What we’re about
Running events for the local C++ community since 2016! This place aims to bring people together. We focus on C++ and related topics and we share knowledge and enjoy time together. From C++ newbies to C++ veterans, everyone who likes or is interested is welcome. Our events are open, inclusive, and positive spaces. We apply the Berlin CoC.
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See all- 0x32: LLVM internals && learning some ARM Assembly SkillsFoo Café Internetstiftelsen i Sverige, Stockholm
Join us for our milestone 50th StockholmCpp meetup as we wrap up Season 24 with an exciting program and a return to the fantastic FooCafe Stockholm!
A big thank you to think-cell, our newest SwedenCpp Pro Partner. Thank you, think-cell, not just for supporting our local C++ community, but also for your engagement in the international C++ developer community!
I am looking forward to an evening of learning, networking, and celebration with all of you!
As usual, Door open: 17:30, the program starts at 18:00
Program outline:
17:30, Door open
18:00, Intro and event host presentation
18:10, Hans: C++ switch statements under the hood in LLVM
18:50, Casual mingling and networking with refreshments 🍕🥤🤝
20:00, Sebastian: Passive ARM Assembly Skills for Debugging, Optimization (and Hacking)The program in detail:
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Hans Wennborg: C++ switch statements under the hood in LLVMAre switch statements more efficient than if-else chains? How do they get optimized? This deep dive into Clang/LLVM's handling of the switch construct will tell you everything you wanted to know, and probably more.
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Sebastian Theophil: Passive ARM Assembly Skills for Debugging, Optimization (and Hacking)
Reading assembly code is an important skill for debugging and optimization. Is there a bug in a 3rd party framework that you don't have the source code for? Are you calling into a system framework and it does not behave the way you expect? Do you want to understand the code the compiler generates, depending on the optimization level you choose? I have done all of these things more often than I would have liked in the past and I had acquired a solid understanding of x86 assembler code over the years. All was well until, suddenly, I had an ARM machine on my desk.
If you are, like me, using ARM machines a lot and always wanted a gentle introduction to ARM assembler code, this is the talk for you
---Väl mött! 🎉