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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

00:30
bye bye, eGLIBC:
http://blog.aurel32.net/175
 
7 hours later…
07:19
return;
 
1 hour later…
08:38
helloc @PeterVaro ;
09:19
Hi,
Can any one tell something about __mptr type used in linux c programming. Like, #define container_of(ptr, type, member) ({ \
const typeof( ((type *)0)->member ) *__mptr = (ptr); \
(type *)( (char *)__mptr - offsetof(type,member) );})
require's more explanation than ->
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15832301/understanding-container-of-macro-in-linux-kernel
10:16
helloc all;
heeloc @carpetjar
hey, anyone here familiar with IEE754? (Floating point bit representation)?
@Ajna what the question is?
how to identify the fractional part if the number is pair
I don't understand, give an example.
if so the '0' last bit stay right aside the others that arent part of it
may I upload images here?
10:24
you have a button next to "send"
mo I dont
0 10001100 10000001110010000000000
lets say this number
I do know that his frac part is 1000000111001

But how do I tell? Why not 10000001110010, or 100000011100100, etc?
use bit operations
the idea here is to get the decimal value os the number. And for that first thing is to get frac.. then M
what you mean
10:30
ah, so you need to implement conversion bit representation -> decimal representation by yourself?
I mean, that if you get a mask 0 00000000 111111111111111111111 and say mask & number you receive the last part of the number as a result, in this case it's 10000001110010000000000
the task is actually write a float float2(float f) that multiplies it's paramter by two without using floating point operations
function*
for that, Im using the conversinto clarify the answer for me
goto reboot;
I didnt got the mask thing right too.. The values are already there, it seems more a semantica matter to me
tic*
do you know what should be done to implement it?
Hi, C newbie here - can anyone help me as to why I keep getting intermittent errors with the following simple code: pastebin.com/CahYKZ9p ? Seems to work some of the time, other times I get EXC_BAD_ACCESS.
10:44
@AaronDS you must allocate space for name.
>_<
thanks @carpetjar
your welcome
no I dont
do you know how to multiply two numbers in a form mantise * 2 ^ exponent?
neither
10:52
you have (mantise1 * 2 ^ exponent1) * (mantise2 * 2^exponent2), what do you get after multiplying it?
it is full distributive?
just assume these are numbers, don't care about their representation
use maths
mantise1*mantise2 + mantise182^exponent2 + 2^exponent1*mantise2 + 2^exponent1*2^exponent2
mantise1*mantise2 + mantise1*2^exponent2 + 2^exponent1*mantise2 + 2^exponent1*2^exponent2
That's right, so now let's stuff it all into floating point representation
no way
that's wrong, you have no addition there
(a * b) ( c * d) = abcd
if we put b = x ^ y, d = p ^ q we receive ac * (x^y * p ^ q)
oh, true
11:04
so the result is mantise1 * mantise2 * 2^(exponent1 + exponent2)
and the best thing is that all of above are integers
nah.. I think we may have the additions
yes, we have additions in exponent1 + exponent2
but adding these is easy
(1*2)(3*4)
same results.. lol
nevermind... I got it so far
11:10
okay, so now we must use this theory in your task
so thats the final formula? just need to sum the normalized exp?
that is not
as you might get overflow when multiplying
and you must increment exponent to reduce the overflow
remembering, my task is to multiply by two, not by itslf
aaa
so the only thing you must do is to increment the exponent by one
but you must get the exponent from the floating point representation
hmmmm
well tought :)
th*
11:17
so again: get a mask and extract the exponent from the number
add one - that's multiplying by two
I leraned how to get the frac number as well.
but what will you do if you get an overflow?
that.
I....
overflow the in the exp?
Dunno... :( Here it says something about infinit value representation
11:20
yes, it would be wise to say "it's infinity"
IEEE 754-1985 was an industry standard for representing floating-point numbers in computers, officially adopted in 1985 and superseded in 2008 by IEEE 754-2008. During its 23 years, it was the most widely used format for floating-point computation. It was implemented in software, in the form of floating-point libraries, and in hardware, in the instructions of many CPUs and FPUs. The first integrated circuit to implement the draft of what was to become IEEE 754-1985 was the Intel 8087. IEEE 754-1985 represents numbers in binary, providing definitions for four levels of precision, of wh...
click the link
^^
but in that case the mantisse part is 0
yes, so you must zero it.
any case with the exp at 11111111 and the mantisse as well?
if you get exp overflowed - return an infinity
11:34
'and the mantisse as well'
Oh.. It's a NaN
yes
just increment exp and handle all the exceptions
11:56
the exp, or E?
@ajna exponent part
@MartijnPieters helloc
12:44
wich format of printf should I use to print exp value?
12:57
@carpetjar?
 
2 hours later…
14:37
Im not being able to increment the exp... anyone can help?
helloc all;
sure thing @Ajna go on..
#include <stdio.h>

typedef union
{
float f;
unsigned int i;
} U;

#define getexp(x) ((x)>>23 & 0xff)

float float2 (float f) // returns float * 2;
{
U u;
float f1 = f;
unsigned int u1;

u.f = f1;
u1 = u.i; /* gets manipulable float version */
printf("the exp of f eis: %.2X\n", getexp(u1));
u1 += 2^23;

printf("the exp of f is: %.2X\n", getexp(u1));
u.i = u1;
f1 = u.f;
return f1;
}
getting the same result in both printfs.. :/
check, one sec
lol 2^23 = 21
should use pot here
 
1 hour later…
16:12
now I need to manually convert a int to a float
16:44
I'm a beginner at `C`. Could someone please help clarify my understanding of the syntax used here? I saw this in someone's code:

typedef struct _object {
...
} MyObject;

MyObject *something;
void (*p) (void*) = something; /* What is going on here? */
They are casting a MyObject struct pointer to a void?
Is that legal?
17:02
return;
@Ajna sorry I had to go earlier, but I'm here again
@NoobSaibot the thing you are referring to is called a function pointer. In your example you have a structure, which is also type aliased, and a function pointer. The two has nothing to do with each other -- at least in your example
I guess you are reading some sort of OOP in C, am I correct?
My advice is, learn C without OO first, and if it is really necessary only then learn and use OO in C, as by default the language does not support classes (it is imperative/procedural by nature) so you can only pretend that a structure is something like a class -- but it is not, truly.
if you are really interested in low-level-ish OOP then use C++, or Objective-C on Apple products, or some new languages like D, Go, Rust or even Nimrod
17:22
np @PeterVaro. Could you help me now with the int2float?
I hope, what seems to be the problem?
@PeterVaro: Yeah. I'm coming from python. Pointers vs. addresses paradigm is confusing for me...thanks.
@NoobSaibot you can find a pretty nice article on pointers in the description of the room, this one here -------->
I just read somewhere that void doesn't necessarily hold "nothing". It can also hold any type. If that's the case, I think I'm good.
Sorry. I'm on a mobile, so I didn't see the description. I'll check it out.
it is not that easy. if a function looks like this: void function(...) that means it does not return anything. what you are referring to is the void * which is a pointer type and yes it can take any kind of pointer(!) but then you have to be very careful as 1) you are loosing type-safety 2) the compiler won't warn you 3) you have to cast it back to a proper pointer at some point to use it as a "real" data or perform pointer arithmetic on it
@NoobSaibot np, that's why I linked the article in my message
allrighty, back in 40
goto walk_the_dog;
17:47
Anyone familiar with the low level details of structs?
I have two structs:

typedef struct {
size_t size;
char *buffer;
} generic_buffer;

typedef struct {
size_t size;
char buffer[255];
} specific_buffer;
Can I safely cast a specific_buffer to a generic_buffer?
I need this to work on at least GCC and MSVC
18:13
@PhilipWernersbach How about using a union?
@PhilipWernersbach When I think of it, I'm not even sure what is the purpose of 'char *' vs 'char[255]'
@dror-k: specific_buffer is allocated on the stack, and then size is set to 255
@dror-k: The hope is that we can allocate different sized buffers on the stack, but only pass around generic_buffers
@D
@PhilipWernersbach There are many rules to consider, even 'just passing' pointers to incompatible structs has implications
@DrorK. Pointers to generic buffers, that is
@PhilipWernersbach If your goal is to follow the standard, it's not going to be easy- but if you just want it 'to work' on a given implementation, then I guess you could try your luck
return;
18:26
@DrorK so we can't do this?

specific_buffer buffer1;
function_call((generic_buffer *)&buffer1)
@PhilipWernersbach before we are talking about if it is possible or not, what exactly is the use case? Why would you need to do that?
(it looks like an XY problem to me)
@PeterVaro Morning!
did you mean helloc @DrorK.? ;)
18:29
@PeterVaro Have you seen my post?!?! :)
@PeterVaro Surprisingly it wasn't down-voted
@PeterVaro The use case is that we need differently sized buffers, and its an embedded system so we don't have malloc() and friends
@DrorK. I was one of the guys how upvoted both the Q and A -- but tbh I didn't had the time to read it all
@PeterVaro The goal is to only have to write one set of functions to process buffers, instead of one set for different buffer sizes
@PhilipWernersbach okay, embedded system, but C89 or C99+?
18:31
then you have variable length arrays on the stack
What's that
it's like:
void function(size_t size)
{
    float array[size];
}
That's nifty
VLAs are pretty useful when you don't have malloc for example
2
So we could do this?

generic_buffer buffer;
size_t size = ...;
char array[size];
buffer.size = size;
buffer.data = &array;
18:35
umm.. I think you can't, you have to pass a constant-like var into the scope of the function.. but
I'm not sure about that.. you have to compile it, and see how it works
(but it has the chance that it will..)
Okay, that can work, thanks!
@PhilipWernersbach it compiled for me:
typedef struct
{
    size_t size;
    char *data;

} generic_buffer;

int main(void)
{
    generic_buffer buffer;
    const size_t size = 100;
    char array[size];
    buffer.size = size;
    buffer.data = array;
    return 0;
}
(without any warnings)
anyway, I have to grab something to eat -- I'm starving!
goto have_dinner;
@PeterVaro ran it through the embedded, compiler, it works
@PeterVaro Thanks for the help
@DrorK. Thank you too
19:06
helloc all;
19:19
@PhilipWernersbach np at all :)
return;
helloc @carpetjar;
nothin' special, I'm actually documenting..
not the best thing in the world, but it is at least very useful
Must be a lot of fun!
how's life there?
@carpetjar coding is better than documenting it :)
I'm getting to work with Django
19:22
why not Flask?
it's my univ project for prof
I highly recommend you to work with Flask instead of Django
and here is a nice site, to begin with python + web
He wants Django, and this project bases on two projects before, so it would be too expensive to switch
and web stuff is really not my future, I hope
@carpetjar I just wrote a small script that compiles yaml and creates an html document
a little help to make my documentations look nice :)
that's really cool, so you don't have to make HTML on your own
19:26
ofc it is still WIP, but it is very handy
@carpetjar nope, I created a so-called template to types and functions and you can use those templates
and if you do the script knows what to do with them
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------#
- head:
  - - <tag name>
    - <attribute>: <value of attribute>

#------------------------------------------------------------------------------#
- type: <name of type>
  # Optional -- if this is typedef alias or related to a basic type
  original: <original or related type of type>

  info: <summary on type>

#------------------------------------------------------------------------------#
- func: <name of function>
bah, I hate HTML
here are the 3 main types: head - normal HTML like notation for customising/branding the doc, type for typdefs and structs, func for methods and functions
@carpetjar me to, as hell :)
and worse than html is html with css and javascript
exactly.
you have 3 languages in one project tightly interacting
19:30
actually JS is not that bad.. but CSS.. omfg.. I could kill the guy(s) who thought this kind of box/grid model would be a great idea..
JS would be okay, if not the fact that you manipulate HTML with it
@carpetjar although I must say, that's not exactly a bad idea, that you have 3 different languages.. although I would definitely kill CSS and add the "view" functionality to JS
I think it's insane. 3 languages would be OK, but please, not interacting so much
so JS can take one piece of HTML code and change it
anyway we can say that HT/XML is bad.. but.. seriously any alternatives?
the idea is to make them work together by asking them, using some api
not changing the code
but sadly, I have not heard of such alternative
19:34
there isn't any.. JSON or even YAML would be a bad choice
as they looks less verbose, but when you have to combine attributes and child-parent relations at the same time, they will be very very verbose too
that's why I think WE DON'T NEED TREE structures
we need constraint based systems
that's exactly what I'm working on with pycasso
@PeterVaro: What the 'new' function looks like?
@DrorK. where?
'cutils'
if you use new() on a DynamicArray then it is:
@PeterVaro What is the type of its first argument?
19:44
what you throw to it
as you can see in the examples above, it can be any kind of DynamicArray
@PeterVaro But the actual prototype- what does it say?
You have a 'new' prototype for each type?
there are two tricks there -- 1) only the compiler thinks those are different types 2) you can only choose between 8-10 basic types and a void * type
@DrorK. it is more complex than that, each header contains a typedef struct {} DynamicArray_sometype;
that makes it possible to the compiler to create a typesafe generic function, which new is
but under the hood each of those types are actually typedef DynamicArray DynamicArray_sometype;
Maybe I'm missing something, if there's only 1 'new' prototype, and it expects different pointers-to-pointers, then what is the type of the first argument of 'new'? 'void **'?
which is ofc storing void*s
the other trick here is that some functions do take special types, like the new for example, it will only accept float* if it is used with DynamicArray_float
but the trick is, new selects a wrapper function which casts back and forth the void* items into their proper type
so it is typesafe, because the compiler can check whether you are using proper types of not
Could you teach me this trick?
19:50
but also has a single implementation.
@DrorK. I try to publish what I have before the end of the next week
all of it -- you could use it, and also you could read the full source
Kamiccolo will help me write the tests -- at least he said that ;)
So each time I may use only 1 type? I can't have:
DynamicArray_int *da_int;
new(&da_int);

dynamicArray_char *da_char;
new(&da_char);
?
you can do this ^
How could the same function 'new' differentiate between the types?
but da_char can only contain chars (and it will be checked and casted) and da_int can only contain ints (and it will be checked and casted)
@DrorK. because it is not a function, it is a type-generic function-like macro
actually, new is a simple macro, which counts the number of arguments
it can choose between new1, new2 and new3
those macros are the typgeneric switches
Something doesn't sound right here... looking forward to see this black magic!
20:01
they choose based on the type of the first argument (which is the array, or the hash table or the linked list)
which function to use
and that function is a wrapper, which casts the values and pass it to the single implementation
it sounds a bit complex, but believe me -- I wrote a Python script which generates all these things for me;)
The part which I don't understand: how the differentiation of types works
what do you mean? how would the compiler knows which variable is what? or how does my implementation knows how to deal with different types?
The only thing you give to 'new', is &da_int ... how this argument alone is being interpreted as "DynamicArray_int"?
that part is not magic at all.
let's think of an other example
 float *array[10];
array is an array of pointers to float
whenever you use the name in the scope "array" it will always be an array of pointers to float
that is what statically typed means
you can cast the value, but the variable itself cannot be anything else, only an array of pointers of float
so when you say
 DynamicArray_float *dynarr = NULL;
then dynarr will always be a pointer to a DynamicArray_float (which can be read as a dynamic array of floats)
therefore &dynarr is an pointer to a pointer to a dynamic array of floats
and the compiler knows that
Q.E.D.
Okay, and when you pass: new(&dynarr); ... how 'new' knows it's float?
20:10
because new call the new3 macro (which is a generic macro that takes 3 arguments)
and inside that new3 there is an association list
where the compiler can choose which real function to call
Are we talking about a C compiler? :)
if the type you are passing is not supported, a compiler error will be raised
@DrorK. yepp, a C11 compiler, to be correct
Is this a special feature of C11 that doesn't exist with C99?
It has a name, something I could google?
20:13
void fn_int(int i) { printf("%d\n", i); }
void fn_float(float f) { printf("%.f\n", f); }

#define fn(number) _Generic((number), int: fn_int, float: fn_float)(number)
it is called the _Generic keyword
as you can see, there are two function prototypes, but I just created a common interface to them
so when you write:
fn(1);
the fn_int will be called and when you write:
fn(1.f);
the fn_float will be called.
@DrorK. the <tgmath.h> which is part of the standard is implemented this way
(tg == type generic)
ofc as I told you, I also used 2 other tricks, the ... ellipsis, the __VA_ARGS__ and numbered arguments in a macro + the tricky header files, with the in/complete types
I see
Well, coming from C89/C99, C11 doesn't look much like C :)
I can assure you it is :) it just have this almost-function-overloading thingy
which makes the source code a bit complex, but the API stays very clean and neat
and that is exactly my goal with cutils
A couple of weeks ago you asked me what is the significance of my question
This feature which bounds you to C11--- is exactly the reason
C89 -- 25 years old; C99 -- 15 years old; I mean, it was really about time to put something new and fancy into C as well ;)
Have you heard the expression you can't teach an old dog new tricks? :)
20:23
:D:D:D
@DrorK. have you not seen C++11?
@carpetjar I haven't seen C11, yet alone C++
C++11 is an old dog which does all the new tricks every other language does
yeah, I understand that, although, I think this _Generic is just a macro, the heart of C is the same -- which means creating a generic function (void*) can be done without any macro tricks
what this adds to C is the ability to make it type-checked at compile time
But not with the same interface
20:25
which is ofc a nice and a super-awesome feature
@DrorK. with the same interface, but that will be raw pointers without casting --> it will be the job of the user to do that
which is ofc can be error prone
So it's no longer the same :)
yepp && nope :)
My pointer-to-pointer to struct makes it the same for structs
(but that's as far as it goes)
how long does it take you guys to kill a laptop?
I can do in no time, with a hammer.
I can actually do it without the hammer too..
:)
20:36
and with love and care?
well, my current mbpro is nearly 6 years old, and I think it won't last till winter
I should really have to by a new one at the end of summer..
why @carpetjar?
just wondering, I killed my in 2.5 years, but it's not mac, wondering if it's good or bad result
what brand is it then?
samsung
hmm.. I never had a samsung.. what happened with it? fans? the case? keyboard? display?
I mean what have died?
20:40
it was suprizingly tough, like it fell of a table and i caught it in mid air gripping it's display with one hand
later on i dropped it in a case on a floor from 1m, but it was fine
then, it overheated, so i changed the thermal paste on both gpu and cpu
and now it has a white stripe on the display, and before I see a desktop on Windows it goes dark for about 10 seconds
so as it's a vital tool for me I need to have spares/backup if it dies
hmm.. and why notebook?
I must be mobile as a student, sometimes I need to take it on exam or whatever
but thought about an alternative: one small, "a girl's bag notebook" not for anything serious and one serious PC with all the cool stuff
like a comfortable keyboard
and a large display
I think that is a way better solution
I was thinking something similar -- a macbook air like (the smallest 11" one) notebook and a powerhouse as a desktop
last time I would nearly fail my exam, as I was trying to track down a "bug" in stdlib, valgrind was giving false positives on the univ workstation
but there is also the third solution: get a laptop and an external display
so you stay mobile, when at home you can attach all the cool stuff to it
I have that setup now
and I hate it
it is not powerhouse and not as mobile as it should be either
20:48
but when do you need a serious computing power you cannot run on a cloud?
:D:D:D
I only know one and only ONE real-time cloud based 3D rendering farm available
and because I model and render a lot in 3D (both high-poly mesh and NURBS)
ah, you do 3D stuff, right
it just needs workstations.
otherwise you are right, for bare development, you don't need a dual GPU and 8 cores
so we have 8 cores now?
wow
I don't have, but I want ;)
20:51
I have an i7 here which is pretty cool
but there was only one time I used it's full power
and 32GB RAM and mSATA SSDs ;)
I don't get why we would need 32GB RAM
right now I have 16 and it is 70% full all the time
(mostly 90%)
I mean, I have never wrote big projects which needed to remember a lot of stuff, I have no idea what people may put into that large memory pool.
well, I constantly have 13 programs running, and one of it is a chrome with over 30 tabs open
20:54
oh, so that's painful
it is, yeah, that's why I desperately want 32 GB RAM :)
I have music, chrome with not more than 15 tabs, text editor and a few terminals
I can't imagine what more can I use
maybe a skype or something like that
tumblr reader, rss reader, twitter client, imessage, dribbble reader, skype, torrent, lots of terminals, github, text editors, chrome, blender, music app, illustrator..
just to name a few that are running on my Mac almost all the time
+ the menubar apps :)
ah, so you have really dispersed entertaiment
20:57
and it mixes with work
exactly :D
nothing more
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