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20:00
I'll see if I can replicate
@MarcusStuhr who has a bigint class?
I do.
@Rapptz link?
I need to fix compiler error on the file atm
Since I updated to GCC 4.7.2 std::to_string isn't valid
because I didn't patch it yet
;_;
20:02
I have some bigint implementations, but I just learned that my IO is rediculously slow, and needs rewriting
I was just giving an example with the toString() bit -- even without that conversion, the equality fails despite the outputs looking identical
i.e. when comparing a BigInt to an int via the overloaded ==, I imagine some conversion behind the process is giving different results
Do you have a test case I can try this with?
ty ;o though I think I see the issue.
toString() is just the same function as operator<<, except using an std::stringstream instead
i have a similar function in my common.h file:

template <typename T>
std::string toString (T N){
    std::ostringstream ss;
    ss << N;
    return ss.str();
}
20:09
std::to_string
fails to compile in MinGW ^
user142019
> The last message was posted 8 days ago.
user142019
I just reset my clock in Linux. :P
Why was your clock 8 days in the future
Have you heard about this little thing we call NTP?
user142019
20:15
@CatPlusPlus Yes I just installed an NTP daemon.
@MarcusStuhr Also, converting to string isn't very common
hell yeah it is
user142019
@CatPlusPlus because I use VirtualBox and I often put the host in stand-by mode, and then the time doesn't get updated in VirtualBox.
@Rapptz So for example if you were to write (A*A-D*B*B).toString(), the output here is 0001
@Rapptz Okay, when
20:15
@CatPlusPlus I don't know, I use it every so often.
@CatPlusPlus Debugging. Logging. Converting to a canonical representation for hashing/hashmapping.
I use it pretty much only for debugging
@MarcusStuhr I can kind of see the issue. operator== basically compares both the deques :(
Depends on your application domain, of course.
For hashing you write a hasher, not string conversion
20:16
Let me eat, be back later.
@CatPlusPlus That is also for a big integer class, where string conversions are common workarounds
Oh, right, I also don't reinvent the wheel very often
@CatPlusPlus For hashing I reuse the code I already wrote for stringifying. I don't reinvent wheels either. ;)
(although I'm not talking about bignums)
@Rapptz why would (A*A-D*B*B).toString() call operator==?
@MarcusStuhr a string conversion should not be a common thing for a big integer class. It should be as rare as possible.
@MooingDuck It doesn't -- it's just to show that when you call an equality on A*A-D*B*B against integer value 1, they are converted to strings behind the scenes and that is why it returns false when it shouldn't -- because it's ultimately comparing something like 0001 against 1
20:21
@MarcusStuhr WTF, why would you do that?
@MarcusStuhr comparing a bigint against an int should definitely not do that
@MarcusStuhr @MooingDuck Agreed.
You guys need to direct this at Rapptz, lol -- I'm not the one who implemented it! lol
bool operator==(const bigint& lhs, int rhs) {
    return lhs.data.size()==1 && lhs.data[0]==rhs;
}
I'm pointing out the error
20:23
hmm
@MooingDuck Er, shouldn't that be 1?
if the lhs's data has size 0, I doubt that you can access the first element.
oh goodie I have to restart again. Guess I'll get food too
hmmmm operator>> is a funny one to implement
especially if you're filling something like a char* buffer that's not allocated when it enters the function
why would you do such a thing?
I created a temp buffer char buff[256] but that seems wrong, what if the input is larger than that?
I'm just messing around with some random shit
it is wrong
20:28
yes, I've figured that much
but what would be the right way?
you shouldn't use MAGIC_BUFFER_SIZE, unless the buffer is only for, well, buffering, rather than storing the whole input in one go.
@TonyTheLion Depends on how you know what the end of input is.
well the input comes from a std::istream so how the heck do I know what the end is?
there is no end... lol
so basically, you need the whole contents of the istream?
user142019
Then use a dynamic buffer. Such as std::vector or std::string.
@DeadMG yes
istream has eofbit
user142019
20:32
// @TonyTheLion
std::ifstream source{"myfile.dat", std::ios::binary};
std::vector<char> data(std::istreambuf_iterator<char>{source},
                       std::istreambuf_iterator<char>{});
fuck eofbit
just use iterators
Huh?
using operator== doesn't convert anything to strings >_>
user142019
It works with any std::istream AFAIK.
user142019
I want templated streams with a single type-erased wrapper. :<
20:33
Things are only converted to strings via operator<< or toString() method
user142019
Compile-time polymorphism FTW.
@Rapptz separate discussion, talking about toString() method
Well the replies seemed to make it like I was comparing strings ._.
When that isn't the case
What is happening behind the scenes with == for BigInteger 1 versus int 1?
you said it was comparing deques?
@CatPlusPlus Uh. I committed a few built binaries, just incase people wanted to grab those instead of actually building the whole thing.
I don't know if bitbucket has a download section...
20:34
@ThePhD You don't commit binaries
@MarcusStuhr yes
bool BigInteger::operator== (const BigInteger& other) const {
    return this->digits == other.digits;
}
Um. Well. Okay.
You're really worse at this than puppy
I am not! ;~;
And he blew up his repository
20:35
(This actually should work fine in like, 99.99% of cases)
Ell
Ell
I wonder if we'll ever need metametaprogramming
user142019
@CatPlusPlus I always commit Waf and rebar.
@Zoidberg Compiled rebar? Also, those are dependencies, not targets
user142019
Compiled rebar yes.
user142019
But it's platform independent anyway.
Ell
Ell
20:37
wtf is rebar?
user142019
Well, platform is Erlang VM.
@Rapptz When I compare the deques, it's 10 versus 1
user142019
@Rapptz Marcus told me it did, I never looked at the code
Nah.. I'm stupid but not that dumb ._.
20:39
@MooingDuck I think we just miscommunicated earlier / we were talking about different things
@Rapptz also, I really like the idea of having optimized methods for int or unsigned int. just as a side. I didn't check if you did or not.
@MarcusStuhr oh
It's only for positive numbers
I didn't want to deal with negatives :|
@CatPlusPlus There, all clean and shiny.
tbh I just wanted to multiply big numbers
which it does a good job of.. :D
@Rapptz fair enough :D
20:40
I think fibonacci(20000) is when it breaks.
still don't know why
the BigInt class has a toString() method and I was just bringing attention to the fact that A*A-D*B*B, which equals 1 in my case, converts to "0001" via that toString method, implying that something is odd about the way the BigInt is stored behind the scenes
@ThePhD It's all in the history
that is further evidenced from the deques which, in the == overloaded operator, compare 1 and 0 versus 1
@CatPlusPlus Liiies.
This class is implemented as a deque of numbers.
20:41
@MarcusStuhr or that toString sometimes shows leading zeros
It will be there foreeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeveeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeer
user142019
rm -rf .git && git init && git add -A . && git commit problem solved.
user142019
Problem solved.
@MooingDuck Yeah
user142019
20:42
Or the Hg equivalent if you use Hg.
user142019
Or whatever.
Just so we're clear
std::string w = (A*A-D*B*B).toString();
        std::cout << w << '\n';
now prints 1.
ewwww toString
dafuq is wrong with you
user142019
Y u no to_string and ADL. ;_;
oh my god
This is a BigInteger class.
20:43
bool BigInteger::operator== (const BigInteger& other) const {
    for (auto& d : this->digits) std::cout << d;
    std::cout << " versus ";
    for (auto& d : other.digits) std::cout << d;
    std::cout << std::endl;

    return this->digits == other.digits;
}
Will you understand that?
user142019
Use to_string so you can use this in generic programming.
user142019
There is std::to_string so you can use ADL.
;_;
Ell
Ell
to_string is standard now isn't there?
20:43
poor Rapptz, lol
wtf people
how do I use std::to_string on my own class
user142019
Simple.
user142019
to_string(my_big_int);
user142019
Make it a friend.
error: 'to_string' was not declared in this scope gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=52015
user142019
20:44
class big_integer {
private:
    friend std::string to_string(big_integer const&) {
        // ...
    }
};
std::vector<char> temp(std::istreambuf_iterator<char>(is),        std::istreambuf_iterator<char>());s.sz = temp.size();  //error: temp expression must have class type. What?
@TonyTheLion most vexing parse kicked in somehow?
user142019
@TonyTheLion MVP
user142019
Use brace initialization.
20:46
@MooingDuck that's what I was thinking. But how the fuck?
@TonyTheLion std::istreambuf_iterator<char>()
somehow? I dunno
but does MSVC 11 except brace init?
@TonyTheLion do you have the november pack thing?
20:46
yes
user142019
std::vector<char> temp(std::istreambuf_iterator<char>{is}, std::istreambuf_iterator<char>{});
it doesn't like that
@TonyTheLion I think that allows it
auto temp = std::vector<char>(...)
Okay, I'm actually pretty sure now that bug only happens when comparing with 1.
user142019
20:47
I always use brace-initialization except when calling ctors of template params or when ctors take std::initializer_list which I don't want to use.
and possibly 10 vs 100.
@Rapptz how could it possibly screw up comparing with an int?
@CatPlusPlus yes that solved it :)
because I'm lazy
user142019
Use a decent language.
user142019
20:49
No more most vexing parse.
and I convert the integer to bigintegers then do the comparison
@Rapptz constructing from an int should be trivial, comparison with an int should be trivial, comparing two bigints should be trivial...
user142019
@Rapptz lol
shh obscure bug @@@ :(
@Rapptz now I have to look at your code
20:50
I hate you guys sometimes. It's why I don't post anything.
5
@TonyTheLion it's the only safe way to make that work
yeah something's wonky with the multiplication/possibly division operators
user142019
++it; // read
*it; // no read
@MooingDuck how can a read operation be performed when incremented?
20:51
it's adding an extra 0 to the deque
user142019
It's logical.
@MarcusStuhr division is bugged
@CatPlusPlus There was only one commit, I swear: bitbucket.org/ThePhD/visual-gcc/overview
multiplication isn't
user142019
@TonyTheLion operator++ is overloaded.
20:51
I know full well division is bugged and adds leading zeroes sometimes.
@Zoidberg D'uh. I'm a fool.
@TonyTheLion how could it work if "*it,*it,*it" read from teh stream three times?
Mostly because division is actually really hard to implement =/
@MooingDuck true.
	A=3;
	if (A==3) cout <<"3 is OK\n";
	if (A*A==9) cout <<"9 is OK\n";
output of deques:

3 versus 3
9 0 versus 9
20:52
@Rapptz I'm with ya, buddy.
user142019
@TonyTheLion lolnoob
@Rapptz agreed, that was a major stumbling block on my bigints as well
We have this thing called unit tests
Use GMP
user142019
Catch is great for as far as testing C++ can be great.
wait, base 10000? HAHAHAHA
20:53
yes
user142019
Why not a base that is a power of two?
user1182183
my biggest base ever made was 255.. but 10000, how the heck you want to represent that? ;o
user142019
@GamErix Unicode. :P
Dare I ask what's so funny about it ._.
@Rapptz waaait, you convert ints to strings and then construct from the string?
user1182183
20:54
@Zoidberg okay xd
@GamErix int, it's one way of making lots of bigint things easy. Don't have to worry about carries and such as much. Also, IO is way easier.
user142019
Use base zero.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg impopsicle!
@MooingDuck Yes.
user142019
20:55
@MarcusStuhr Base 2 + 4i.
user142019
@Ell imtesticle! :L
user1182183
@Zoidberg base (2i + 5k - j)^2x
I still don't get why 10000 base is funny
@Rapptz it's over 9000
@Rapptz I was just surprised, I've never seen anyone actually do that before. I've actually recommended it as a way to get out of the ASCII mindset as a stepping stone to base 4b.
20:57
the all caps HAHAHA made it seem like I was insane
Ell
Ell
can't you have an arbitrary base?
@Ell mostly, yes. It has to be greater than 1 or less than -1.
technically
Ell
Ell
BigNum<int_max> >:D
@Ell that's how mine works, yes
user142019
20:57
Make the base a template parameter.
general programming question: what's a way to do this?
Ell
Ell
this
user142019
@Crowz Using Haskell.
@Zoidberg no point, it shouldn't affect the interface in any way
@Crowz "this"?
Can I see yours?
actually interested
user1182183
20:58
if ur using unicode anyway, make a base 65k
if(myImg!=null) img=myImg;
else img=originalImg;
user142019
Real people use base Lounge<C++>.
@Rapptz my division and IO are laughably slow and nieve, but here: ideone.com/HnyuZ6
It will not let me reference "img" outside of that if else.
user142019
@Crowz auto img = myImg != nullptr ? myImg : originalImg;?
20:59
Ooooh
Can I post my implementation of Variable Digit Precision?
@Crowz Looks like Java.
People might not like it, though. It's in C.
@Rapptz I haven't looked at it in a while, so I make no guarantees. I know multiplication is fast though, used it to solve a codechef problem.

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