
    Hybrid Raid 0/3                    - 5,156    (also used by other modules)

    Basic Multiplication               - 5,556
    Fast Fourier Transforms (FFT)      - 29,818
feel free to add it up
@Mysticial You're the one with the addition module!
I can't even count :(
The last 4 are the 4 major multiplication algorithms.
Each of them are large enough to deserve its own module.
@Pubby Yeah, it takes more than a few thousand lines. :)
Oh, and these don't include several thousand lines of tuning parameter tables.
*which are script generated. So it doesn't count as real code.
It looks like the multiplication module and its dependencies accounts for 63% of the entire code base.
Part of why it's so big is because of micro-optimizations (like loop unrolling) along with out-of-core handling for operands on disk.
Out-of-core computation basically uses ram like a cache. And you explicitly move data to and from memory manually. So lots of micro-management.
06:57
is there any macro in boost that generates std::pair<const char*, T> pair ? given BOOST_PAIR(v)
something like BOST_NVP that takes one argument only
Ell
Ell
07:32
@myst I think you are this rooms academic tenuous
Genious
Genius
07:45
Worst title ever.
I was debugging a crash and then my terminal emulator crashed. FML
@Rapptz Lot of them look duplicates
How can you tell with such a god awful title
Does anyone here actually use interactive debugging with templated C++11?
What is interactive debugging? Or rather non-interactive? Because all my debugging seems to be interactive.
07:50
Like, simply stepping over lines in GDB seems really not to work at all.
I don't think I've really used a debugger for much as opposed to just printf since I started C++11.
yeah, some times its hard
hard as in completely impossible? Steps in or steps out when it's supposed to step over?
I remember this happening once or twice. It was due to some corruption or something (because I had not initialized the variable)
@Rapptz I was just thinking the exact same thing.
08:11
@jalf hi
o/
You are the TM expert, right? What do you think is a good introductory read?
@Potatoswatter with gcc/gdb? I think Apple's current version of Clang has an issue like that, but haven't heard of a similar one with gdb. But there's no reason why it shouldn't work, other than buggy debuggers/bad debug info
@bamboon oof, hardly an expert, but yeah, I wrote my masters thesis on the subject :)
@bamboon I found this book extremely helpful: morganclaypool.com/doi/abs/10.2200/s00272ed1v01y201006cac011
@jalf ok, thanks for the tip. I will check if our lib got that
@bamboon Why are you reading up on TM?
08:19
Is it legal for two headers to include each other if they are protected by header guards?
@Mysticial sure, there are no rules against any of that
it can be a bit tricky to figure out exactly what gets included where, but it's perfectly legal
you can make a file include itself too, if you like
k, thx
@jalf plain interest. With Intel incorporating it directly into their next CPU architecture and the cpp standard committee having an own working group for it, I think it will be pretty important in the future.
I was under some impression that includes might be processed before ifndefso it would cause a infinite chain.
Just wanted to make sure.
08:21
@Mysticial they don't. Otherwise, all cross-platform code would break horribly
@jalf Oh you're right. :)
when building on linux, it'd crap out because you have an #include <windows.h> somewhere, ifdef'ed out
and vice versa
@Mysticial Everything is done line by line. The preprocessor even goes to clever lengths to appear unclever.
@Potatoswatter with some success
shuddup
:)
08:22
@bamboon ah yeah, true enough. I'm very curious to see how that's all going to turn out
although I must say I did like the plain software implementations. All this new-fangled hardware support is not nearly as cool ;)
And not just because it's making my software implementation obsolete before I finish it! ;)
@jalf ^^, is your master thesis readable for a beginner?
@bamboon it's intended to be. There's a lot of it I wish I'd written better/differently, but it's intended to be readable without any prior knowledge of TM
I also wrote a short intro page here
@jalf cool, I am gonna check that out
@jalf the link to your thesis is dead :(
Hmm... VS2012's syntax highlighting is not consistent.
@bamboon ah, I'll dig it up once I get home :)
I guess you'll have to do with that intro page until then
It's much better written anyway ;)
08:35
@jalf yeah np, would be cool, if you could ping me, when you fixed it.
will do :)
@Mysticial prove it!
Good morning
@sehe In some cases, it fails to highlight macros and typedefs even though a mouse-over correct identifies the definition.
Seems to have to do with include cycles as I was asking about earlier.
@Mysticial Oh. I thought you claimed it was not inconcistent :) misread
I am saying that it's inconsistent. But I didn't deny that it might be my code that's confusing it.
08:43
morning all
evening
yeah, all the intellisense stuff in VS is a crude approximation. It doesn't fully compile your code, so there's a lot of information it doesn't have
it's especially shaky in headers, because it doesn't know the context the file is going to be included from
Yeah, it's the include cycles that are screwing up the syntax highlighter...
stupid John Lewis not shipping stuff I want to out side the UK (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
I've gotten in the habit of not relying on VS intellisense or syntax highlighting. When it works, I take it as a pleasant and unexpected surprise. :)
08:51
@jalf so, what is there left to VS? what more is it then a text editor with a big fat compile this shit button?
"oooh, it know the type of that variable? Magic!"
@thecoshman a good debugger :)
and good Windows support ;)
debugger I will give you, just. But how is does it have 'good Windows support'?
@thecoshman the compiler generates code that is 100% compatible with the windows ABI? ;)
ah, so it's the compiler that you like, not the 'IDE'
08:54
@thecoshman yep. As far as the IDE goes, it's mainly the debugger I like
well, for the most part, I like the basic IDE as well. I just don't expect much from Intellisense
so, this 'IDE' basically boils down to a debugging tool, with a load of shit to get in yout way
@thecoshman And a text editor and project structure to organize my code
also familiarity
@jalf you really like the VS text editor? may I suggest you try others? an structure to organise you code, so what, folders? come on now, you can't really consider those shiny features worth using
@thecoshman Which others would you like me to try?
And no, having access to the entire project structure (which might be different than your folder structure) can be nice
So yeah, I consider them worth using
08:59
@jalf well, I suppose a good portion of the world try to shank me if I did not suggest 'vim', apparently it shits gold bricks. I've personally fallen in love with Sublime Text
Well, I'm using vim right now :)
@jalf why would it be different?
I never said I used VS exclusively
@jalf would you have tried to shank me had I not suggested it?
@thecoshman why wouldn't it? A project might extend across several folders. Or perhaps it shouldn't include every file in that folder (perhaps some are only relevant on other platforms, or perhaps they're just not code files)
@thecoshman nope. And I'm certainly not an advanced user
Anyway, overall, I find VS the path of least resistance when I'm working on Windows
09:02
Holy fuck shits? is MS really that stupid? as a security feature, you can swap out your password made up of over 30 odd characters for each of nearly unlimited length for a pin made of four digits...
As for liking the text editor, yeah, pretty much. It works well enough IMO
@thecoshman what are you talking about?
project root = /
actual code files = /src
non code files = /resource
sorted
@jalf 'well enough' dear me, you are a lost cause :P
@jalf probably is :P
@thecoshman i just have better things to do with my time than religious crusades over a text editor
@jalf me to, but I certainly am up for finding ones that don't grate on me
@thecoshman where do they advertise it as a security feature?
09:05
@jalf perhaps not the best way of phrasing it, but you can use a 10^4 combo pin rather then a 40ish^asBoutAsLongAsYouLike password
Last I checked, pretty much every OS allows you to run without a password if you want to. Why shouldn't Windows let you use a pin code then? It's up to you to decide if it's secure enough for you
@thecoshman Perhaps you could show me an OS which unconditionally requires you to use a 40 character password?
I guess...
@jalf the 40ish is the number of options for each character...
30'ish then, if that's the length of your password
I don't see how that changes anything
the letters a-z, numbers 0-9 and the special characters as well... actually, there is A-Z then as well
do you not get how I get the 10^4 for the number of combinations for a numerical pin?
Yes, Microsoft must be soooo goddamn dumb for letting the user decide how long a password they want. What were they thinking? Linux or OSX would never do that. And I certainly can't unlock my phone with a 4-digit pin
@thecoshman Yes, I get that.
09:08
@jalf ¬_¬ so how do you fail to understand what I mean by (number of possible characters for each 'char' of your password)^(length of your password)
@thecoshman What on Earth gives you the idea that I "fail to understand" that?
@jalf that you appear to fail to understand it?
@jalf like here
@jalf or here
@jalf here too
You said you used a 30'ish character password and that Microsoft is dumb for allowing you to use one with less entropy, and so I ask you which OS requires you to use a 30'ish character password
Are you high?
9 mins ago, by thecoshman
Holy fuck shits? is MS really that stupid? as a security feature, you can swap out your password made up of over 30 odd characters for each of nearly unlimited length for a pin made of four digits...
Remember that? Note the 30 part. That was qwhat I was referring to
@jalf ah, I meant that to be the number of options for each character, a gross under estimate on my part. I did not mean it to be the length of the password
Ah ok
You should have worded it better
but it's still not relevant
point is, every OS I know of allows you to pick a high entropy password if you want to, and it also allows you to pick a low entropy password
09:12
I also didn't really read the page, just got the jist of it
On Linux I can set my password to some monstrous combination of dozens of random characters, or I can set it to 'a'
So you're just trolling, then?
yes, but take a pin code, it is four digits long, that is 10^4 combos. take a four character p'word, each characters can be one of like 50, that's 50^4 combos, a fair bit more
Let me get this straight.... Just making sure here. You didn't read an article on the internet which didn't say what you thought it said, and use it as evidence that Microsoft is dumb?
That certainly shows dumbness, but not on the part of Microsoft
@thecoshman BREAKING NEWS: LONG PASSWORDS WITH ARBITRARY CHARACTERS HAVE MORE ENTROPY THAN SHORT PASSWORDS WITH DIGITS ONLY
@jalf :O write a paper on that one
@thecoshman Now please compare that 10^4 figure to what I get if I use a single-character password
09:16
I still hold it is a poor decision, people all ready have a poor enough time with using passwords too short
and tell me how, considering every OS already allows that, Microsoft is dumb for enabling something that is orders of magnitudes safer
@thecoshman Have you tried typing on a phone recently? Where do you think this pin code feature is intended to be used?
And how is it a poor decision?
@jalf derp, I am still getting used to this idea of a generic OS for both phone and desktop
... and tablets
though I would still rather have a proper p'word on my phone, if I could keep swipy pattern unlock. Physically having my phone is the best security I have. Against remote attacks though, a decent password / PSK is the way to go
besides, password length really isn't a huge deal in that case. You can't easily bruteforce it unless you extract the password hash. Trying to brute-force it from the login screen would take ages, even with a 4-digit pin
09:20
if physically entering it yes. but I think script kiddies are past that :P
Of course, if people do extract that hash, you certainly want a long, secure password. But if they're able to get data out of your computer anyway, you've probably lost regardless :)
to be fair, the article does clearly say that it's not s secure
Look, just admit it, you were trying to bash Microsoft over something they never said, and over a feature which makes a lot of sense, and doesn't really compromise security
@thecoshman you only just realized that? :|
@jalf ... skimmed :P
Funny, when I skim an article, I tend to miss information that is there. You seem to read information which isn't there
09:23
I guess it depends on where you can use this pin... if it only for unlocking, it would not be too bad
@jalf conclusions, I jump to them :P
I am sure at least one cool invention was invented thanks to jumping to conclusions
either way, one thing I can say, win8 looks so old fashioned
sort of like someone tried to describe LCARS and failed to mention rounded corners
you guys are arguing on a Monday morning?
jeez
hey, I just missed four days of giving out about shit I know nothing about! I've got lost time to make up for
oh my, big decision time. I have more day off to book before Christmas
09:35
me thinks the 14th sounds like a good day to take off
is that just randomly picked?
not really, it's a Friday of the penultimate week
the final week basically nothing happens
@thecoshman Today is Friday? Thank god, I thought it was Monday.
but this a vector of vectors of vectors, it's a very different question — thecoshman 11 secs ago
@FredOverflow ¬_¬ was the room a bit to busy for you?
09:40
I have been very busy with work yesterday and have completely lost my sense of time.
@FredOverflow it's 2016 btw, the Olympics where awesome!
How was GoingNative 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016? Is C++1y out yet?
another day which is going to bore me out of my mind...
Haskell makes the boredom go away!
When I'm bored, I usually read a book, watch the Simpsons or try to understand monads.
5
09:56
Function template specialization isn't allowed, right?
@FredOverflow Haha, can you imagine reading a book at work?
lol
@TonyTheLion Use overloads.
@TonyTheLion What's so farfetched about that?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because I don't really need to read a book for my work
My workplace kind of looks like a library.
0
Q: I don't understand why this template specialization is failing in VS 2010

Fredtemplate<typename T> T foo(std::string key, T &def_value) {return def_value;} template<> std::string foo<std::string>(std::string key, std::string &def_value) {return def_value;} fatal error LNK1169: one or more multiply defined symbols found If I remove the 2nd ...

hmmmm
There are books on most walls.
09:59
@FredOverflow shit, as always
@R.MartinhoFernandes which kind of library? static, dynamic? :p
was wondering what the answer to this is?
I've noticed there a few C++ books floating around work... not sure if they are relics of days gone by, or wishful thinking
@TonyTheLion there is an answer now :)
@thecoshman How do they float? Do they keep the books in water tanks?
10:02
@thecoshman hi there
Hmm, cake.
@FredOverflow I thought you would grok monads by now.
@TonyTheLion There are XML books, you know?
@TonyTheLion I read a couple of books per week (of course not cover to cover, just a 15 minute glance) at work to decide whether or not we should add them to our library.
@thecoshman I liked the GoingNatives so far...
@R.MartinhoFernandes You'd think so, but no.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't need XML books. Grrrr
@R.MartinhoFernandes Intructory lol, stupid Windows Firefox not correcting my misakes. Thanks!
10:30
@R.MartinhoFernandes stored in tanks with insanely dense gas
I feel like I should write something about smart pointers on interfaces. It seems to be complicated enough to generate lots of confusion. I asked Herb about putting the answer to GOTW #105 online, but he seems to be too busy promoting the C++ Renaissance.
@FredOverflow yeah, being overly moany :P
@melak47 hi
@thecoshman modany? Monady
It's now been six months since GOTW #105 was published.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
10:31
It's more like Guru of the Week Semester.
2
@sehe grumbally
@R.MartinhoFernandes Guru of the Week? I always thought it was Gotcha of the Week :)
@FredOverflow He changed that sometime back, when it started becoming more about general advice than gotchas.
Or maybe he is still struggling to accept that he did wrong when he recommended passing shared_ptrs by reference.
Are you telling me there aren't enough gotchas in C++? ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes You mean instead of passing naked pointers?
Or references. Or shared_ptrs by value.
10:50
> Ericsson sues Samsung
fucking patents (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
"is of type" or "is off type"?
@thecoshman of type, of course
off type, off course
int32_t x = 1 << 33; // off type
lol
But why 33 when 32 will already do? ;)
10:58
agreed
Half of the programming errors are probably off-by-one errors. And by that I mean 51%.
I didn't want to let doubts about standardese get in the way of the joke.
there was a joke?
@DeadMG ¬_¬ I suppose I should still say thanks
10:59
1 min ago, by FredOverflow
lol

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