@Basj If you’re going to ask a new one, you need to be careful. Site standards have changed a lot over the years, and many of those old questions would be considered too broad or otherwise off-topic if asked today.
@CodyGray yep I know, but in this precise case it's a bit sad, because having a good canonical question about this classic passwordless auth would be super useful for many people
I agree that sometimes “too broad” is wielded as a bit too blunt of an instrument. But we do need questions to be reasonably narrow in scope in order to work within the Q&A format.
@Scratte Only because it's a duplicate. Otherwise, that's of sufficiently narrow scope to be asked here, as long as you contextualize it with a specific language.
What's not going to be allowed is "Which is faster, if or switch?"
As one of the people most ideally suited to answer that question, at least in the context of C or C++, I can tell you it's way too broad. I could write a book on it.
How expensive are branches on your architecture? How expensive are mispredicted branches? Do you even have branch prediction? What are the chances that your inputs will cause the branch to be mispredicted? Also, what are your memory constraints? Will that LUT kick other code you care about out of the cache?
@Scratte Questions don't become off-topic just because they can be looked up in the manual. Such questions, while they may not be popular, are perfectly on-topic, and can be easily answered by quoting from and citing chapter and verse from the manual.
@CodyGray I'm guilty of getting answers from here when I searched for them. But for basic stuff I usually start with the manual. When I can't figure out how it works, then I go here.. where there's really nice explanations for slow-thinkers too
@Scratte While that is what everyone should do, most don't look at the manual. I think most don't even bother searching at all considering how many get closed as duplicates.
Right. Not reading the manual is likely to get you downvotes, but it doesn't make the question off-topic. And there are plenty of cases where asking about the manual (i.e., for an explanation) is going to get you many upvotes and make for a great question.
% is a prefix in AT&T syntax meaning to interpret the following string as a literal register specification.
Apparently, nobody at AT&T was able to write a parser that could just match symbols with a look-up table.
@NathanOliver But there's another downside to looking at the manual. You end up with a very large Question that no one bothers to read. Especially if it comes with code to try to sort out what's happening.
Okay, so your bit mapping is 100 1010 1100 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0100 0000 0000. It's going to index into the bit field at the index given by the input parameter, negate that bit, and return its value.
@Scratte I actually like those Q's. If its a wall of code, I just close the tab and move on. If it's code inter-spaced with quotes and explanations I'm a lot more likely to invest my time.
What's the input code, @S.S.Anne? I.e., Godbolt link, please? :-)
You can easily confuse GCC's pattern-matcher by using non-idiomatic C code, which is especially likely if you're trying to hold its hand and force it to generate certain machine code output.
@NathanOliver Yep, I reached this same conclusion a couple of lines back. S.S. Anne was compiling with and old version of GCC (circa v6), which doesn't appear to know about the BT instruction.
Hmm. I wouldn't be too worried about losing the ability to ask questions on a Chromebook support forum.
It's a Linux distro. What's the worst that's going to happen? Whatever it is, you can fix it.
Dang, no kidding. I find myself saying "OMG" a lot whenever I analyze the output of "GCC". Funny, those TLAs.
This is seriously pathetic, but I've actually seen similar things before where GCC is unable to see through a short-circuiting comparison operator and turns it into a branching nightmare, instead of a sane bitwise test.
Paradoxically, changing || to | breaks MSVC's pattern-matcher...
No, seems they're all fine with that. Unsurprisingly, since it's literally a no-op. And therefore, as we say in Texas, I guaran-damn-tee it that someone is going to come along later and remove it from the code, the same way as you'd remove an if (x == true)
@S.S.Anne MSVC doesn't have -O3, so you're looking at unoptimized code. You can pick from either /O1 (which means optimize for size, equivalent to -Os, except not stupid) or /O2 (which means optimize for speed, basically equivalent to -O2).
Yay! Your code will then look like libraries that I write.
Giant paragraph blocks of comments explaining why code is written in an apparently-nonsensical way, with snarky remarks about the output on various compilers.
Folks, the thing about "optimizing" compilers is that they have to obey your code!Write good code, then they (probably) don't need their tricks; write 'daft' code and they'll optimize you away! I once did a 'test' on my code with Intel C++ versus in-built MSVC - no noticeable difference,