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03:35
Hey guys, I'm trying to use intel's MKL/IPP libraries
I know that the path is /opt/intel/compilers_and_libraries_2018.3.185/mac/ipp, and so I included that in my -L and -Wl,rpath= flags. However, it still can't find the header file. Is there something that I'm missing?
Large parts like BLAS, don't really need their headers - in the sense the BLAS is binary compatible across different implementations (as it declares c-style linkage).
03:57
@Mikhail I tried calling the ippvars.sh from this link software.intel.com/en-us/… but...
04:14
... but environment variables dont get exported if you just call a bash script
my bad, was busy
 
7 hours later…
11:12
what does it mean when a function returns ();
nwp
nwp
It default-constructs whatever it is supposed to construct.
Maybe with value-initialization, not sure.
oh so it works just like when it returns { };
I guess there is no way to call a non-cost function in a const function?
const on a member function means that this is const
 
3 hours later…
14:25
how can I change std::random_device so it won't give me the same numbers every time I run the code
you're hitting a MinGW bug
how can I fix it
use boost::random_device instead
(from Boost.Random‌​)
 
1 hour later…
15:43
Hi guys, i have one (i think) easy question stackoverflow.com/questions/50951564/get-audio-session-guid t hanks in advance
15:54
How do I import it? Do I just download the files, copy them inside my project and then just do #import "boost/random.hpp" ?
nwp
nwp
@VioAriton What operating system are you on?
windows
nwp
nwp
Then you want to click the big red button top right.
Looks like boost::random is not a header-only library, so you will have to also download the libs and link to them.
 
1 hour later…
17:05
If I've a vector of strings, is there any way I could return the position the iterator is at as int?
Hey all! I've a small query: how is a .header file in C different from import statements in Python? I am asking because I noticed that when we import a library, in Python we write: import math; math.pow(2,3), but in C if we do #include <stdio.h>, we can later directly use printf() instead of stdio.printf(). Why so?
@GaurangTandon a header is the equivalent of just literally pulling that file into your current file
found it - std::distance should do the trick
so you can think of a .h file as a file that sanitized enough to be included into another file, or at least should be
@Mgetz hmm, I see. Doesn't that pollute namespace though? What if I had a function printf in my own code, and now I also need to #include the stdio.header file. Is there no way to work around that?
17:09
@GaurangTandon you're in C, so yes but C doesn't have namespaces in the same sense as C++
macros maybe but having your own printf is undefined behavior
as that's prohibited by the standard
@Mgetz hmm ok. So, does C not have the Python equivalent of libraries? I can never do import package; package.method(); in C?
@GaurangTandon shared libraries or static libraries yes. If you want something that has namespaces you'd have to use C++
ah alright
thanks! :D
does this make sense this->immutable_table.push_back(std::make_pair(std::static_cast<int>(it - this->table.begin()), std::distance(it->begin(), _it)); - I have a std::vector of std::array and I wanna save the vector's iterator as well as the arrays
17:31
@VioAriton Not sure what you mean by "make sense". One thing is that you have an immutable_table member, but you are mutating it, which seems strange
 
1 hour later…
user8701826
18:36
Any good resources on NUMA-aware containers or design patterns?

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