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Xeo
Xeo
16:00
TIL: Holding alt while clicking a link allows you to select the link text instead.
TIL too.
That's awesome.
user142019
You know.
user142019
I can implement String and Array directly in Zoidlang.
user142019
No need to do it in C.
What are the primitives those build upon?
user142019
16:03
Two integers and a pointer.
"For a single unicode character get the glyphIDs." -> function return type is one ID. Scumbag docs.
@Zoidberg'-- No static arrays then?
user142019
No.
user142019
Well.
user142019
Nah.
user142019
I don't see the need.
16:05
@R.MartinhoFernandes Somehow, it has gained renewed interest over the last few days. That was visible, even before the re-tweet by ISO/Herb (don't remember)
user142019
The only C functions I'll have to call are malloc, realloc and free.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I also fear that it might make beginners assume that something is thread-safe because it's const (e.g a const reference to an object that is modified by other threads)
@StackedCrooked There are very crazy things in the comments.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Also, that blog post was the 'mystery talk' announcement, right? Wouldn't that explain a certain amount of blind guessing going on (at least in the top, say, 200 pages of comments)?
> Since const means thread-safe and all of the operations are thread-safe (because I use synchronization), doesn’t that imply I should mark all of the operations const? Even the ones that do modify the observable state of the queue?
16:07
@R.MartinhoFernandes "Cart, meet horse."
@sehe There are only 10 comments there.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah. I should have looked. It is clearly not that old announcement
> Does this imply that it’s now completely legal for any compiler vendor to implement, say, std::sort as always in parallel? DeadMG
I don't see how that can be concluded from the video.
I really hope that thing does not get a massive audience so I won't have to unconfuse minds about this all the time.
@StackedCrooked std::sort takes nothing const.
@Zoidberg'-- Of course, somewhere, in Java-jabba-land, an oblivious child is happily rumbling his keyboard:
if (exposure.equals(null)) {... #java #facepalm
user142019
16:11
.equals is terrible. Give me operator overloading already.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why wouldn't sort be allowed to parallelize?
@StackedCrooked Wait, what.
user142019
Then just provide an operator is or a function or whatever to compare identity.
@StackedCrooked Can you please review the use of negatives in that sentence?
user142019
@StackedCrooked You may use an impure comparison function.
16:13
Good point.
@StackedCrooked Because the predicate may not be thread-safe.
I don't think Java will ever take on operator overloading, it will overload there tiny little minds
You cannot accept arbitrary code to call and run amok with threads.
> The guy doing the camera work should be shot.
That's difficult because he is holding the camera.
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes You can document requirements, but that would break existing code.
user142019
16:16
@StackedCrooked He should be shot with a Canon!
Maybe a concept for thread_safe_predicate could work.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked pure~
user142019
Or use Haskell.
@Zoidberg'-- And flashed into obliteration!
@Xeo Indeed.
@Zoidberg'-- You write the proposal :P
Xeo
Xeo
They should just add that to the language - const on steroids.
user142019
16:17
@StackedCrooked extern "Haskell" :^)
user142019
As for Zoidlang.
Xeo
Xeo
Or they should add a doped keyword that enhances all the things.
doped const comparator
user142019
Would it make sense to #define __zoidlang /* version here */ when importing a C header?
No, why would I do that?
user142019
The implementation does so you can query whether the C header is being used in Zoidlang or not.
user142019
16:19
Like __cplusplus.
Ah, you mean in Zoidlang.
Xeo
Xeo
You normally don't use dots, though.
user142019
yea xd
You can use (0)(1)(1) and parse it as a BOOST_PP_SEQ
user142019
muh
16:22
well I sure did make the most of this day
see y'all
@thecoshman bye, and see you later
@ScottW It's for developing software on the Windows platform.
user142019
Use Vim and a decent terminal emulator with Z shell.
user142019
Is there actually a terminal emulator for Windows?
user142019
Ah yeah a bunch.
0
A: Simplifying code: function call order inside loop

Bart FriederichsOkay, the code's fine, but I'll bite: while (CONDITION) { if (!rand) goto label; foo1(); label: foo2(); if (rand) continue; foo1(); }

Is it just me or everyone here is forgetting what "simplify" means?
(Also please close vote as too localized)
lol, someone suggesting optimizing memcpy with the GPU.
16:32
@StackedCrooked Why are camera-wielding people difficult to shoot? Next time, I'll remember to hold my camera up when I'm in a mass shooting
@Zoidberg'-- mintty
@R.MartinhoFernandes That'll work. Zero-copy :)
Yes.
Make the two things functions.
At least yours seems to be the only answer so far that doesn't actually make the code less simple.
@StackedCrooked Isn't there some optimization gcc will do that will turn yours into basically what the OP had?
I can't remember what it's called
One of them even adds comments to explain the tricks. The need for the comments should be a clear sign it isn't really simpler.
I think wrapping the two pairs-of-statements in functions is not useful unless there is a need for reuse.
user142019
16:42
@sehe Dankjewel.
@Collin That could be.
@StackedCrooked It is useful if it makes things clearer. Of course it is hard to name them properly with the meaningless example that was given.
do_things_one_way and do_things_another_way maybe :P
Loop unswitching is a compiler optimization. It moves a conditional inside a loop outside of it by duplicating the loop's body, and placing a version of it inside each of the if and else clauses of the conditional. This can improve the parallelization of the loop. Since modern processors can operate fast on vectors this increases the speed. Here is a simple example. Suppose we want to add the two arrays x and y and also do something depending on the variable w. We have the following C code: int i, w, x[1000], y[1000]; for (i = 0; i The conditional inside this loop makes it diffic...
Unswitching!
Yeah, or forwards() and backwards().
@ScottW Yeah, I kinda don't want to do anything else now
16:49
@ScottW only half of it, though
@Collin just aim for 65536 :)
@StackedCrooked Those names are actually nice even in that meaningless example.
user142019
My code is bad and I should feel bad.
user142019
switch (c) {
    // ...
    case '<':
        switch (state->text[++state->index]) {
            case '=': ++state->index; return make_token(LT_EQ, NULL);
            case '<':
                switch (state->text[++state->index]) {
                    case '=': ++state->index; return make_token(LT_LT_EQ, NULL);
                    default: return make_token(LT_LT, NULL);
                }
            default: return make_token(LT, NULL);
        }
    // ...
user142019
:P
> // Please don't submit this to the daily WTF
That's the dWTF equivalent of starbait, right
16:57
Dude, functions.
@Zoidberg'-- ++state->index - makes me frown
@Zoidberg'-- You need stack-based parser.
user142019
@StackedCrooked it's a lexer.
user142019
@sehe It increments the index of the next character to be read.
16:59
@Zoidberg'-- meh, seen worse.
@Zoidberg'-- Dude, functions!
switch(state->consume()) or something.
I love @TheTweetOfGod. It's got style.
user142019
Syntax error! :D
17:00
@Zoidberg'-- Yup. That's what it does.
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah yeah I could create peek and consume functions.
@Zoidberg'-- "It increments the index" clearly shows you are thinking at the wrong abstraction level.
Ideally you should write a minimal and general lexer that allows you to define your syntax rules declaratively. However, I could be wrong since I have no experience writing lexers/parsers.
You are writing a lexer, not an index incrementer.
nah. Listen to Linus! Abstraction is overrated
17:02
Kernel is ugly so that userspace can be pretty.
user142019
The lexer needs some way to read a character.
Just wanking.
user142019
And to do that you need to increment an index.
user142019
Eventually.
@Zoidberg'-- Now we are talking. Why not call that "reading a character"?
17:03
@Zoidberg'-- No! It needs to build character first.
Just call the damn things by their fucking names.
user142019
@StackedCrooked that's just a string.
user142019
struct lex_state {
    char *text;
    size_t length;
    size_t index;
};
I guess a Lisp lexer would be rather simple.
Well at least you are getting your hands dirty and not staying comfortably in an ivory tower.
@StackedCrooked It needs escapes in strings, so it will probably have operations of the same complexity as lexers for any other non-esoteric language.
Ell
Ell
17:06
Hey guise
It may be smaller, though.
Ell
Ell
Hotels without free WiFi suck :( £5 for an hour is extortionate :o
Hack it.
Call your dad.
Kizmac, if you have a Mac.
Or maybe it builds with Linux these days... who knows...
Ell
Ell
I have just my phone and tablet. It's one of those where you get your hopes up and connect but then have to log in with a web interface :(
17:11
Spoofing your MAC address as that of someone logged in would work, I guess.
Ell
Ell
Hmm
Aren't Mac-Addresses hardware-specific, though?
I mean, I haven't tried too hard but what I have tried hasn't let me fake the Mac Address
Ell
Ell
No you can spoof it
Oh, well then. Run through some mac addresses get on the list.
Ell
Ell
your computer has to send the data after all, and you have 100% control over your computer
17:13
@ThePhD Yes, but the hardward does not get final say.
Ell
Ell
I suspect ill need to root my phone :S
ifconfig can do that IIRC.
On Windows it depends on the driver.
Fuckin' windows. :c
Ell
Ell
I can't do fun stuff on this phone :o
user142019
> More than 10000000 total errors detected. I'm not reporting any more. Final error counts will be inaccurate. Go fix your program!
3
user142019
17:15
lol @ Valgrind xD
@ThePhD You can also do it regardless of driver through the registry, but some drivers have an interface to do it buried in the Control Panel.
@Zoidberg'-- OMG, you suck.
Did he really hit 1million errors?
user142019
I had an infinite loop with a leak in it.
@Zoidberg'-- Valgrind :D
Ell
Ell
I have JRuby on here and that's it
17:16
Lol.
@Zoidberg'-- while(malloc(1));?
user142019
No.
user142019
if (c == '\\') {
    switch (c = state->text[++state->index]) {
        case 'n': string[string_length++] = '\n';
        default: string[string_length++] = c;
    }
} else if (c != '"') {
    string[string_length++] = c;
}
user142019
Something with that. :P
user142019
I'm figuring it out now.
17:17
I don't see any allocation.
user142019
No the allocation is above that.
user142019
if (string_length + 1 >= string_capacity) {
    string = realloc(string, string_capacity *= 2);
}
realloc calls free() for you, right?
user142019
It deallocates when needed.
Something like that.
17:20
What if string_capacity == 0 ?
user142019
@ThePhD Never happens; it's initialized with 2.
Hm. Well, okay.
I don't see what's wrong with it.
-1 not enough std::string.
user142019
lol std::string in C.
-1 not enough ++.
user142019
17:25
but
user142019
There is ++state->index all over the place!
user142019
-1 too much ++. xD
man
I did a totally stupid thing
You shat on your dog?
no.
but I did shit my bed.
5
so embarassing
user142019
lol
Dude. People will star that.
user142019
@StackedCrooked Good idea.
that's what happens when you make choices when you're only 10% awake
user142019
17:28
@StackedCrooked The topic is so old. (Hint hint!)
I don't get the hint.
user142019
I do.
@DeadMG Apparently I was close.
The dog would have been funnier though.
she'd be easier to clean
there's not just sheet and mattress, there's also some kind of hot pad thing and I've no idea how to clean it.
is it old? Buying a new one is an option imo
17:34
hmm
one presumes that there must be some intended facility to clean it
I'm not gonna be the only guy ever to have a small accident
There be tutorials one the web on how to clean shit.
very funny
if not you should make one?
@DeadMG No, I would read that.
Because I suck at everything household/cleaning/etc..
That would be the other option, tell gf that you really need to compile some sh*t (no pun) and that she has to deal with it?
17:37
@DeadMG Throw the blankets away. You don't need to clean that.
apparently
it can be just machine washed
Fuck it.
if you're careful
@JohanLarsson What.
Presumably one would want to stop having her as a girlfriend to do that, no?
don't understand
17:39
I once threw up in bed. I think I let the blankets soak in a bucket of water.
The smell was hideous.
My dog has taught himself to puke in the floor drain, he has done it eleven times in a row now
Why does your dog puke enough to be a pro at it?
are we talking about vomit again?
@TonyTheLion No, puke.
17:41
He eats grass, it is over a long period of time though
@R.MartinhoFernandes same difference
my brain hurts
user image
4
nice cop ^ (good looking)
Strange uniform, not really undercover but not very formal either
Casual Friday?
Maybe it's a movie set.
17:45
wtf is that at the front, a flashbang grenade?
user142019
@TonyTheLion It's a trap!
pepper spray?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's not a movie set
Oooh, new hat.
user142019
> Die rekent even in een klap af met het stigma van lelijke politieagentes die altijd een te dikke kont hebben in hun operationele pantalon.
user142019
17:46
LOL
user142019
Dammit.
I got 70600674 for Euler11, don't feel like off by n checking, is it correct?
user142019
Fuck this infinite loop.
17:49
Shit, I think I have to call an 11-argument function that has no docs.
2
lol
dat face ^
user142019
Oh the lexer didn't consume the final " of a string literal and thus the next iteration started lexing a new string literal.
@DeadMG Seriously, going from a character in the text-only stream to its glyph(s) in the final rendered structure is an herculean task.
A Coliru paste contains both the source code and the output. I escape the \t in each part and then concatenate the parts using \t as separator. On the receiving side I do the reverse.
Is there anything wrong with this approach?
17:52
you
user142019
lol
my brain hurts
go to see a doctor
tomorrow
@JohanLarsson That is correct.
17:54
@DeadMG No paracetamol nearby?
there is, but whether or not taking it is safe is another matter
user142019
As for numeric literals, I'll go with 42, which is decimal, and e.g. 2#10, which is binary, 16#DEADBEEF, which is hexadecimal, etcetera, in Zoidlang. You can use any base greater than 1 and smaller than 36.
@Griwes ty,ty saved me some boring.
@DeadMG Huh, do you have any reason to believe it's unsafe?
17:54
@JohanLarsson Unless he was lying :P
well, the last time I tried taking paracetamol was about 22 months ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah buying new is better
and I don't recall if it made me sick
user142019
Only thing is
user142019
floating point literals.
user142019
17:56
Is that possible in binary and hexadecimal and octal?
when I fucked your mother, it was
user142019
So you could do 2#1001101.10011101 or something.
All the other devs that are familiar with this API left already. I think that is a sign I should call it a day.
@Zoidberg'-- C has hexadecimal floats. But please, don't.
user142019
So only base-10 floats?
user142019
But what about 0xabc.def? Is that impossible?
@Zoidberg'-- C makes the exponent mandatory because in 0x1.f the f could be the float suffix.
(p separates the exponent)
user142019
I don't have float suffixes in Zoidlang.
user142019
You add .0 and you have a float.
user142019
Or you cast int to float.
user142019
18:02
Well, double. There is no single-precision float.
user142019
Problem is, what would abc.def represent? abc + 16^(-def)?
user142019
No wait.
user142019
123.456 = 123 + 456 * 10^(-3)
user142019
So 0xABC.DEF = 0xABC + 0xDEF * 16^(-3).
user142019
Yeah that's it.
user142019
18:07
16#abc.def == 16#abc + 16#def * pow(16, -3)
user142019
Assuming arbitrary precision. xD
user142019
Then in binary, 2#101.111 == 2#101 + 2#111 * pow(2, -3).
right
paracetamol and diarrhoea relief tablets
do your magic
user142019
Run your AV.
Cola is supposed to relief upset stomach.
Can't vouch for that though.
user142019
18:15
In Dutch hospitals you get Coca-Cola when you're dizzy.
Cheap and effective solution. Clever people.
user142019
And tasty. xD
Is 5537376230 correct for problem 13? Did it in a lazy/ugly way
user142019
Uh
user142019
Just enter it?
18:19
Just enter it, but yes, it is correct.
I hardly see any non-ugly way to do it
ah, sry I have not registered, guess i should do it instead of spamming here
...lol
Concerning the const-is-thread-safe discussion. IIRC it simply boils down to this: declaring a const object means that the object is binary immutible. therefore only reads are allowed, therefore the object is thread safe.
Am I missing something?
Oh yeah the mutable part.
mutable undermines constness therefore only objects that are inherently thread-safe may be declared mutable.
If this rule is strictly adhered to, then mutable becomes an indicator of thread-safety.
user142019
But if object has mutable members and a const method mutates those in thread-unsafe manner, you're fucked.
@Zoidberg'-- Then you are breaking the rule I just presribed.
user142019
18:25
ohxd
user142019
When you don't terminate your string literals, my lexer will generate a segmentation fault. xD
However, if a const method modifies two mutable objects then the transaction as a whole is not thread-safe.
user142019
Use actor model and voila, problem solved.
user142019
Actor can only do one thing at once.
user142019
And actor has unique ownership of and unique access to one or more resources.
user142019
18:28
Want to access object, gotta do that through the actor.
user142019
Shared memory is terrible.
Use any synchronization technique and problem is solved.
user142019
As long as you don't forget to synchronize.
user142019
Talking about threading.
user142019
How shall I do that in Zoidlang.
user142019
18:32
I was thinking green threads.
If I can possibly design stuff to use a message-assign/actor scheme, I do. Synchro on anything, (except the message-queues), is a fall-back I use if I cannot design any other way.
@MartinJames,
agree
user142019
How do JVM and CLR avoid a GIL?
@Zoidberg'-- By using finer-grained locking.
Put another way, why does pythion etc. need a GIL at all?
user142019
18:36
I could enforce actor model (like Erlang) but that would decrease flexibility.
@MartinJames Because they were originally designed and implemented without supporting threading at all, and a GIL was a relatively quick/easy way to retrofit at least a little support for threading.
user142019
IIRC PyPy and Stackless don't have a GIL.
user142019
I was thinking of something like this.
@JerryCoffin Piss-poor design of the interpreter in the first place, then. To make another thread that runs an interpreter, should just be a matter of creating an interpeter instance for each thread.
user142019
foo = ->
    while true
        print(receive().to_string())

thread = Thread(foo)
thread.send(32)
thread.send(64)
thread.send(128)
user142019
18:41
Prints 32, 64 and 128.
user142019
Every thread has message queue.
user142019
Problem is captured objects. They need some kind of locking and you might want to do things synchronously.
user142019
One thing I could do is this:
user142019
atom foo
    bar = Integer()
    baz = String()
user142019
lock foo
    bar = 42
    baz = "Hello!"
user142019
18:43
It will lock both bar and baz.
user142019
And you must lock foo before you can access bar or baz. Would that make sense?
@MartinJames I'm hesitant (at best) to throw around phrases like "piss poor". Keep in mind that Guido started work on CPython in 1989. At that time, most typical computers had around one or two megabytes of RAM, and MS-DOS was the dominant OS. A lot of things that are "just a matter of..." now were on the border between grossly impractical and outright impossible at the time.
user142019
Maybe that can screw up things if you call functions from within the lock block. Those functions may also want to lock foo.
user142019
Wait.
the problem with threading is that there is no automatic algorithm to achieve it safely
18:46
0
Q: function with integer parameters

BadshahI have for example a function as follows: int func(int a, int b, int c){...} Now I want to use the GMP library. So how do I have to change the above code?

lolwut
user142019
Locking a lock that is already locked by the same thread will be a no-op.
user142019
Locking a lock from another thread will block.
user142019
@LuchianGrigore he wants to pass and return bigints using GMP.
@DeadMG Anything that starts with "The problem with threading" instead of "One of the many problems with threading" is almost certainly false.
@JerryCoffin Hmm.. a good argument, but I'm struggling to accept it. Maybe I would understand the issue better if I actually used a language with a GIL ~;)
18:49
@JerryCoffin Well, I could argue that every other threading problem arises from that, indeed.
@Zoidberg'-- which language are you talking about?
user142019
@bamboon I'm designing one.
@Zoidberg'-- ah ok, so zoidlang.
@DeadMG You could argue it, but I think think there's any way you'd convince anybody who knew much of what they were talking about. Just for example, making it safe automatically seems unlikely to reduce task switch overhead.
true
user142019
18:52
I think I'll do it as such: you must lock atoms before accessing any objects in the atom, and if the atom is already locked, you must wait until it's unlocked, unless it's locked by the same thread in which case the locking operation will be a no-op.
user142019
An atom is just a collection of objects with a mutex attached.
Since preemptive mutitaskers and the threads exist primarily to support efficient I/O, an ' automatic algorithmic' language to apply thread support would seem to be imp... ... err... 'very difficult', unless the language could design complete systems, not just generate code.
@MartinJames I doubt it -- it's not really about language use or design. It's about implementation. Keep in mind that Linux (for one example) had the same basic problem for a long time (dealt with in the same way -- the GKL). They've put a lot of work into increasing the granularity, but in the process, the kernel has gotten a lot bigger and more complex, and at least at times introduced some non-trivial bugs.
@MartinJames At least IMO, if you just want asynchronous I/O, you should generally support that more directly instead of using threads.
user142019
I usually use non-blocking I/O.
user142019
With callbacks.
user142019
18:56
And a runloop, optionally (depending on what I want).
user142019
Runloop could be in a separate thread.
Async I/O is essentially just moving the thread pool/s and the buffer-filling into the kernel - something has to make the callbacks!
user142019
But separate threads for each I/O operation is silly.
@Zoidberg'-- That's a recursive lock -- it generally simplifies design at the expense of increased overhead.
user142019
What is the overhead? A branch?
user142019
18:59
if (lock.thead_id == current_thread_id) return;
lock.lock(); // blocks
lock.thread_id = current_thread_id;
@Zoidberg'-- Extra branching and storing extra data.

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