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09:02
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah -- how to coerce std::for_each to act like a mediocre imitation of std::find; what an accomplishment!
@JerryCoffin std::for_each cannot break, though.
@chris in_avail will tell you if the stream buffer contains data that hasn't been consumed yet, but nothing more.
@chris It does not.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Exactly!
If you're wondering where it's coming from, stackoverflow.com/a/14192474/962089
09:07
Apparently Gangnam Style has over 1 billion views on Youtube.
Since Dec. 21, yeah.
[rmf@persephone ~]$ cat a.cpp
#include <iostream>
#include <chrono>
int main() {
    auto in_30_seconds = std::chrono::system_clock::now() + std::chrono::seconds(30);
    while(std::chrono::system_clock::now() < in_30_seconds
          && ! std::cin.rdbuf()->in_avail())
    {}
}
[rmf@persephone ~]$ g++ -std=c++11 a.cpp
[rmf@persephone ~]$ ./a.out
I am typing stuff and this does not break the loop. See? It only stops when I press Enter, I guess.
Nope, not en[rmf@persephone ~]$ I am typing stuff and this does not break the loop. See? It only stops when I press Enter, I guess
@chris See?
@R.MartinhoFernandes, Pretty clearly, yes.
@chris Yeah -- pretty sure his code won't work (except, conceivably, on a completely broken system). If in_avail is false, it'll remain false until you call an input function. Basically, you have to do a blocking read, then you can call it to see if the next read won't block. You can continue doing that until it returns 0/false, after which it'll continue to return false at least until you do a read again.
I see what you mean.
09:12
chrono won't do any good. Bottom line is that the OP needs a non-blocking read, and the standard doesn't provide one. in_avail is the closest it has, but that's not really a non-blocking read, just a way to see if a previous blocking read left some input in the buffer. If it did, you can read that without blocking, but if it didn't, the only way to get more is a blocking read.
Yeh, we reached that conclusion (the the tools really needed are missing) a while back.
lol, there is a Turbo C answer there.
Well, it's late here. I think I need sleep.
Yes we did, lol. I was purely suggesting chrono for the Timer part. That works perfectly by itself.
@chris For the timer, it's fine. The problem is that you can't cancel the attempt to read when the time's up.
@JerryCoffin, Yup. I actually did make a timer, but what really sucked was its wait function. I didn't have a working version of <thread> to use with GCC.
Xeo
Xeo
09:18
They told me they were inexperienced when they wrote this codebase back then, some 3 years ago... but holy crap, a Singleton class with a virtual destructor? :(
I sincerely hope not to start a holy war with this question: Which online C++ reference do you find yourself using most often when pointing answers to standard-lib documentation? There appears to be a few dominant ones, and I'm just curious which one seems to have higher accuracy and should be used over others.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, wrong link, sec.
@WhozCraig None. I cite the standard.
user1182183
hm you guys mind helping me in a problem where I can't decide to buy something or not? :P
user1182183
(about computer hardware)
09:19
@GamErix Sure -- don't buy it. Send the money to me!
user1182183
@JerryCoffin that escalated quickly ;o
Xeo
Xeo
@JerryCoffin Yeah, or that.
user1182183
Well, the ram in my laptop is DDR3-667 , I have an intel core i3 @ 2.4 ghz with 2 cores, each core 2 virtual cores, and, I was wondering if I would buy DDR3-2133 ram, would there be a significant speedup, or not?
Buy it and profile first.
Oh, wait.
Xeo
Xeo
09:21
@GamErix The question is, does your mainboard handle 2133?
user1182183
@Xeo ;o how can I know that :P
user1182183
Acer 5742G
Thats somewhat what I've noticed (the cppreference.com usage, not the standard citing, which I tend to do more and more as well). Thank you.
What the heck is a virtual core?
Xeo
Xeo
Check the manual / manufacturer website?
09:21
@GamErix look up the specs
i didn't know hardware had anything virtual
@Neil he means logical core
@WhozCraig I like it because I can fix mistakes.
@TonyTheLion Oh. Did you mean logical cores?
@WhozCraig, I either use cppreference or the standard. cppreference does occasionally have mistakes, but they can be fixed.
user1182183
09:22
@Neil yeah
@Neil yes, isn't that what I'm saying?!
I would contribute more often to it if the wiki syntax wasn't incredibly messed up, but I do make an effort to fix the mistakes.
user1182183
at least the task manager shows 4 cores while my specs say it's 2 cores
@GamErix so 2 physical cores and 4 logical cores
Sorry, I consider myself a little behind on the new technologies, and I try to learn whenever possible
09:23
that's the correct terminology
unfortunately, it also means I can't tell a mistake from a new technology
I actually caught the omission of ERANGE on std::stoi on cppreference once.
"This is surprising. Right below that it says ERANGE has the possibility of being stored in errno. Believe it or not, cplusplus has that information and cppreference does not. I guess there's a first time for everything."
It was fixed pretty quickly after that.
FWIW, cplusplus.com underwent a radical change lately, and now it even includes C++11 content.
I can't vouch for anything though, because I haven't looked.
user1182183
>Dual-channel DDR3 SDRAM support: ■Up to 4 GB of DDR3 system memory, upgradable to 8 GB using two soDIMM modules5
user1182183
oh sure, how nice, Acer!
09:25
@GamErix you need the speed
It was strtol that was changed on cppreference by the way, not stoi.
user1182183
@TonyTheLion it isn't stated on the support page : (
@R.MartinhoFernandes, I actually like the option they have to switch between 03 and 11 better than cppreference.
user1182183
not even the MoBo model
@R.MartinhoFernandes bleh, too late
09:26
@GamErix then you should stick to the speed of the RAM modules already in there.
I think that's the only safe option
@GamErix There is software to get that info.
Maybe even Windows can get that out of the box.
also this ^
user1182183
@R.MartinhoFernandes and is there software which checks if it can support such fast memory sticks? :P
I have used this in the past: hwinfo.com
@GamErix Once you have a board model with all the details you can google to find out about compatibility.
user1182183
and if it does "support" it, will there be a significant difference or won't it be worth the 70 euros?
09:29
I saw something in stores the other day that I thought was neat
It looked like a usb key with two ends
It actually splits in half, and you can put it into two separate computers, and what you put on one gets made available on the other key
One for reading and one for writing?
Oh.
of course it uses networking software to make it work, but I like the concept
the idea is that you attach one at work and one at home, and you see the files you left on your work usb key at home as well
user1182183
Intel HM55 (IbexPeak-M DH) chipset, hmm will google it
like they were "virtually" connected
09:39
lol
A programmer started to cuss
Because getting to sleep was a fuss
As she lay there in bed
Looping 'round in her head
was: while(!asleep()) sheep++
@Myrddin: Yes but that's incrementing the sheep variable, what you need is to count them (with C++0x): sheep = std::count (field.begin (), field.end (), not_asleep ()); — Joe D Apr 9 '10 at 18:06
user1182183
lol'd
And since I posted the limerick, I can't skip out on the picture.
TIL: one of the top reasons marriages end:
> Wife drinks more than her husband
WTF
user1182183
fortunately in RL it's not an integer overflow, it's brain capacity overflow.
@GamErix I doubt that.
I don't think I can survive long enough to overflow my ability to count.
user1182183
09:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think I can increment 1E99 really fast each second by one in my head
user1182183
somewhere I would lose track of the numbers
It's only one number.
@chris huh. that's going to keep you awake trying to correct for compile errors
Also 1e99 is one heck of a big number.
@sehe, Interesting... I can say that's true about my mom and dad, but I don't think that's why their marriage ended.
user1182183
09:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes too many digits and you don't know where the fuck you are : P
Like humans in general, you seem to have trouble grasping how big it is.
user1182183
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know it's a 1 with 99 zeros
@chris :) in a way
@GamErix You don't get to too many digits.
@GamErix Yes, and that's fucking big.
Sst. He doesn't know that
09:43
@sehe, Actually, my mom didn't even drink at all in the marriage, so I guess definitely not :p
@GamErix look up the manufacturer specs already
Big enough that you cannot count to it even if you spend all your lifetime trying; unless you cheat.
user1182183
@sehe yeah and no one ever cared to talk about supported DDR3 memory types
user1182183
nor on intels page
user1182183
nor on wikipedia
09:44
@chris Huh, then how: "that's true about my mom and dad"? Did your dad die of dehydration?
user1182183
nor google can't find anything ; o
@GamErix So, they're all supported, or the support depends on the Mobo/Chipset combination
@sehe, I meant alcohol. That's what I got from the statement.
@chris so, how does "that's true about my mom and dad" combine with "my mom didn't even drink at all in the marriage"
@GamErix FWIW, it takes like forever for a computer to count to 2^64. And that number is negligible next to 10^99.
user1182183
09:45
@sehe now one question remains: will it be a significant difference if I put a 2133 mhz slot (replacing a 667 mhz one) ;o
@sehe, I was thinking of the present. My dad hates beer, and my mom drinks it, but not all the time or anything.
user1182183
@R.MartinhoFernandes how much nanoseconds is a milisecond again...
user1182183
now, make that a few h
user1182183
hm
user1182183
09:46
ur right
user1182183
yeah
@GamErix Ok, 24000000
@GamErix profile it :) this is a programmer's chat.
@chris wokay. I understand. I think
That's my joke!
user1182183
that's one hell of a year of nanoseconds.. 31536000000000000 not even close to 2^64
user1182183
09:48
3E16
user1182183
Lol
@GamErix Exactly.
Those numbers are mindboggingly big, but they look tame because we have a concise and short way of expressing them.
@sehe, Yeah, I'll probably make it more confusing the more I talk about it.
user1182183
it would take 585 years to cause an integer overflow on an unsigned 64bit integer if you can increment it by one each nanosecond XD
I wonder how long it would take on a quantum computer.
09:50
@GamErix anyways, you could count many sheep:
> The record for memorizing digits of π, certified by Guinness World Records, is 67,890 digits, recited in China by Lu Chao in 24 hours and 4 minutes on 20 November 2005.[135][136]
user1182183
@sehe ...
@GamErix auto x = ULONGLONG_MAX+1 seems faster.
@chris nah the anachronism explains
user142019
ohio
@R.MartinhoFernandes partypooper
@Zoidberg kansas
09:51
It's not technically an overflow, though.
user1182183
@R.MartinhoFernandes :p
user1182183
well my 2.4 ghz processor can make 75686400000000 calculations a year
Since ULONGLONG_MAX == -1, ULONGLONG_MAX+1 is equal to -1 + 1, which is zero. Ain't this awesome?
user1182183
now.. how many GHZ does a quantum processor have?
user1182183
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, kinda ; o.. nah
user142019
09:53
@GamErix Depends on the processor and the settings.
user1182183
@Zoidberg dunno, any people ever created one yet?
Protip: quantum computing is not about more GHz.
user142019
Also, you cannot really compare quantum processors and ordinary processors in terms of cycles/second.
Don't ask me what it is about.
@R.MartinhoFernandes qubit sounds nice, though
user1182183
09:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes reading wikipedia makes me just more stupid, please explain.
user142019
@GamErix one company claimed to have.
I like to say it randomly.
30 secs ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Don't ask me what it is about.
user1182183
@R.MartinhoFernandes then I still ask XD
@GamErix it's quite complicated.
09:55
@GamErix It is unlikely you can do something like incrementing an integer any faster with a quantum computer.
user142019
It's about using quanta to store information.
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz it's something like a binary which can be 10%, 50%, 60% .. etc "loaded"
NO NO NO NOOOOOOOOOO DO NOT USE DEFINE MACROS WHEN YOU MEAN CONSTANTS USE STD::STRING IF YOU MEAN STRING — phresnel 2 mins ago
2
user1182183
well, what the heck is that usefull for?
Someone lost it.
@GamErix Not general purpose computing.
user142019
09:57
A bit can be either in a state of one or zero while a qubit can be in a state of one, zero or a superposition of both.
@GamErix we are still looking for uses. Possible include cryptography and compression.
Good point. Incrementing a couple variables at once would go faster, though.
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz mkay ; d
@chris your computer can increment a lot more than one. Say, 64 (bits) * number of registers
NO NO NO NOOOOOOOOOO DO NOT USE DEFINE MACROS WHEN YOU MEAN CONSTANTS USE STD::STRING IF YOU MEAN STRING — phresnel 2 mins ago
FFS chat, would you onebox the updated comment?
user142019
09:58
If a quantum processor has a bug, is it a Heisenbug? :)
@BartekBanachewicz, You know what I mean. Do 1000 then.
> NO NO NO NOOOOOOOOOO DO NOT USE DEFINE MACROS WHEN YOU MEAN CONSTANTS USE STD::STRING IF YOU MEAN STRING. GET A FKUCING BOOK FIRST AND USE GOOLGE. I AM OUT OF PATIENCE ONCE AGAIN LIKE YESTERDAY – phresnel 2 mins ago
user142019
lol
If you want something done right, you have to do it yourself... Sigh.
user1182183
09:58
I still would prefer a 9.6 ghz processor with one core than a 2.4 ghz processor with "4 cores" ...
@GamErix 9.6Ghz is unpractical
@GamErix So you can spend more cycles waiting on I/O?
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz why? no lags in games
user142019
lol void main().
hahah, lololol
09:59
@GamErix I have no lags in games either
user142019
Use non-blocking I/O. You rock when you don't block. :P
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz well and my laptop has problems beating a 6 year old desktop I have.

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