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03:25
@EuriPinhollow think it could be a question for SO or SE?
 
1 hour later…
04:54
@EuriPinhollow Somebody has written a sort for C as a giant macro. It's possible, but fairly difficult and exceptionally ugly. The problem with qsort isn't so much inlining the sort itself. It's the fact that it refers to your comparison function via a pointer to a function. In the usual way of things (it's compiled to an object file in a library) inlining the call to your comparison function requires link-time code generation.
 
3 hours later…
07:47
@JerryCoffin link-time code generation = link-time optimization?
Sam
Sam
Morning
08:37
well technically the C qsort could be defined and declared inline in the header (to prevent link errors) and then the compiler can constant fold the function pointer into that function after inlining
08:56
i have a real noobie question
Sam
Sam
I have a vector of type std::vector<Effect*>.. I use a pointer because Effect is an abstract class but the actual vector is filled with sub classes inherited from this base. I populate the vector as:
ReboundEffect weightEffect = { 2.0, 1, 1 };
store.push_back(&weightEffect);
i've started learning templates, and it sounds so confusing. so if i define a template and the arguments for instance are t constant &s, can i use it to retrieve for some id and some name out of a class?
Sam
Sam
But, if I try to print an element: std::cout << store[0]->effect I think I'm getting a memory address printed. How do I dereference?
so i can save lines of code by eliminating getName, getId for instance?
or i understood it wrong?
i think that if they are for instance integers, one way could be to: vector<variabletype>& ref = *nameofyourpointer
and then you could access it with some other name variable
but i'm not sure tis is the most efficient way
this*
the guys here are pros, they might give you a better solution
Sam
Sam
But I can't make a vector of an abstract class.
09:06
hold on, store[0] would be of type Effect*, right?
so store[0]->effect is already the element that the pointer is pointing to
if you get for some reason the mem address of it, couldn't you just assign it to same variable, then (*vectorptr)[index]?
Sam
Sam
hmm, then why would it not be giving me the value it was assigned with
@Sam what value are you getting? and did you overload the output operator? because it seems like you are trying to print an element that has several primitive data members
Sam
Sam
Might be better for me to upload some of my code..
sec
you could use onlinegdb
and then upload the whole code and people could compile it
Sam
Sam
09:13
Oh I think I Missed a header
yeah, the iostream header
@Sam that will leak. Instead you will want to use a std::vector<std::unique_ptr<Effect>> and use make_unique
Sam
Sam
@ratchetfreak In my global or on the init_effects function?
Sam
Sam
09:29
Ahh brilliant. This fixed my printed issue also!! Thanks. Care to elaborate a little on this? Or point me to some useful info
way above my level lol
but it's interesting to learn
is it a correct practice to use template instead of functions like getName and getId?
Sam
Sam
A template being a generic function?
Sam
Sam
Well, it depends I guess. Does the function need to be generic?
getName I'd imagine is going to always return the same type?
basically it's just retrieving elements from a tree. for instance an id and a name
yeah, you're right
09:39
@Sam owning raw pointers is nearly always a mistake
also you pushed a pointer to a local to a vector and let it escape, that it undefined behavior of the dangling pointer variety
Sam
Sam
10:18
Thanks @ratchetfreak I'll bare that in mind
 
3 hours later…
13:37
@MiroslavCetojevic No guarantee, but yes, probably.
14:12
How is referring to function by pointer bad except being C-way? Compiler will easily inline it if function pointer is obtained directly in parameters. I know about LTO but it's a grey matter for me.

Also how qsort can refer to function by anything else other than a pointer while being a part of C? You confuse me.
@EuriPinhollow There's nothing exactly bad about referring to a function via a pointer. Calling a function via a pointer tends to be fairly slow though. This means that for something like sorting an array of int, std::sort is normally faster than qsort by a factor of at least 3.
hm... if a function is inlined, then shouldn't it be simple to determine that the function pointer points to the same function during the entire function call... and if the pointed-to function is known, to remove indirection?
nwp
nwp
In theory yes. In practice C compilers are too bad to do that.
14:30
it's probably handled under devirtualization, more commonly needed in OOP based C++
@JerryCoffin it's also a barrier to optimization. When doing quicksort on ints finding the first int bigger than the spill is going to be a very tight loop and SIMD-able
however with a function pointer that function can do anything to the data before the actual compare
 
1 hour later…
15:56
@JerryCoffin Speed difference has nothing to do with whether function is passed by pointer or not. Speed difference results from absence of LTO (which does not matter if translation unit is same for called and calling function). Last time I checked, compiler had no problems with inlining the function as long as it's name is used directly without assigning pointer to variable before calling.
16:48
hi, i have a question. struct sockaddr_in serv_addr; i have this line of code
why do i need to use the keyword struct
sockaddr_in is alreaddy a struct defined elsewere
but this sample code does that
nwp
nwp
Either you don't or there is also a function called sockaddr_in and you need the struct for C++ to know which one you mean.
It might simply be a C example.
Sockets are pretty ancient.
oh ok, so im guessing if i have a function delcared like this: void myfunc(const struct mystruct); its also to prevent that?
is there better alternative to sockets?
nwp
nwp
@jeyejow Maybe. You should simply remove the struct and see if you get an error.
@jeyejow There are wrappers like boost::asio. I find them much better, but boost takes a bit getting used to.
i tried using boost once, but its too confusion
the function i saw that used the const struct as paremeter was this one man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/bind.2.html
nwp
nwp
It's documentation for linux's C API.
17:01
well
bind(sok, (struct sockaddr *) &serv_addr, sizeof(serv_addr));
if i dont cast it to conststruct * i get error
but i dont understand why
oh nvm, its sockaddr_in
my bad
Hi guys, I want to ask something about template variable definition.
Given this question, *Why can templates only be implemented in the header file?*. Link: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/495021/why-can-templates-only-be-implemented-in-the-header-file
From the accepted answer:
// Foo.h
template <typename T>
struct Foo
{
    void doSomething(T param);
};

#include "Foo.tpp"

// Foo.tpp
template <typename T>
void Foo<T>::doSomething(T param)
{
    //implementation
}
Is this solution means that I would not compile Foo.tpp, and merely use the cpp file as a way to satisfy seprating declaration and implementation design?
nwp
nwp
17:22
@Rick Yes
18:05
@ratchetfreak The "spill"? Do you mean what most people call the pivot? I've never heard anybody use the term "spill" with respect to a quicksort before.
@Rick It means that you can view the template implementation as being in a separate file, but the compiler sees the declaration and the definition in a single translation unit.
@JerryCoffin yeah, spil is the dutch term for it
18:35
@ratchetfreak Ah, I see. So if Quicksort had been invented by Dijkstra instead of Hoare, we'd probably all call it that... :-)

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