« first day (881 days earlier)      last day (4294 days later) » 

23:00
@MooingDuck well, I am trying to build SFML. I seemed to have gotten the libs...compiled with the VC11, same as code I am comping now... either that or somehow I linked it incorrectly.
I used the exact filename, extensions, etc. Is this not proper?
Ell
Ell
Binaries are A lot easier on windows I find
@Pawnguy7 sounds right
There is something so depressing about linker errors...
Oh... it's derpstep :(
Xeo
Xeo
23:12
Haha, they mention @Mysticial's world record here. :)
world record for what?
Xeo
Xeo
Calculating digits of Pi
programmatically, by speed?
Xeo
Xeo
By number of digits
10 Trillion
@Xeo There was a paper to support that kind of thing. Did that come up?
Xeo
Xeo
23:14
@LucDanton Wait, what?
What kind of thing specifically?
Making associative containers work with projections.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, I didn't see that.
I don't know if it ever was submitted. It's a pet project kind of thing. I think Abrahams ie one of the authors.
> What is the actual method for calculating pi to more digits? I don't get how it's done, how come you don't get all the digits in the first place?
lol
I don't know how to calculate any digits of pi...
23:18
int get_some_pi() { return 3 };
Did someone ping me?
reminds me of that random function comment
@Mysticial I don't think so. Untill now, of course.
Never mind. World record. Sorry.
@Mysticial pi
@Mysticial did you ever attempt to calculate primes?
@StackedCrooked How come you don't get all infinity digits in your finite memory?
23:21
oh
ahaha
@StackedCrooked nope
They're more profitable I heard :)
primes aren't that interesting
@Xeo they just mention that "we" did 10k digits, that's it :(
@DeadMG I don't know!
then again neither are the digits of pi
23:21
Does anyone know a good resource for reading about a fast implementation of variable sized memory pools
primes isn't an area that I can actually do well in.
Mysticial only really knows one number
@Mysticial Really, a sieve is fast enough that the only really limitation IMO is memory
@Rapptz Nope... not when you're looking at primes that are millions of digits long.
Though I have no idea how many primes we're talking :(
23:23
Sieves aren't really that useful at those sizes.
For cryptographic purposes you don't use sieves.
You can use them to rule out a large class of numbers so you don't even need to test them.
But in order to actually prove a number prime, you need to run a real primarily test.
So you'd use an FFT?
And there's no way I can possibly write a Lucas Lehmer iteration that's faster than the one in Prime95.
The kind of optimization that I do is child's play to the guy who wrote and maintains Prime95.
@Mysticial lol
23:26
On the other hand, I have a stronger math background. That's why I can do Pi well. But not strong enough of a background to come up with the next ground-braking formula or primality test.
> May 15, 2012. You may download version 27 now. The FFT assembly code has been rewritten for better speed on Intel's newer CPUs supporting AVX instructions. Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge CPUs (Core i3/i5/i7-2xxx and 3xxx models) should see a huge performance increase. To upgrade, simply exit Prime95, download the new version, and unzip the new version replacing the old version.
ahaha
It's hand-written assembly.
That's how ridiculous it is. I only toy around with intrinsics and such. This guy goes all the way.
So it's still possible to beat the compiler at assembly?
@StackedCrooked yes
Even I can do it regularly.
And where it matters, I can usually do better than the compiler.
I guess for very specific tasks.
23:28
But that's only because I know how the damn compiler works.
So I know what it will trip up on. And what it does well on.
Does GCC generate code that makes use of the machine's SIMD and MIMD capabilities?
@StackedCrooked yes
If you tell it to.
But it doesn't always do it well.
isn't SIMD just SSE and AVX?
@bamboon for the most part
user142019
@Mysticial "Even I"
23:31
@Zoidberg Yes. I'm not the only one in the world who can beat a compiler.
@Mysticial When does your job at YT actually start?
@bamboon Mid-June.
A lot of the times, I find myself fighting against the compiler.
It keeps trying to be smart and does something stupid. And I'm trying to tweak the code in a way so it stays dumb.
It seems -ftree-vectorize has been removed from GCC 4.8.
23:34
@StackedCrooked It's probably on by default to the point that it's integrated into the core or something.
@StackedCrooked Isn't it in -O3 by default?
@bamboon According to the GCC 4.7 man pages, yes.
But it is not mentioned in the GCC 4.8 pages.
Ell
Ell
@mysticial do you ever improve the compilers optimizer? Or is that a different kettle of fish than optimizing manually?
@Ell There isn't much I can do to modify the compiler anyways.
They're either closed sourced. Or I wouldn't even dare peek into GCC.
@Mysticial that's why gcc is gonna die
23:36
Clang source isn't any prettier IMO
Not that I particularly care though. As long as there is a half-decent compiler I'm happy.
Anything that requires real optimization, I take over.
Fuck the compiler in those cases.
So no, none of the compilers will die at this point
I look at compiler optimizations as freebie optimizations.
@Rapptz Exactly.
Ell
Ell
I hope the open source compilers don't die :(
Almost everything a compiler does is optimizing. There would be little point in using them otherwise.
23:38
Seems like I got a few upvotes from Pi day. I can't seem to pinpoint the source of the traffic to any one source. So it's probably from everywhere.
So no, not a freebie. More of a raison d'être.
user142019
Building LLVM yay.
user142019
> cc1: error: unrecognized command line option "-Wcovered-switch-default"
Hello.
user142019
FUCK YOU LLVM
user142019
23:40
@robbert229 Ohai.
hows it goin.
user142019
Badly.
Ell
Ell
@lucdanton how is it mostly optimisation?
going from high level -> low level is what it does
@Ell Not always. Resolving templates and stuff can also take forever.
But the big point is: Code optimization is an NP-complete problem.
23:43
I am starting to wonder if I didn't build the libraries wrong, but am linking to them wrong...
@Pawnguy7 What are u doing?
@Ell An interpreter can do that.
@Pawnguy7 if its with libraries i might be able to help
trying to build and use SFML for VS2012
But I also tried using a supposibly correctly built version of said sort (off of site), and that got the same errors, so perhaps it is elsewhere...
Ell
Ell
Oh, I guess yeah. Didn't really Think of it like that
23:46
what kind of errors?
Xeo
Xeo
Welp, and off the proposal goes.
unresolved external symbols on every use of the external library
Ell
Ell
Did you link them all
sounds like linking..
It is a linking error, correct.
But, the paths are right, as
the includes works correctly, and it does not say it cannot find the library files
23:49
@Xeo It would be awesome if one of them actually got accepted.
but it finds all the library files specified, and each module gives errors...
Xeo
Xeo
Damn, 10 minutes for 40 to 50 rep
@Xeo yay
@robbert229 you use Visual Studio 2012?
@Pawnguy7 ya.
Xeo
Xeo
23:51
@LucDanton I added some stuff to the discussion section, after some good input from #llvm prior to sending it off. :)
Hm... perhaps I can try pictures.
pictures are good.
Hm.
Trying to take pictures of subwindows in VS only gets the main window...
I guess pictures will not work.
Ever used SFML?
not really, I am a datastructures guy.

« first day (881 days earlier)      last day (4294 days later) »