last day (29 days later) » 

21:39
1
A: Problems using boost multiprecision library

seheIt looks like you copied the wrong bits from the documentation: http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_57_0/libs/multiprecision/doc/html/boost_multiprecision/tut/ints/gmp_int.html What's shown is a reference summary, not a usage synopsis. The types shown already exist. A clear case of less is more: L...

This is very helpful - however, I am still getting the following errors: Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64: "___gmp_get_memory_functions", referenced from: boost::multiprecision::backends::gmp_int::str(long, unsigned int) const in main-8ba45a.o "___gmpz_clear", referenced from: boost::multiprecision::backends::gmp_int::~gmp_int() in main-8ba45a.o "___gmpz_get_str", referenced from: boost::multiprecision::backends::gmp_int::str(long, unsigned int) const in main-8ba45a.o
"___gmpz_init", referenced from: boost::multiprecision::backends::gmp_int::operator=(unsigned long) in main-8ba45a.o boost::multiprecision::backends::gmp_int::gmp_int() in main-8ba45a.o "___gmpz_set_ui", referenced from: boost::multiprecision::backends::gmp_int::operator=(unsigned long) in main-8ba45a.o ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64 clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
Stop spamming the comments!
how am i spamming? im just trying to put the errors messages here because i assume they're necessary to isolate the problem
I cannot possibly make the sample more interactive. Follow the Live On Coliru link and see for yourself. Here's a clang variant. Hope that helps...
@JonathanBasile I was happy to explain the linker flags, there is never a need to enter large amounts of texts in comments since (a) the info wasn't required here ("it fails to link" would have more than enough here) and (b) you can edit the question.
The problem I'm having is that I havent been able to reproduce your results. I see that the code works on coliru but not on my machine. if you arent willing to help further that's fine but i have to let people know that im still having a problem if someone else is going to. - i notice that you're using mpfr.hpp - that's not a library i have. And i know i havent been able to isolate the problem - that's why im asking for help
21:39
@JonathanBasile fixed that for you gmp only, clang. It's a force of habit to include mpfr I guess :/
When I try to use the gmp library I get the "Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:" message - does that mean I have 32-bit boost?
Please note that I addressed all your issues (the documentation confusion, the unnecessary code, the type of the integer literal) /at once/ even supplying a fully working example live which pre-empted the linking-related questions you encountered afterwards. I don't think I deserve the flagging and "if you arent willing to help further that's fine" attitude. (I was just not amused with the large amount of followup comments that were on things already addressed. Give yourself time to actually read the answers and messages. And your answerers to answer your followup comments. Cheers
@JonathanBasile I really don't know. It could be you're not linking -lgmp (in the right order!!!) or indeed your gmp is not 64 bit. (Boost is header only here, so that doesn't matter). If you don't work it out, post a new question about the linker error and tag it boost c++ osx clang++
I didn't flag you - someone else did - so evidently I'm not the only person who finds your attitude unnecessary - and the point im making in comments is that beyond the three issues you addressed in your answer (which was very helpful) i am now having another issue which has emerged since making the changes you suggested. again, if you dont want to help with this further problem, im just mentioning it in the hopes that someone else will.
thank you for that response - its very helpful
It's ok. We're all here to help and learn. You can streamline the help workflow. The main bit here was (a) slowdown + (b) "there is never a need to enter large amounts of info in comments"
(I'm removing the unconstructive/unrelated comments at the answer)
Note that nowhere was I mad.
I hope you do realize it's enormously frustrating when you put a lot of effort and care to detail in the answer, and are already busy explaining the link-time dependency the comments with noisy error message keep streaming in. This was the reason why I shouted out
O OK - im not mad either - i hope you understand as well that i did read your answer and comments and did everything i could to implement them before responding - i also just had a problem where i meant to hit shift-enter but accidentally only hit enter, so i produced more comments then i intended to.
21:44
Philosophically speaking, there's a cost to being too quick in communication (listening helps). This is often way worse in online communication because of the latencies in the messaging.
I realize my "shout out" has the same symptom, and it didn't work the way I intended.
when you say that i need to link -lgmp is that something i write on the command line - as you can tell im a major noob
I apologize for this
@JonathanBasile The command line used in the live sample is shown:
> clang++ -std=c++11 -O2 -Wall -pedantic -pthread main.cpp -lgmp && ./a.out
It's important to keep -lgmp at the end (at least after main.cpp)
Of course you can name your binary (-o some_program_name) if you want :)
I've been using c++ -I /usr/local/boost_1_57_0 main.cpp -o main
So, clearly not linking gmp
can i do that without using clang?
21:47
Yes. (You are using clang! Just invoking it via an alias).
whoa it works now!
thanks for sticking with me on that one
its very much appreciated
GCC has the same syntax. Other compilers have differences
@JonathanBasile No problem
> did everything i could to implement them before responding
I can't help but notice that you posted
O I see - I was a bit confused by the documentation - if i remove the class definition i still get the following errors: main.cpp:17:17: warning: integer constant is larger than the largest signed integer type gmp_int seed = 18446744073709551615; ^ main.cpp:17:10: error: no viable conversion from 'unsigned long long' to 'boost::multiprecision::backends::gmp_int' gmp_int seed = 18446744073709551615; — Jonathan Basile 39 mins ago
after I posted
also, use 18446744073709551615ull or initialize from string mpz_int seed("18446744073709551615");sehe 44 mins ago
:)
Also, the command line was there all the time. I did accidentally mixup mpfr in the mix though, so you're forgiven for still being confused.
I love giving live, self-contained examples because the pre-empt the whole "but how do I get it to work" mess.
Again, philosophically, -getting things to actually work- is the hardest problem in IT.
The real tricks of the trade are there.
Great one :)
22:16
Thanks Sehe! Im glad you took a look at the site. The base conversion function I'm working on is for the library, if i can ever get it to work.
22:38
@JonathanBasile I'm pretty sure at that scale you can use some help by master optimizers :) I know some people on SO who know their way around SIMD (SSE4/AVX) optimizations. Or OpenCL GPU coding :)
in Lounge<C++>, Mar 23 at 16:28, by Mysticial
Not that I've tried it. But I have a similar kernel for (binary integer <-> hex string conversions).
So, if you can de-XY-problem the goal and show a selfcontained sample that needs to be improved upon... I would at least look at it personally
 
1 hour later…
23:44
Hey @sehe,

I appreciate very much your offer to consider the task I’m facing. My background is more literary - I just stumbled into programming when I came up with the idea for this somewhat silly website - so I could definitely benefit from some advice from someone with more experience.

I’ll give you the biggest picture description since you mention XY. Right now, I generate books and store them on a hard drive. its a facile way to do things, I know. My goal is to create a true universal library - where any possible “location” a user visited would have a book in it, and every possible co
Yes, mpz is arbitrary precision. Obviously you must initialize from text (though I believe GMP may have more efficient serialization built in)
> A friend of mine who is a mathematician suggested using a halton sequence to create a random-seeming correlation between the book “locations” and the actual seeds used to generate the books.
^ that seems like a perfect suggestion.
In terms of generating maybe interesting things, though you could glean an idea or from e.g. brute force password cracking software
They too would usually do /either/ a brute force ("0000000000" - "zzzzzzzzzzzzz") combination sequence, but you could look at e.g. John's Markov generator mode (openwall.info/wiki/john/markov)
AFAIR it can be configured to be exhaustive (what you want). And the better part is that it's gonna be deterministic. Password crackers use this to partition the subsequences of the domain over a large number of hardware nodes for parallel processing.
This would be like you splitting in hexagons.
The main benefit of Markov chains is that you can "train" them with frequency data from real life English literature so that "more likely" sequences get a higher probability of being generated first. Of course, that's still not "random" as you desire for the "library organization index" so you would still want a (pseudo) random index on top of that like with the naive generation order
> So I’d need to be able to work with about 4680 digits to do that.
I've not yet pondered the relevance of bigints for your purpose yet. I may revisit that question one day (or await an interesting question on Stack Overflow)
(I realize that my suggestion above might not interest you at all - for it is biased towards generating "accidental" pseudo-readable verbiage. Depending on how you approach the project philosophically you might not personally be interested in this at all.)
But I noticed the site references the idea (plaintext search, "share your findings" and "angloize" (IIRC) seem to indicate a certain minimal interest in that direction anyways)

  last day (29 days later) »