« first day (710 days earlier)      last day (2367 days later) » 

12:09
@Tellus I assume Intel and AMD probably have something
 
2 hours later…
Ron
Ron
13:40
What is the purposes of this make_unique1 function example?
Isn't that functionality already implemented in the original std::make_unique function?
@Ron Yes... it's just an example
Ron
Ron
@Mgetz Thanks.
nwp
nwp
> This example demonstrates perfect forwarding of the parameter(s) to the argument of the constructor of class T. Also, perfect forwarding of parameter packs is demonstrated.
The point is showing forwarding of a single parameter, not being useful otherwise.
Ron
Ron
I see.
So I should always prefer the U&&... approach in my implementations?
Or does that depend on the number of template arguments for the class I am implementing this for?
nwp
nwp
It depends on the number of arguments. If you want to forward exactly one argument you shouldn't make it a variadic template.
Ron
Ron
13:47
Ah right, appreciate it.
Is calling resize with a size larger than current size would trigger a call of reverse to reallocating?
My textbook said "the resize members change only the number of elements in the container, not its capacity." But it did change the capacity (indirectly) I think.
nwp
nwp
Either you forgot to mention that the book said "in case when you make the size smaller" or your book is wrong.
14:03
Yes. it mentioned than it never reduces capacity. only change size
Alright, maybe I am being too strict about the sentence.
 
1 hour later…
15:25
How do JIT compilers manage to execute generated machine code?
if the generated code as stored somewhere, that memory wouldn't be executable?
because "generated" implies it was modified?
and code sections would be marked read only?
There are systems calls you can do to make parts of memory executable
15:37
While I was looking at perf annotated data, I found this:
lock btsl $0x0, (%rax)
sbb %esi, %esi
test %esi, %esi
jne 1e1
The code was compiled with -O2. Why is sbb and test even needed?
Why not jc 1e1?
And perf also showed that the sbb instruction was taking 90% of the time. This makes no sense at all!
There's a dependency because of CF being set by the bts but 90%?!
@Yashas probably not the sbb I'd bet it was actually lock btsl that was taking the time but you're seeing it in the profiler as sbb because the pipeline has already taken that in and moved the IP
you'd have to use a pipeline level profiler to figure that out though
actually now I'm totally confused
what does the value of IP indicate?
if I had to guess sbb esi esi is a very specific sized noop
most recent instruction in the pipeline?
You know that CPUs have pipelines right?
15:43
yea
Instruction pipelining is a technique for implementing instruction-level parallelism within a single processor. Pipelining attempts to keep every part of the processor busy with some instruction by dividing incoming instructions into a series of sequential steps (the eponymous "pipeline") performed by different processor units with different parts of instructions processed in parallel. It allows faster CPU throughput than would otherwise be possible at a given clock rate, but may increase latency due to the added overhead of the pipelining process itself. == Concept and Motivation == Cent...
so a lock prefix causes a few weird things to happen, most notably it locks the bus which introduces a heck of a lot of latency. It also at least on intel CPUs causes a fence of sorts
but that fence wouldn't be apparent until the next instruction
so parts of multiple instructions is in the pipeline. So what exactly does IP refer to?
Instruction Pointer
rip/eip register
I meant what does the value in IP point to
I mean there can be multiple instructions in the pipeline so which instruction would IP point to?
In the design of pipelined computer processors, a pipeline stall is a delay in execution of an instruction in order to resolve a hazard. During the decoding stage, the control unit will determine if the decoded instruction reads from a register that the instruction currently in the execution stage writes to. If this condition holds, the control unit will stall the instruction by one clock cycle. It also stalls the instruction in the fetch stage, to prevent the instruction in that stage from being overwritten by the next instruction in the program. To prevent new instructions from being fetched...
@Yashas Usually to the most recently read instruction, most intel CPUs last I checked were 4 issue decoders so they try to read and get 4 instructions into the pipeline at once
@mystical might know better on later architectures
you can go look at Agner Fog's latency tables to figure it out yourself if you want
 
2 hours later…
user9949270
17:23
Anyone has a C++ compiler handy? I'm trying to debug this program (not written by me) - it's behaving very strangely (for the same input it is sometimes generating the output and sometimes it is not!). Header file: paste.ofcode.org/yxx5dbU4GQkLD24n9tdKcV; Main file: paste.ofcode.org/6DpN7xusJNU9FSrnsSaasp; Sample command line arguments (format): L=100 p=0.5 d0=0.3 d1=0.7
user9949270
Could someone please let me know whether they're being able to re-produce the error?
@Blue smells like undefined behavior, have you turned on warnings?
it's not a C++, it's written in C with naked POSIX calls;
I suspect that some variables are uninitialized, to combat that, try running memory and address sanitizers (google them) in llvm, and also building your project with
-Wall, -Wpedantic compiler switches
@login_not_failed that doesn't change my recommendation ;)
user9949270
@Mgetz I'm trying to look for that option on Visual Studio :/
17:33
@Mgetz I'd like to give some bonus points for distinguishing C from C++, since it's often mixed for no reason
user9949270
There should be something like "treat warnings as errors"
user9949270
I think
@login_not_failed I honestly didn't look at the code at all
tbf posix calls on windows are kinda flaky anyway
@Blue you need /Wall
user9949270
@login_not_failed I don't know what that is. Any reference to read about it?
17:35
@login_not_failed /Wall isn't recommended. It turns on literally every warning. Little code is warning free for all warnings, and some warnings are prone to false positives
3
Q: How do I enable all warnings in Visual Studio 2008 in a project?

user1343318I want to print all the warnings in my project built in VS2008. As has been suggested at other questions, the project properties only gives me up to /W4 level warnings when I want to enable /Wall. Below is a snapshot of properties. Is there a way to enable /Wall in VS2008 for a project?

@Blue /WX (I always get this wrong, both chars are capital)
that's too-Windows-specific :) did'nt know that, thanks
g++ is really weird. You say, "turn on all warnings" and it turns on some
it turns on all of the sane warnings ;)
17:37
I claim that -Wextra and -Wpedantic are also sane
it's not enough, still
user9949270
@login_not_failed Thanks
in Lounge<C++>, 2 days ago, by Mgetz
because GCC sucks in various random soul deadening ways
user9949270
user9949270
So, I'm getting these warnings
user9949270
17:38
I don't understand most of them. Anyhow, trying to comprehend
@Blue I would fix them, they are pretty clear actually
you're not passing the right number of parameters to that function macro
you're defining a macro before the precompiled header it looks like
user9949270
So apparently this is the macro '#define _POSIX_C_SOURCE 200809L' which is causing the issue. It says either it is not defined or "definition is different after pre-compiled header use"
user9949270
#include "clusters.h"
user9949270
clusters.h is the pre-compiled header I suppose
user9949270
So I should shift that (#include "clusters.h") to the beginning?
17:44
nope, it's stdafx.h
user9949270
@login_not_failed Oh, how did you know though?
user9949270
Aren't both of them pre-compiled headers?
user9949270
stdafx.h and clusters.h?
because this is a standard name for them
user9949270
17:46
they have a specific purpose: people store data that won't change from compilation to compilation, so it will speed it up, they are not important for a project this small, but do read about them later
user9949270
@login_not_failed Okay, I will, thanks :)
user9949270
So that warning is gone now! Yay
user9949270
Now I'm checking the others
that's because POSTPONE2 have one parameter — a, and you are using it here without it:
#define POSTPONE(a) POSTPONE2() #a
to properly stringify something with a macro, you only need two of them, I believe:
#define POSTPONE(a) #a
#define STRINGIFY(a) POSTPONE(a)
user9949270
@login_not_failed Ah, after making that change it is indeed showing no more warnings, however, the problem still seems to persist - for the same input sometimes it is showing the output and sometimes it is not!
17:55
then it's a logic error somewhere in your code
user9949270
Well, I mean if it is a logic error it would not have shown the correct output ever, I guess :P It's weird that for the same input it executes the first time and not the second time
if you're not that familiar with debugging and stepping through the code, it's time to adopt this habit, or try to compile with gcc with address and memory sanitizers turned on
and with -Wall, -Wpedantic compiler switches turned on
it looks to me that you're using some memory twice, maybe indirectly; and MSVS instruments maybe aren't so smart to find these cases, that's why I'm suggesting to use another tools
user9949270
18:11
@login_not_failed It seems I'll have to read about memory sanitizers for that. Will do soon
user9949270
Apart from that the issue seems to be somehow related to fflush somehow
user9949270
I commented it out once, and it works fine
user9949270
But then second time it again doesn't
user9949270
Again I remove the // and it works....lol
user9949270
Strange
19:37
Is there an effective way to compare two strings that contain letters "A", "B" , "C", "Z" but "Z" denotes that it could be any letter from the rest , so for example "ACZ" is equal to "ACA" (or even "ACB", or "ACC") ?
strings are always equal size
I can do it "manually" and check each character one by one but is there a better way?
I don't understand the problem. If we have a std::string a = "ACZ"; and std::string b = "ACA";, then what you want is just a == b
but "ACZ" == "ACA" in my case
Oh
So like a unix pattern like AC? where ? can match any character
yes, assuming that ? is only for one character strictly, then "A?A?" would be equal to "ACAB"
(ignore the word it was coincidence :P )
so Z is the wildcard
19:42
Yes ( that's the word i was looking for )
you may want to pick a different symbol for that
std::equal can work, supply a custom predicate
I'm using c++ would it matter? (I can pick another one)
it doesn't really matter but having it not be a letter helps with making it clear which char is the wildcard
Ok, don't attack me but how would I make a predicate and would it actually be more efficient than comparing char by char , or I would end up doing the same thing but with more boilerplate code?
19:48
It does the same thing but with less boilerplate code: std::equal(a.begin(), a.end(), b.begin(), b.end(), [](char lhs, char rhs) { return /* condition */; });.
It can also potentially be faster than a raw loop. The std::equal function is implemented by the standard library, and they often do non-obvious tricks to make it run faster
@Justin ok I'm sold, thank you :)
how could I align the spaces using the iomanip lib onlinegdb.com/HJOXfYFbm
maybe I should use std::cout for each then std::setw()
@AnnaK. yw :)
@VioAriton Yeah, I think that std::setw is the way to go. I always hated alignment with iostreams, though, so I'm not going to look more into it
this gonna be a pain
20:24
Boost format
things like integer signing can be determined using the stl
21:18
does int8_t, int32_t and so on have the bits it says on all the machines or something?
or they are just an alias to be more specific
so, say I'm on a machine that the normal int has 16 bits
then if I use int32_t, then that would have 32?
yeah but that would be the point in using int32_t instead of int if the int is already 32
int isn't always 32 bits
If you want your code to be portable to other platforms, if you are relying on it being 32 bits, you should use int32_t
nwp
nwp
@VioAriton Like you said, you may be on a machine that has 16 bit ints and still want a 32 bit int.
thanks - I'm learning so much about computers ever since I've started learning c++
 
1 hour later…
23:40
I'm having trouble initializing and appending elements to a map<string, vector<vector< mytype > >>, does anyone have a link with a related question?
Did you get the std::map<std::string,std::vector> case working?
23:56
@Mikhail I'm looking at stackoverflow.com/questions/10487865/… and I will try to have Vector<vector instead of vector
std::map<std::string, std::vector<int>> test = { { "Hello", { 1,2,3,4 } },{"Goodbye", {4,3,2,1,0}} };
also a vector of vectors is an anti-pattern unless you need them to be jagged

« first day (710 days earlier)      last day (2367 days later) »