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23:00
time to write constant folding
@MooingDuck missing a constexpr
@sehe ooh, nice
@DeadMG May I ask what exactly you are doing (seems like an AST, but what for)
constant folding @ home
@Cicada More SHA-2 breaking
I rewrote my solver to be vastly more accurate and precise
23:01
Oh.
now I need to implement all my constant folding steps
and then information propagation
Xeo
Xeo
Uuuh, this is bad, my eyes are shaking.
@Xeo Yeah, that's kinda bad. Perhaps you should obtain some medical information instead of telling us :P
@Xeo Get some sleep
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Xeo
32h of being awake + 6h of sleep before that sure make the body go weird
@Cicada Hey, my record is 15h of sleep within 7 days, this is nothing :P
23:04
@Xeo Pretty sure that's very unhealthy!
I wrote a stupid
Xeo
Xeo
Well, it's not as if that was voluntary
You must be very very very zombie after 7 days of almost no sleep
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I had a week to solve a programming problem to get my scholarship to stay at school. Not much time for sleep with that
I can't even picture it
@Xeo What do you mean? oO
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Xeo
23:06
~2h per day, it was getting funny after 4 days
how could a solver be 'more accurate'
What is a solution if it isn't ... _accurate_? An approximate reverse hash? An approximate artificial hash collision? Only 6 bits off?
Xeo
Xeo
@Cicada I had some money problems and the test / exam was deciding whether I'd stay at school or not
@sehe Well, the original solver I believe was on the right track but since it couldn't operate on the individual bit level, could not actually implement the algorithm I had in mind
but I accidentally left in a whole bunch of unnecessary 32bit plumbing, which I was about to attempt to constant fold even though I now constant fold on the bit level :P
@Xeo Oh I see. In a way I find it nice that you could save your scolarship this way, on the other side I find it disturbing for a school to require that kind of things
Xeo
Xeo
The test was to write a solver for the Devil's Labyrinth
And I was bad at writing that solver, so I had to put extra hours in
23:10
@Xeo uh.. the book?
@Xeo all I find by that name is a book
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Xeo
Hm, wait a sec
It's a (German only it seems) block game
Xeo
Xeo
you have to get the red piece out only through moving the other pieces within the board
And it's fucking hard
@Xeo oh, I've seen that game all over, called... uh... hmmm
23:12
is it always in the same starting orientation?
Xeo
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Yes
yellow out game/parking lot game/rush hour
hmm
genetic algorithm?
or hell, brute force
Xeo
Xeo
I tried bruteforcing it
there aren't many positions or pieces or possible moves
23:13
@Xeo uh, I'm pretty sure that demo right there is impossible
number intuition
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Yeah, my bruteforcing algo was horrible, though
although I guess that it's still 4^n, where n is the number of moves
@Xeo Have you tried logarithms?
or more
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Xeo
23:13
@Cicada Try building the board yourself with some blocks and play it
@Xeo she's not serious
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Xeo
@MooingDuck It is, somehow
the problem appears difficult because there's only enough space to move the red block one line at a time
but the double-sized blocks are inflexible in their positioning
the trick is to keep the center block surrounded with the smaller blocks which can move easily, like lubricant
Why not try random moves? Easy. Just needs time.
A lot of time.
Maybe.
Xeo
Xeo
Good luck, I made 3 other guys from my course play it over 3 hours, to no avail
And they weren't of the dumb type
23:15
@Xeo the red cant move to the side in that one, can only move toward exit. once it moves toward the exit, it's impossible for any block to be moved behind it. The demo in that pic is impossible.
They were guys
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@MooingDuck It can move to the side
@Cicada he said he tried brute force
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You only have to move the block from there first
btw, @MooingDuck, that's the only starting position for the game, there are no others.
@Xeo to move to the side, one of the 2-wide blocks next to it would have to move two blocks to the side... oh, that is possible. nevermind, I see it
Xeo
Xeo
23:16
Maybe I should try to solve it again now, I should have much better knowledge
@Xeo oh, the American variant comes with many many starting positions of varying difficulties. I bought it for my datd
@MooingDuck Hmm for me bruteforce != random
@Cicada I optimized for you
Xeo
Xeo
Of course I mean solve the exam, not the puzzle
btw, in assignment, there's a guaranteed sequence, right?
like in var = container[var] = expr; and the lookup uses the original value?
23:20
Yes
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I think so. Value computation on the rhs is done first
@Xeo Geez, that is a hard one
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It's sequenced before the assignment itself
@MooingDuck brute force != random
@DeadMG it's irrelevant, it's bad code. Use two seperate lines
Xeo
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23:21
@MooingDuck Aye
@sehe I already addressed that. brute force is faster on average than random.
> at the end of the evaluation of full expression (§1.9/16) (A full-expression is an expression that is not a subexpression of another expression.)1
@MooingDuck I don't think it's bad form at all. They're all given the same value. In fact, container is a memoization of var = expr.
I agree with @MooingDuck
(Not that you would care)
@MooingDuck depends on the problem and the algorithms used
23:24
@Cicada It's a pretty throwaway program. The kind where I use new without ever deallocating it and put everything in the global namespace
@DeadMG because you enjoy finding UB in your SHA-2 solver :)
@sehe Pretty sure that it's not UB :P
@DeadMG I didn't say that :)
I'm just hinting that sloppy style leads to UB when in the land of bazooka wielding cute little girls (poetic license)
Jan 1 at 14:52, by sbi
But, really, while C# is a neat little toy language, it feels like wielding a cute little girl where C++ feels like a fully-armed battle-hardened elite soldier. I miss the raw powers of C++ templates so badly.
@sehe lol
@DeadMG I can move the red block sideways in ~18 moves, and still have useful moves left. linear extrapolation leads us to guess the result is very roughly 100 moves. That means 1.61e60 iterations. At a billion ops per second, that's still 10^46 years. I don't think brute force is a good idea.
Xeo
Xeo
23:29
a removed conversation!
I'm not. I'm just thinking of that hilarious question again
You all know resurrecting messages is trivial, right?
brainchip
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Yep
23:29
@CatPlusPlus It is? I've not seen that done.
@CatPlusPlus For italics people. But you wouldn't contemplate demonstrating such poor taste :)
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there, magic!
Italics people can see the history, everyone can quote AFAIR.
I'm an italics person and I can't find any history
all it says is "Message deleted."
Where id is ID, obviously.
Xeo
Xeo
As long as you can atleast guess the ID, you can restore the message.
@Xeo No need to guess the ID, but it doesn't work ^
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@sehe I just showed that it works
23:32
right
now I constant folded my tree and need to inspect it's new size
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1 min ago, by Cicada
:3906991 Just testing
Ew, it's even easier than I thought
Stop removing stuff, dammit.
Xeo
Xeo
xD
Also, if you install the userscript thingy, you'll have IDs for all messages.
stop folding trees
it isn't environmentally friendly
2 mins ago, by sehe
@Xeo No need to guess the ID, but it doesn't work ^
^ no need to guess, indeed
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Xeo
23:35
So, just as a test, did everyone see the deleted quote from @Cicada 3 messages earlier?
@Xeo I did.
@Xeo You mean this one now?
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Yes
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Because you guys have been trying all kinds of links that didn't onebox, so I was a bit wondering
5 mins ago, by Cicada
:3906991 Just testing
23:37
@Xeo tried the exact link there, what's different?
Stop quoting me, gah
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Oho, really only italics now?
I still maintain it has a lot to do with italics on your user name
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG, try the link @sehe posted
@sehe Seems so
So.... I was right after all?
I fear the MG might be a bit Dead
23:39
Xeo
Xeo
Hope nobody minds
May 24 at 11:50, by sehe
@sbi Told ya so. So @RMartinhoFernandes does it compensate for my inability to grasp a broken ranking algorithm, when I know more about room owner's capabilities then the resident dinosaur?
:)
awww cockles
@Xeo That works
I could only constant fold out 5,000 boolean expressions
I'd hoped it would be more than that
Xeo
Xeo
23:40
@Cicada's messages are not allowed to rest in peace...
Shoot me already
Lol. I'll remember that number for a while.
although I guess that's better than my previous 20 32bit states
which is only 640 boolean expressions
@Cicada I'm pretty sure that's illegal
I can edit stuff too
23:41
13 mins ago, by sehe
Maybe later
:)
>.< Bug fix: Will no longer prompt users if they want to save if they don't have write access.
awww buggery
the actual % is less
Oh my eyes
I only folded out 0.4% compared to the previous 0.8%
must be something wrong there...
23:44
It must be that 'more accurate' part then
eh
actually, I don't think so
it's probably just a property of the fact that some operators now use a lot more states than before
-2
Q: Barriers on threads?

tetartosHello i have to parallelize Smith_waterman algorithm with threads and i wrote this one: #include <iostream> #include <iomanip> #include <fstream> #include <cstdlib> #include <string> #include <cmath> #include <sys/time.h> #include <pthread.h> #...

Holy crap wall of code.
like +, which used to have 2 input and 1 output state, is now many more than 32 times it's previous size
And badly indented, too.
whereas I'm mostly folding non-+ operators
23:46
@DeadMG sounds very related/the same to me
What are those people thinking, really.
@sehe No, what I mean is that it's probably more states in terms of how I used to define them.
There was a terribly indented question a while ago
anyway
23:47
the point is that now I am going to perform the actual information propagation and attempt to determine if I solve more states that way
Xeo
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@Cicada Just one?
@Cicada That's bad
How can people get such bad indentation when using VS?
I mean, it's not like the IDE itself does its best to make you write good code, but almost
Oh man this is nice:
And your comments are literally Greek to me (//for gia diagwniou pou mikrainei -> για διαγωνιου που μικραινει -> for diminishing diagonals) — sehe 17 secs ago
damn
if only my more accurate solver wasn't more accurately telling me how ineffective my algorithm is actually being right now
23:56
@Cicada that's not that bad as far as they go
@DeadMG Are you saying your algorithm itself is telling you how bad it is?
@Cicada Well, my previous solver might have glossed over a few problems, whereas this one more accurately reports the state of how well I'm doing.
@DeadMG in fact, some mathematicians made that a point about the algorithm; I believe they had a proof for it too, but it this chat may be too small to contain it
although I am further, it's not as much as I had hoped
still got 115738 states to solve out of 126231 (91.69%)
Well that's the part I don't get
How dare you fight mathematicians
23:59
I'll bet that most of my level 1 variables are AND

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