@stdOrgnlDave I should add that it's easy for me to be philosophical about it at the moment; right after it's happened to me, I'm often much less so...
Have done some reading on lambdas and those are really cool! I wound up writing one for our application as this is one of those "one-off" situations. Thanks! If I could set multiple answers as accepted, I would add this one as well! — Jon5 hours ago
Was gonna delete it. Thought it would be ok as a temp joke.
Perhaps I'm missing the rationale behind the rule (I know it would pollute the chat, be distracting and possibly non-safe-enough-for-work, am I missing something?)
@DeadMG It's not that I regularly watch. But this is about who will participate in the Champion's League final. I watch such matches once in a while. And this one is very exciting.
@sehe It was. I even gave you some time to delete it.
Now the first half of the extension is over, and still either team could score a goal. In the second half of the regular time the Bavarians were somewhat better, now it's even again.
@sbi So it would seem! :) What's your oldest one inclined to ? (I wonder just how much do kids take after their parents for I'm like an apple that fell way too far away from the tree :))
@stdOrgnlDave Well, you commented out some sub-functionalities that your big function does. I guess those would be good candidates for separate functions but meh, i reckon its fine.
@ScarletAmaranth Regarding kids being like parents: If there's one thing all my kids have in common, then it is that every one of them is a completely different person. Regarding my oldest: It's a girl, and she's good when it comes to languages, writing, etc. Math and physics definitely isn't hers. :)
@ScarletAmaranth and @RMartinhoFernandes yeah, I know that, it's not really the point though - I could also replace those sub-functions with standard C library calls to an extent
@RMartinhoFernandes I added the pathing lines. Hilariously enough, it's actually ambiguous at first inspection whether or not the path line collides with the AABB, because of the camera angle.
I will need to add functionalities to change the camera angle to inspect the line more closely
For instance, a friend of mine downloaded an mp3 from his dorm and his school and him received an email from a producer demanding the deletion of the file. Tho they couldnt file a lawsuit.
@sbi In the US (and probably the UK, since that's where most US law originated), law is divided into "civil" and "criminal". There are laws about both, but (for example) there are differences in how you can be punished for violating one versus the other (e.g., if memory serves, you can't be sent to prison for a civil violation, only for a criminal violation).
@DeadMG I remember when I made a pathing algorithm as part of a homework (it wasn't key to the homework, it was just making the homework cooler). I spent more time on that assignment than any other in college and never got the fool thing working.
This is probably a dumb question, but does taking the address of a variable prevent it from being in a register? Or, how does the compiler put things whose addresses are used in registers
" However, if the address-of operator (&) is used on an object, the compiler must put the object in a location for which an address can be represented. In practice, this means in memory instead of in a register."
@RMartinhoFernandes your wording/context seems like you're showing an example where I'm wrong, but that doesn't apply to what I said. Are you responding to Scarlet?
Also, I was going to ask, the only reason that using the heap is slower than using the stack (besides caching issues) is because of the complex management that must be done when you allocate and free memory, correct?
@RMartinhoFernandes so if I allocated a large block of memory on the heap and I used it as a stack, it would generally be just as fast as using the real stack
Essentially your operator >> is way too complex, and doesn’t even handle errors properly. You shouldn’t read the value into a string to begin with – read it directly into a number. Furthermore, after each read operation you need to check (and potentially set) the stream’s state.
istream&am...
@MooingDuck operation<T> has a function that will pull out a T and a way to notify something when the T is ready.
When all the notifications have fired for the argument operation<T> objects, it will then pull all the values out and pass them into the wrapped function.
Nope, it isn't too complicated. The main difficulty will be in the template magic that allows me to convert functions that weren't originally built with this in mind to operator<T> objects of their own with all their arguments set up as dependencies.
And that's mostly because I've never done anything like that before. I'm thinking of trying to cannibalize parts of ::std::function and the currying stuff in the standard library.
Though I'm going to have to do something a bit more complex because if a function already takes ::std::shared_ptr<operator<T> > then I just want to pass it in without waiting for it.
@DeadMG That too. I want to use ::std::function instead.
@DeadMG It's frustrating when that happens, but I always look at it positively. I didn't find the bug, but I did find a bug. And it's fixed now!