no need to go further that atoms or even molecules, that will give us more than enough computing power we will ever need, especially when we get off the binary system and use qubits!
In physics, its the ability for particles to exist in multiple/parallel dynamic states at a particular point in time. In computing, would it be the ability of a data bit to equal 1 or 0 at the same time, a third value like NULL[unknown] or multiple values?.. How can this technology be applied to:...
I have a great Pawnshop Management app I developed over 22 years ago running in over 88 shops, but havent had the time or energy to modernize it to a touch-screen POS app
In 3D computer graphics, the viewing frustum or view frustum is the region of space in the modeled world that may appear on the screen; it is the field of view of the notional camera. The exact shape of this region varies depending on what kind of camera lens is being simulated, but typically it is a frustum of a rectangular pyramid (hence the name). The planes that cut the frustum perpendicular to the viewing direction are called the near plane and the far plane. Objects closer to the camera than the near plane or beyond the far plane are not drawn. Often, the far plane is placed infinit...
I thought the whole point of doing frustrum culling at the application level is because your application has a higher-level idea of what the polygons are arranged into
@RMartinhoFernandes I guess what I could do is pass the frustum straight into the octree and get a more accurate view of which subnodes it intersects that way
No. template<typename T, typename = EnableIf<foo<T>>> ... is however, and that's what I'm using.
He's suggesting template<typename T, EnableIf<foo<T>> = 0> ... which does involve a defaulted parameter though. (Obviously not the same alias as before in this case.)
Return type version is template<typename T> typename std::enable_if<foo<T>::value, Ret>::type ... which doesn't work for everything and I'm not sure how to alias it.
He mentions it to be exhaustive and because that's one of the common variation.
@LucDanton You give special names to your detail namespaces? I've always had a tingling feeling that detail everywhere was asking for collision trouble, but never ran into it, so I haven't worried much.
@RMartinhoFernandes You had a question regarding those namespaces that are reopened across TUs and I decided to take the careful approach after some reflection. I did have conflicts in the past and it's annoying to change a topical, local name into a convoluted detail::featureX_find because someone took detail::find first. This runs into the point of namespaces head first. So featureX_detail::find it is.
> For best performance if there's less than 4 levels of nesting, use one. If there are more levels of nesting use the other. In all other cases use the comefrom statement: cs.dartmouth.edu/~mckeeman/references/come_from.html – Michael Burr 1 min ago
quite some time ago i noticed that in Visual C++ 10 ADL fails when at least one of the arguments is a lambda.
std::vector<float> vec;
for_each(begin(vec), end(vec), [](float) {});
The above fails to compile on VC++10 and 11 (beta) (begin and end are found via ADL). When i convert the l...
@DeadMG care to review my answer vs the answer provided by Nawaz? It's 4:31 am so it could very well be something I'm missing, but I took some time to re-read everything twice so I hope not.
@DeadMG true, though you could have read the question before I posted the answer. but I take that as a "stay calm, go to sleep, but first; grab a smoke"
@DeadMG you mean, it's so bloddy hard to simply get stuff deleted (delete a project: get a modal dialog for each individual file and (in VS2008) you can't even control it with the keyboard, so you're mousing like a monkey, serving VS?
@ScottW Never do, I suppose
Already back from school, brought the kids by bike
@ScottW Eclipse local history rocks, especially with structural diffs
@DeadMG I don't share that experience. Visual studio is impressively good at crashing randomly, yes.
Cue: telling me it's the plugins
@ScottW Well, it does in the sense that there is a lot discipline to still get up at 7am
On the relevance: someone said an IDE made it so easy to delete a lot of stuff. You say, VS is so resilient to that. Immediately that resonates with my everyday experience: deleting stuff is annoying. I frequently drop down to a text editor to edit .csproj/vcproj files
although I appreciate this might not be inherently obvious, because you can't tell from the chat logs that both messages were posted almost simultaneously
@sbi I marked most as invalid (the non-offensives out of context), the 1 (or 2?) offensive one 'valid' and the remaining (potentially offensive) as unsure. I just don't want to reward serial flagging