I got a riddle for the programmers here, if you feel like you're a good programmer, or should I say a "Real" programmer, give me the solution to it:
Aliens from Planet Blah come and invade Planet Earth. In the Planet Blah's news, it is reported that they sent 23 beings into Planet Earth. Planet Earth reports that 17 beings invaded. All of Planet Blah's aliens made it to earth and Planet Earth counted all of the aliens correctly. None died or left Earth. How could it be that Planet Blah reported 23 while Planet Earth reported just 17?
funny that both are right. I'd presume @JerryCoffin due to the assumption that planet earth uses base 10, but if you count in base 16 that's fine also :p
@EtiennedeMartel Sony is truly a nightmare. The SDK may be fine when you get it, but the hoops you have to jump through are just plain nuts. Basically, you need to already be an AAA studio, and they'll ask you to develop for them Otherwise, you can pretty much forget it.
@EtiennedeMartel Microsoft is pretty crappy too -- amateurs only get the second-rate SDK. Studios doing "serious" games get something else entirely (which is next to impossible to get as well).
@Rapptz I think they're all moving in that direction -- probably because although indie games don't make as much total, they also cost less, so they're often pretty profitable anyway.
@EtiennedeMartel I think it's more that some of the AAA guys (especially EA) haven't done anything even marginally original in a couple of decades now. Yes, Madden Football will probably still be selling in 2050 -- but it's pretty much the same old game with new players digitized in ever year.
You know, thinking about it now, it is kind of unfortunate that people seem to rag on Nintendo for being "casual" and some people won't take them seriously.
If I get a Wii, it's gonna be for Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Metroid Prime 3 and both Super Mario Galaxies. None of which could be considered "casual" (well, maybe the Marios, but still).
Maybe Donkey Kong Country Returns, which is still not a casual game (in fact, I heard it had quite the steep difficulty curve, which is pretty much as anti-casual as you can get).
I'm saying that because I'm working on a Zelda-like action adventure right now, and I got the feeling that there are many things that are wrong in Zelda, but that nobody addresses because doing that would fuck up the "Zelda-ness".
The low difficulty level. The fact that most items are almost single-use objects that become dead weight in your inventory once you complete the dungeon where they're found. The dull button-mashing combat. The formulaic level design and boss fights.
You did? Or did you use basically the bow and the local hookshot variant, with anything else being related to heart piece hunting?
The main problem is that most items in Zelda are tools but not weapons. Since puzzles run out much faster than enemies, you end up with items you cannot use on anything.
Well I guess if you're new to the series the games follow a decent progression. You're introduced to new ways to solve puzzles and you can look around and see if your old way works in the new puzzles, while still learning new ways of doing things.
There are a lot of cutscenes and dialogue in Skyward Sword probably because it's the first game in the timeline, so it's supposed to "tie everything together"
But it was mostly subverting a core concept in Zelda.
Zelda has always been highly idealistic: you save the world, beat the bad guy, rescue the princess, big sunshines and rainbows.
In MM, you cannot save everyone. And although it's not explicit, it's easy to infer that, even though you stopped the moon from falling, all the shit that Majora caused isn't gonna go away just like that.
Still, having a dark story and a cheerful presentation gives a great dissonance. When done right, it can be much powerful than going dark and depressing all the way.
I am using eclipse for C++ program.
After build my code when I am running the code I am getting name.exe has stopped working error.
Same code is working fine here http://codepad.org/2c5xFbLM .
Please help me finding this issue.
Thanks in advance.
My code :
#include<iostream>
#include<...
Yes, I wish I could use C++11, but our compiler is not yet ready to support that. I'm actually looking for some template metaprogramming solution to this question. — ozox8 mins ago
At some point, standard GCC installation started to fail me when I was compiling for bare metal, with -ffreestanding and friends. I was using GCC back then, so I had to create cross-compiler, which is awesomely irritating. Later on, I decided to move to Clang, but Clang is inherently a cross-compiler, so it Just Works out of the box.
And, even with that Apple's involvement, it's more free software than anything GNU's.
I wish i could cross compile from visual studio to both arm and x86. And its possible, but honestly too much arcanity to get it set up. So i keep two codebases, one in xcode one in vs.
Hi, How can I know how many "references" of my class are present? e.g const A & a = some_variabl;e
I heard variables used in Qt's signal-slot are reference-counted, it won't get deleted until no reference are present, wanna know how what was implemented
@enko .. and require two memory allocations to create, are twice the size of regular pointers, need a lock on the reference count and require two deallocations upon destruction. This does not matter in most apps, but it is there...
@Abyx AFAICS that also counts as not using make_shared :P
Bottom line, don't use new.
And even if shared_ptr proves to have overhead in your case (the only thing I can actually see as justifiable here are the atomic operations in single threaded scenarios) you don't go around and not use a smart pointer. You make a smart pointer that doesn't have that overhead.
@DeadCicada I'm sure it is, yes. The span of the contention is very small, so an atomic increment will almost always succeed first time. So, it's more of a hardware lock, not an OS kernel lock.
@MartinJames If you're implying that shit hits the fan if you set up the wrong lifetime for the object used in the callback... I have no idea why you're trying to argue based on the idea of programming without thinking.
@DeadMG, I don't like pre made things because I don't have limited time to do what I want (I'm still studying). I wound't be surprised if the next year I'll be developing a CGI app in Assembly ...
Well, basically, if you expect them to be there sometime later you need to pick the right lifetime whether you use smart pointers or not; there is no escaping this.
We all know that ending the explorer.exe process helps you to get some old games to work better (visually) on the Windows Vista and Windows 7 OS's. But why is that? Why do old games hate the new explorer? Or why does the new explorer hate old games?
In other words: What is the root of the color ...
@DeadMG Yeah, it took me a while to figure that one out. I don't know why that is. I mean if it's used to include a js file, why cant i just have <script rel="script.js" />