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21:01
Was it << 1 is the same as multiplying by two?
user142019
The fact that you need to ask that says enough: never use it that way.
@Pawnguy7 Yes.
Well, in this assembly tutorial, it has this:
"Note that shifting a value to the left is the same thing as multiplying it by its radix."
assemly, dude
Xeo
Xeo
ITT: Super Hexagon on sale for $0.99
21:03
@BartekBanachewicz ?
user142019
Assembly is a family of bad languages.
For learning purposes.
for that too
Well, I can learn how the registers work :D
21:05
@Pawnguy7 Not radix. Base. Base 2. Because each number is encoded in radix notation. Each digit represents max b-1 units of a base power. Shifting is moving all the bits left or right, which is equivalent to multiplying by its base. Because multiplying by the base increases the base power of every represented bit, hence moving it left. Same goes by division by two, where everything "goes right".
@Zoidberg Not really a family. The relationship isn't that close.
user142019
Write machine code directly.
@Xeo I've already got it :|
user142019
Much better.
Usually when you have to "optimize multiplication with bitshifting", you should ask yourself whether a career in botany is more suitable to your skillset.
21:07
@Zoidberg Good luck convincing somebody who's actually done it.
Doesn't assembly have a 1:1 relationship with machine code?
user142019
No.
user142019
Well, depends on the assembly.
@Pawnguy7 It's close, but no, not necessarily.
@Xeo Not buying any games until I play everything on my Steam collection.
user142019
21:08
It's more syntactic sugar.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do it, robbot.
Oh. Any examples of what parts are not exactly the same, instruction wise?
@Pawnguy7 Assembly is not one of a kind, it depends on the instruction set architecture. Not exactly, but close. It defines mnemonics which are more readable by humans than opcodes.
@Pawnguy7 anyway, cpu won't give a shit about it
user142019
@Pawnguy7 there may be multiple different kind of mov instructions that are all denoted as mov in assembly.
21:09
cpu literally does strange things with your code
user142019
Or label references that get translated to addresses later before the CPU can execute them.
@Zoidberg Yes, but, for any given move, is it not translated directly to its correct instruction set counterpart?
@DeadMG Cleanup on aisle 3.
i'm wondering if there is a better way to accomplish this and also deal with additional tables without having to create classes/data structures for each one
user142019
@user12217 by going to Stack Overflow and asking for help there.
user142019
21:10
There is a reason this room is tagged .
user142019
No excuses.
oh sorry
There is a reason the site has a "Questions" section.
@DogPlusPlus ?
@Pawnguy7 For one example, on an x86 you have an exchange instruction. When you exchange two registers, the instruction specifies the two registers -- but some assemblers will encode them in one order, others in the other, so what you write as xchg ax, dx could be encoded as if you'd written xchg dx, ax.
21:10
As you request.
The Lounge Conglomerate is gratified by your immaculate service.
@DogPlusPlus That's bad :)
lol, the puppy takes requests now.
@Pawnguy7 gre, gne in some assemblies. In one I worked with, those were translated to sub jumpifoverflow and sub sub jumpifoverflow respectively
21:12
I mean to say, I had thought assembly instructions were directly mapped to instructions set counterparts, and thus, there is not "hidden" waste, in another abstraction layer.
@Pawnguy7 you thought wrong
user142019
I want president Puppy.
Every city would have a bin.
Operated by Daisy clones.
Is it that, instead, it is just a much smaller difference?
$ ssh rmf@persephone screen -R default
Must be connected to a terminal.
$
Wut.
Where the fuck do you think I am running this command you stupid piece of shit.
21:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes You can't ask a guy to help you with his website and then not clear up the chat when he asks
@Pawnguy7 Other instructions have prefixes that can be rearranged. For example, if I did something like mov ax, [fs:edx], there will be two prefixes: an operand size override, and a FS prefix. The assembler can change the order of some prefixes. But, most of it is stuff like that -- minor changes that have no effect on functionality.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It says that you suck. :Đ
@R.MartinhoFernandes How do you keep breaking stuff?
He's getting complacent. :/
@EtiennedeMartel What do you mean?
21:16
Poll: Smaller memory footprint, or faster?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Seems like it's not the first time you get fucked up failures on Linux.
`ssh -XCt screen -DR` - my default
-t being the crux, but you found that out
@EtiennedeMartel You must be confusing him with the puppy
Also, this doesn't nearly qualify as "fucked up failure"
Mar 21 at 15:55, by R. Martinho Fernandes
$ ls
Segmentation fault
$
I was thinking about this.
Ah :)
@Pawnguy7 false dichotomy
21:21
@EtiennedeMartel mixing chroots with incompatible kernels, corrupted fs, invalid ldconfig, binary not targeted for running CPU ... stuff like that
@JerryCoffin Are you saying, it is not an "this or this" question, as they are not dependent upon each other?
well, this is a first
my keen knowledge of pathfinding algorithms results in a gameplay advantage
@sehe Yeah, I probably fucked up the chroot somewhere in that. But it was the live CD environment, so it was disposable anyway.
sysrq :)
echo b > /proc/sysrq-trigger
I enabled line numbers and Visual Studio defaulted to the white theme. Lol.
21:22
@Pawnguy7 More or less, yes. Just for example, reduced memory footprint can improve locality (and cache usage) thus improving speed.
Anyone has a good show to recommend? (Not dexter)
There we go, dark again.
@DogPlusPlus racism
Silent life (.hack//sign OST) (music vid) It doesn't tire even after several years :)
@DogPlusPlus I had that when it did not have an official dark theme.
21:24
@JerryCoffin Correct. It would be great if such solutions could always be used. I mean to say, though, if you were given a seeming unavoidable choice, on whether to use memory and gain speed, or vice versa, which would you prefer to do? They might not be exact linearity, but I think the choice is real in some cases.
What, they have a gun to your head?
Light/bright/white themes really don't work for me. I like the contrast with the dark one.
@Pawnguy7 Depends on the situation. For a typical desktop (for one example) I'd typically favor speed.
No, you're just emo is all
@JerryCoffin I see. I find myself liking the concept of using the least about of memory possible, but I have not made anything big enough to be slow, so when I do I will likely get a better view of the situation.
21:26
We are not in a 640k world anymore.
@JerryCoffin I wonder if this would ever lead to a noticeable performance difference on desktop applications.
Or the 4k world from Gate's qoute. Still, I feel like I would enjoy programming on such computer, trying to squeeze the most out of the memory.
I guess it would for games.
user142019
Google Street View y u no Pyongyang.
21:30
y u care? Listen to some piano instead.
@StackedCrooked Sure -- depends a lot on how far you go though. Just for example, try a vector-like object that only allocates the space truly needed for the current contents (reallocates every time you do a push_back). Saves memory, but at pretty serious cost in time.
@EtiennedeMartel :D ... :( ... :D ... :( ... :D
I wonder what it was like programming before the internet. You would have to search in books for the documentation...
@JerryCoffin Right, I recently encountered such a situation for an image viewer application that I was making. I was testing the loading of many image pathnames (around 50.000). And storing them all in a vector<string> using push back turned out to be a bottleneck. It went much faster after I switched to deque.
21:35
Is there a naming scheme for microprocessors?
No, but there is your mom.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Well.. did you know roughly how many path names you'd have in advance?
Like, say we have the 8088, and 8086. Are people able to tell what bit/other information these are from it, or otherwise?
@Xeo Roughly I could anticipate around 10 - 50k.
However, I found that deque even beat vector if I used reserve. (Which I find strange, and I think I should retest.)
But, still, with deque it works like a charm.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked which stdlib did you test this with?
21:38
Hm, I was using GCC 4.7 from MacPorts, and probably the stdlib that comes with it.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm... that should have move-enabled string
and even if not, libstdc++ still has COW string
user142019
> The North Korean constitution provides for freedom of speech and the press; but the government prohibits the exercise of these rights in practice.
user142019
looooool
user142019
Then why have a constitution at all.
Xeo
Xeo
But still, 10k-20k moves are no joke either
21:40
Sadly, I am pretty sure that has happened more than once in history.
@Zoidberg How the fuck do you find that funny.
And deque probably doesn't require any moves at all when expanding iirc.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Yep
It just allocates another chunk
But in return it's worse for traversing.
And on memory
@Zoidberg In this case, so they can claim those rights are guaranteed, regardless of what happens in reality.
@Xeo How is it bad on memory?
21:42
@StackedCrooked It uses some extra pointers.
In the case of MSVC, about a zillion.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked It uses total_size/block_size pointers for indirecting to the blocks
Or something along those lines anyways
@R.MartinhoFernandes How much is a zillion?
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel MSVC's deque is retarded and basically an indexable list.
3
Xeo
Xeo
With block-size of 1.
21:45
@ScottW ...NOT!
lol
MSVC is kinda endearing.
Like a puppy that pees in his mouth.
Harhar
@EtiennedeMartel A wat.
@EtiennedeMartel You mean its mouth? Or is there another entity involved in this scenario?
@ScottW lol, I don't get it, but I still think it's funny. "ball" hehe
@StackedCrooked Oh. Right.
@ScottW WTF
12
That's too funny!
Btw, TIL trick or treat means that instead of giving candy you can also show a trick.
That's good, since I know lots of magic tricks.
22:01
@Xeo it's the same as boost::stable_vector. In that light it's still useful
@ScottW Impressive.
@ScottW I'm better than others.
@StackedCrooked I thought trick means they get to fuck up your house with eggs. :/
@DogPlusPlus Never heard of that before.
Trick or treat or misdemeanor it is, then.
22:07
@Zoidberg yet, the hints say that questions can be asked. don't be such a dick.
AFAkN+rnaNzEU8ecy0MnUtN2B13+AJOdxzMjyLddJOW/azchP3LSoMMCDwKQOQy2jQ==
Yay.
@StackedCrooked woah, some serious wtf there!
@DogPlusPlus UTF7
@DogPlusPlus wait, I'm confused
22:10
I now have a greater appreciation of those who know assembly. I have been looking at this tutorial for 4 hours... I feel like I cannot think anymore :\
Just a hashed passwordz0r.
@DogPlusPlus that was then encoded in utf7
hash is "AFAkN깶跌䔼秌됲甭㝠痟㧜猲㲋痒乛爓⨌〠ΐ쭨" btw.
20-7E ^^
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
@MooingDuck Wut
Base64 is a group of similar binary-to-text encoding schemes that represent binary data in an ASCII string format by translating it into a radix-64 representation. The Base64 term originates from a specific MIME content transfer encoding. Base64 encoding schemes are commonly used when there is a need to encode binary data that needs to be stored and transferred over media that are designed to deal with textual data. This is to ensure that the data remain intact without modification during transport. Base64 is commonly used in a number of applications including email via MIME, and stori...
22:12
that doesn't look like valid utf7 at second glance...
@R.MartinhoFernandes wait, I got it all wrong
:< ignore me
Substance abuse can be tough. :/
@DogPlusPlus I don't even drink caffine, I cant afford to be any more messed up than I am by default :(
Has anyone literally cried before because they couldn't solve a programming problem ? I did today. Does that mean i'm stupid and i should give up programming ?
I'm not sure how to reply.
But you should try again.
I'd like to troll, but I'm lazy.
22:20
@R.MartinhoFernandes repost
@SteveJobs probably and no
if anyone knows how to do this it would help
-2
Q: Secret word program in python

Steve JobsI'm trying to add a feature to the following program that takes in a secret word and letters guessed as input where letter guessed is an empty list. example: isWordGuessed('hello',[ ]). How do I make the function: - Return true when all the letters have been guessed correctly - Return false i...

oh I remember doing something similar to this like 9 years ago
Hey guys, I believe there will be a programming contest in my college and I would like to participate. I heard it is about solving problems quickly (rather than efficiently). If this is the case, which (C++ or Java, the main languages permitted there) language would you use?
Doesn't matter?
22:22
I am rather new in both, so I want to choose one to begin practicing etc.
Probably C++ since that can be obfuscated easier
Why would I want to obfuscate my code for a contest? D:
"quickly"?
I mean if you want to solve something quick, might as well say fuck it to the variable names and readability of your code lol
Oh, I didn't know obfuscation implied speed. But yeah it sounds good.
But Java can also fuck the variable names?
@Omega If it is consentual. Otherwise it is rape and that's not cool, bro.
22:26
Can you elaborate more on what the contest is like?
@Pawnguy7: I have no idea
@Pawnguy7: I've just heard that you have to solve problems... fast
@Omega it doesn't, ignore everything he said about obfuscation
Damn you Mooing.
:(
Hi, I understand this is a C++ chat room and not a database one, but there is no one in the DB chatroom. I was wondering if anyone knows of any other communities where I can seek help on database design - specifically large scale database design. Sorry for the inappropriate topic!
@Omega I prefer C++, many prefer Java. I can't think of anything that'd make one objectively better than another for a college speed coding contest.
22:28
Well, in terms of solving some problems, Java's standard lib would be useful. For example, strings, for each, etc. All I can think of for faster (in terms of production, not execution), in terms of C++ would be you don't need main to be in a class.
@Pawnguy7 std::string, std::for_each, for(auto& i : container) ?!
Is that C++11?
only the last one.
Huh that's a good point. Utility libraries... dunno if they would let me use them for solving problems though
Ell
Ell
C++ yeah
22:29
@Omega ahahaha
Oh. I didn't know that. Still, in Java, it is more built it, which should be faster to code, I would think. Of course, if you are more familiar with one than the other, I would obviously use that.
Really?
@Pawnguy7: Yeah, but I think I'm equally new in both XD
For the longest time I used C++ as C with std::string.
22:30
I just thought up new name for Minicraft
since there's already one
I thought everyone knew about std::string.
I should name my Microcraft
@Pawnguy7 you don't know shit about C++, so saying "java has more" is kind of pulled out of ass
Also Qt.
I suppose that the presented problems would be like the ones in the Euler thing.
Xeo
Xeo
0
Q: Can I stringify a Boost Phoenix expression?

user2023370Can I convert a Boost Phoenix expression into a representative string of C++? I could have: stringify(_1<_2); which might then produce a string containing something like: template <class T1, class T2> struct foo { auto operator()(T1 x2, T2 x2) -> typename std::remove_referen...

Wow. Just wow.
22:32
@BartekBanachewicz Are you claiming to know Java in its entirety?
@Pawnguy7 no.
I am finally relevant.
@Pawnguy7 but I certainly know more about Java than you about C++
22:33
That may be. How about this: it is easier to learn Java's for each than C++'s?
what's hard about for(auto& i : container)?
Well, for one, you need it to be supported.
@Rapptz: Aaaargh wtf is that
:P
@Omega C++
@Pawnguy7 which every major compiler already does?
22:34
@Rapptz that's a fucking for-each. What's hard about it?
@Rapptz Not mine.
@Omega the equivalent of for i in container
@Pawnguy7 what compiler are you using?
@Rapptz: Ah, much better
Lol XD
who is this guy? ^
22:35
@MooingDuck Not the newest minGW g++
@Pawnguy7 ?_?
He just wrote "Lol XD"
I am suspicious
@Pawnguy7 Update?
@BartekBanachewicz: Lol XD
Not even that hard, g++ 4.8 came out.
22:35
@Pawnguy7 say what? That can't be right
@BartekBanachewicz You might have gotten the wrong person.
@Pawnguy7 no wait, I know that's not right.
@Pawnguy7 why not?
@Rapptz sorry
Because it came with C::B, which I downloaded a while back.
Ell
Ell
I might write threaded quicksort tomorrow, seems like A good excersize
22:36
@Ell no
@Pawnguy7 The one in Code::Blocks is GCC 4.7.1. Which definitely has it.
Ell
Ell
@bartek no? Why not?
But I downloaded C::B over two months ago. At least. Probably further back.
Yeah.. it's had GCC 4.7.1 since November 28, 2012.
Hm. Perhaps it has been longer than I thought...
Ell
Ell
22:37
Even before then I'm pretty sure it was supported with std=c++0x
@Pawnguy7 did you actually try it?
@Pawnguy7 Hey, do this std::cout << __VERSION__ << '\n';
And tell us the output
4.4.1
That would do it :D
@Pawnguy7 from July 22, 2009...?
@Pawnguy7 that's NOT the "newest" minGW
Pretty sure I got C::B no later than 2011.
I never said it was.
22:40
Redownload.
I said, it was not the newest.
5 mins ago, by Pawnguy7
@MooingDuck Not the newest minGW g++
You're missing out.
@Pawnguy7 oh, wait, I get it
I probably am. However, I don't make heavy use of the standard library, so I don't know about, for example, std::for_each.
Although, initialization of variables in class would be nice.
22:42
I used to always want to do that
but now that I can, I never do it.
I forgot what I wanted to use that for...
it's actually kind of cool but I don't know why I never do it.
Although, is auto supposed to be used in a polymorphic fashion, or is it more of making code modular?
I was just thinking, why would I do auto i = 5, when it would be slightly easier to read as int, if not for modularity, say.
You're not supposed to abuse auto like that.
Well, that is the example of it I always see.
Either for or in a for each, I think.
22:47
You use auto for: std::map<std::string, std::int>::iterator
@ScottW guarantees that you initialize it the same always
@Pawnguy7 yes
Oh, yes. I will be able to have nested templates declarations :D (without the space)
@Pawnguy7 auto is best used when you're not certain of the return type and don't care
@Borgleader or in my case std::unordered_map<std::string,std::unordered_map<std::string,std::string>>::it‌​erator
@Rapptz typedef
22:48
Why? I just use auto.
@Rapptz or that
@MooingDuck This would be in a polymorphic fashion, or can you actually use auto as a "I can return anything" sort of construction?
@Pawnguy7 both. Either.
real men do using a = b;
@Rapptz fine. But if I ever see a container in a container, I immediately give the inner container a type name or using or SOMETHING.
22:51
I only typed that out once.
Literally.
irrelevant
Feels like a waste to typedef it for me
So, BF4 looks quite similar to BF3.
youdontsay.tiff
Watched my first Yahtzee video in a while.
It was about SimCity no less

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