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00:00
9 mins ago, by milleniumbug
there is no rule that says you can only call MPI_Comm_rank once
it reads a well known value that doesn't change
@EuriPinhollow question still urgent if anyone can help.
ok so as much i understand now if i want to get the over all time of the whole ping pong then i must repeat the same for the myrank !=1 that is rank 0 as well and then sum it up to get the over all time ...
as the above will only give me time taken by one processor but not the actual total time correct ...
 
7 hours later…
07:17
a conceptual question:
nevermind
 
2 hours later…
Sam
Sam
09:28
@Mgetz Thanks for the reply. I've made a crude implementation using two classes. One class which represents the state as a whole then a manager which holds information on state changes, would be great to get some feedback if you have time to review.
I have a function which requires a parameter: someFunc(std::unique_ptr<StateMachine> machine) {}
If I want to call that function then, passing in a StateMachine object which is already instantiated, how would I do this?
That is, if I already have an object StateMachine fsm = {params}; How can I then pass it into the function?
09:52
pass an unique pointer?
nwp
nwp
@Sam You would have to copy/move it into a unique_ptr.
10:18
I'm reading up on the copy-and-swap idiom, and it looks to me like you can't really do it for both const and non-const arguments, can you?
overloading the copy-assignment operator by const and non-const parameter seems to work, though
nwp
nwp
For copy-and-swap you are supposed to take a copy, not a ref or const ref. That way you can always swap.
I'm not a fan of that. It helps with exception safety which probably doesn't matter and may be a little bit easier to implement at the cost of being inefficient.
I would recommend you stick to the rule of 0. It's even easier to implement and more efficient.
sure, but for the purpose of learning how the copy-and-move controls work, I'm defining all five operations
nwp
nwp
Maybe read this. You are not supposed to define all 5 operations, only 3.
I'd like to be able to call the move-assignment operator
nwp
nwp
StringVector& operator=(StringVector& rhs) should not exist.
10:30
@nwp If you are managing dynamic allocation, surely you would want to define the move operations?
nwp
nwp
StringVector& operator=(const StringVector& rhs) and StringVector& operator=(StringVector&& rhs) are supposed to be combined into StringVector& operator=(StringVector rhs).
@nwp I get an error from that
nwp
nwp
What error?
@nwp binding reference of type ‘StringVector&’ to ‘const StringVector’ discards qualifiers
nwp
nwp
Looks like you forgot to remove the &.
10:32
happens when I do this:
	StringVector sv;
	const StringVector sv5;
	sv = sv5;
and if I remove the & qualifier, then the move-assignment operator is faulty for calling std::swap
nwp
nwp
You are not supposed to use std::swap. You are supposed to write your own swap function.
does that mean, if I want to define either the three copy operations or five copy-and-move operations, I need to write my own swap?
nwp
nwp
You either go with rule of 0 and define none of them or with rule of 5 and define all of them or with copy/swap and define swap+constructor+assignment.
Copy+swap should look something like this.
why no copy constructor and why is alloc defined again outside the class?
nwp
nwp
alloc is defined for the first time. The one in the class is only a declaration. I got errors because of that.
10:45
huh? but I didn't, when I ran the program on coliru
nwp
nwp
I do wonder about the copy constructor too. I forgot why it even compiles without
@MiroslavCetojevic I think that is because you used -O2 which optimized it out and I didn't.
@nwp I see, I got the same error without -Ox, too
why, though?
nwp
nwp
Because you put static members into the declaration of the class in the header and if it was a definition you would always get a multiple definitions error and could never use static members in a class.
all right, now, how do I construct some code that the move-assignment operator is called?
nwp
nwp
sv2 = std::move(sv1); or sv2 = StringVector();.
The StringVector sv2 = std::move(StringVector()); you have doesn't make much sense. StringVector() is already a temporary, no point in moving it.
11:01
no, that doesn't work
nwp
nwp
That is an insufficient error description.
only either the default or the move constructor is called, but never the move-assignment
nwp
nwp
Actually you don't have a move-assignment because copy+swap. It all goes through StringVector& operator=(StringVector rhs).
doesn't matter, I took out the swap and reused the old code that was commented out
same difference
nwp
nwp
If you do sv1 = sv2; then rhs will be copy-constructed from sv2. If you do sv1 = std::move(sv2); then rhs will be move-constructed from sv2. That is the beauty of copy+swap. You don't need to write 2 assignment operators.
The old code doesn't have move-assignment.
Wait, it does.
nwp
nwp
Which of the lines in main do you expect to call the move-assignment operator?
StringVector sv4 = std::move(sv1);
nwp
nwp
That doesn't do assignment, that constructs a new object, hence constructor and not assignment operator.
sv = std::move(sv1); does the right thing.
oh man, now I'm feeling dumb
should've realized was assignment actually meant
well, your advice to me to call the move-assignment
thanks
 
3 hours later…
13:52
Somebody please greet me. I had a terrible bug and it turned out to be a compiler bug.
 
3 hours later…
17:06
@EuriPinhollow my condolences
Sam
Sam
17:29
@nwp Yeah I tried that but doesn't seem to work
Sam
Sam
18:00
This is what I currently have: paste.ofcode.org/y94kZiT5CgxqdXEVyZPrGb. There are a few errors. Not really sure the way I'm currently doing things is most efficient. Also not sure how to pass unique_ptr's around. Would appreciate if someone could take a look
Sorry, this is the correct paste: paste.ofcode.org/wuFAYDRERwTgNPanMT9Mga.
The code compiles... but, when fails when instantiated the Event
> libc++abi.dylib: terminating with uncaught exception of type std::out_of_range: vector
where does the error happen?
Sam
Sam
line 117
I think maybe its down to using std::move in the instantiation of StateMachine
If I instantiate the Event before the StateMachine, I no longer get the error @MiroslavCetojevic
The code then fails on line 59
With BAD_ACCESS
it seems somewhere the program accesses the memory it has no business accessing
Sam
Sam
Hmmm, yeah can't figure it out
Ahh yeah I think its because I'm using std::move when instantiating Event, I know longer have access to states when i try to construct the StateMachine
Should I be using a copy or something
18:16
no, it's not about move or copy
there's a problem with the vector, something is accessing it outside of its range
Sam
Sam
hmm, no idea
The error in inside that range based for loop. It doesn't have access to possibleStates
for (auto& state : std::move(this->possibleStates))
why are you passing unique pointers, though? seems to me it would be more sensible to use shared_ptr and pass it around by reference
Sam
Sam
I'm not entirely sure how they all work, how would I use shared_ptr
I only learned about them recently, they have a built-in count of how many pointers are pointing to the same object
18:25
I'm not experienced enough to tell you if you are doing it right, but I don't really see much use for an unique_ptr if you pass it around
that's why I recommend shared_ptr if you need (smart) pointers
Sam
Sam
Fair enough. I'll wait for one of the guys to come back. Hopefully they will see my error
thanks anyways
Sam
Sam
18:46
I can see it
I'm not assigning the StateMachine object inside of Event
This seems to do it
paste.ofcode.org/Cj4qVK32y8qDe8Tbbb8jLJ. I created a unique pointer to StateMachine as I guess only the Event object needs it?
compiles fine, runs fine
does it do what you want it to do?
Sam
Sam
Yeah it does. Just want to make sure using a unique_ptr seems a reasonable choice?
my take is, once you need to pass a pointer, make it shared
in your code, you always pass a pointer, don't you?
Sam
Sam
Yeah, I'm passing pointers because the classes I want to have as member functions to other classes take parameters to be constructed. I thought this would be the way to do it
seems good enough for me
Sam
Sam
18:55
awesome!
thanks for the advice
;)
ah, now I see why you used move on the state machine before passing it to Event
it would be troublesome if you passed an unique pointer somewhere and you end up with a dangling pointer
Sam
Sam
Fair enough, just changing it now
what, no, I didn't mean to change
Sam
Sam
My statemachine is using a unique_ptr
Im changing to a shared_ptr, sorry
yeah, it's what I'd have done anyway, but that move thing was a nice workaround
Sam
Sam
19:03
The whole idea of this code is to allow users to implement Events which have complex inner states
and how is that done?
by extending Event?
Sam
Sam
The Event class holds reference to a starting state.. and each EventState holds a vector of integers which correspond to where the current EventState can transition to
Take this for example: google.co.uk/…:.
Different states have different transition pathways. I just wanted a generic way of instantiating objects and passing in their routes
interesting, the description sounds like it's presenting the concept of an android app
you know, "intents"
Sam
Sam
19:22
yeah i guess its similar
19:33
@Sam of interest to you:
25
Q: Recommended usage of std::unique_ptr

MushyWhat are recommended uses of a std::unique_ptr as to specifically where, when, and how is it is best used? I discovered: About unique_ptr performances I already know: std::unique_ptr was developed in C++11 as a replacement for std::auto_ptr That a std::unique_ptr has no reference counting ...

Sam
Sam
Great thanks, i'll take a read now
you can either use shared_ptr or (unique_ptr + std::move), the latter has supposedly less overhead
not sure if the difference is practical for you, the performance might be more than sufficient for your purposes
Sam
Sam
Interesting. I'm not concerned with performance atm. I'm really new to cpp so I want to get the implementation done before I start profiling
When I usually code, I spend a long time trying to figure out the right way to do some implementation instead of just getting it done. I know it should be the right way but I can consider that in a future iteration
I also need to start making unit tests
Never worked with it, but Google Test might be a good candidate
Use Catch
19:55
Suppose, I have a EmailClient, that stores Folders and Messages. A Folder can have Messages, but they are always unique within a Folder. A Message can appear in several Folders, but only once in each Folder. Both classes will maintain a set of pointers to objects of the other class.
The interaction between Folder and Message will be managed by EmailClient, and I wonder, what is the best data structure to represent the relationship between Folder and Message within EmailClient?
std::map<Message*, std::set<Folder*>> and std::map<Folder*, std::set<Message*>>?
would have to maintain two maps, though
Sam
Sam
@milleniumbug Are you talking to me here?
Oh Catch is a unit testing thing
user704565
is there any way to prevent G++ from putting methods into their own sections inside binary?
user7659542
20:41
@jakubinf Do you mean like dynamic linking?
user704565
20:52
yeah
user704565
@traducerad problem is I would like all struct/class methods to be inside .text section and not their own .text._Zwhatever123 section
user704565
and there doesnt seem to be way how to enforce compiler to use strong symbols for methods instead of weak symbols
user7659542
@jakubinf Why would you need to do that?
user704565
because I am trying to build position independent code which is linked during runtime
user7659542
the only thing I can tell you is that in C you have functions like dlopen that allow you literally at run-time (not load time) to link against specific libs. But I doubt this will guarantee you that all your structs etc are in the same .text segment
user704565
20:57
with C everything is alright, only C++ methods seem to create own sections :/
user704565
like if i create simple function in C like int area(const Shape* self); it goes to .text section, but if I make class with method area(), it goes to own section
21:21
yo
if I have
std::vector<classX> vecX
std::vector<classX> vecY
and I do vecY.push_back(vecX[0]) to it, does this create a copy of item or they still point to the same object?
whh
thanks
C++ has value semantics by default, not sure what are you expecting
ok so lets say I have a data in a vector, is this correct way of creating a pointer to it?
vec<data> vecData
std::shared_ptr<data> x = std::make_shared<data>(vecData[0]);
This should create a smart ptr to the vecData[0] object right? I know its not so "smart" pointerish as once all smart pointers are deleted the data object will still be alive in vector(I think?) but I can wack it this way ?
21:30
mhm
why ?
I though c++ would just take the existing object and add a smart pointer around it ?
also this code sucks
also you are making so many assumptions
?
unless you can say what you have in mind, I literally have no idea what to do with these 2 messages
user7659542
what you should do after having read those 2 messages:

- stop sucking
- stop making assumptions
there is so many things to unpack here the response wouldn't fit in 15 messages
sorry, but I have a headache
ping me tomorrow
and maybe I'll be able to answer it then
@Dariusz Problem here, among a few, is that the data inside the vector is being managed by the vector.
21:37
yeah, I wanted to pass it to another class that can edit the data. But I did not want to copy it. I still want the vector to hold the ownership of the data. I could take a &vector[0] ref, but since I'm working with pybind11 and that only takes smart pointers I have to smart it all up.
Thats kinda sad. Looks like the smart pointer cargo cult is leaking.
what you mean ?
I don't approve of their decision to have all the arguments be smart pointers, if that is indeed the case.
ah yeh, it was quite a "surprise" to me :- ) glad half my code uses the smart_ptrs so I just have to refactor other half and figure out some edge cases (like one above) how to re-adjust it
Can you use a std::weak_ptr?
21:42
never used them before
hmm
now that I read it
maybe I can
22:01
@Dariusz you can also use vector<shared_ptr<data>>, that way if you add an element from another vector<shared_ptr<data>>, both will point to the same data
I know, but I already have entire system written with normal vector
:/
so now I either have to rewrite it all
or make a quick "fix" for 1-2 use cases with shared_ptrs
is your system designed to have pointers everywhere?
its slowly becoming one
and the purpose of such a system is...?
its a bit of a mutant ^^ learning on the go
started with copies, then refs&raw pointers and now migrating mostly to shared_ptrs
since I want to be able to control most of it via python eventually. I need smarts :- )
22:06
so you are writing a program in C++, and you want to pass that program some object via python (however it works)?
not sure yet, haven't figured out that part yet
atm its all c++, and I'm slowly adding pybind11 wraps here and there to see how it needs to be, which affects app and I'm erwriting app and so on. Learning on the go
I see, good luck then
thanks ^^

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