> This answer is for the older versions of the C++ standard. The C++11 and C++14 versions of the standard do not formally contain 'sequence points'; operations are 'sequenced before' or 'unsequenced' or 'indeterminately sequenced' instead.
Larynx, I'm curious, why did you think the pre-post increment followed by assignment of two different variables would be UB? In no case is it contentious, there is no ambiguity, it is rather easy to settle on what happens first in such a situation, unlike with something like b = b++.
Given that I've been declared a fool in my first 10 minutes here, I predict a glorious future of me adorning the wall of stars.
I am not exactly sure whether they will at all... AMD has taken over the integrated GPU duties and Nvidia has been focusing a lot on working on the DX12 drivers.
Well, that would be confusing to someone at first sight, which is why I am asking Don why he thought it was an issue. I can see him being confused by the latter, but not the former.
Yup, but it introduces a lot more control to the developer, all of the responsibilites and power is now in your hands. Bindless model, no hazard tracking, concurrency unleashed... All the good stuff.
Just like DirectX 12. I think AMD also lend a hand after all their work with Mantle, which was pretty much killed by DirectX 12.
And OpenGL's "open nature" is greatly exaggarated.
The best way to utilize any platform is to use its APIs. Windows, DirectX. Apple, now Metal. Linux, Vulkan. Only the fellows designing the system can utilize it to the brink, and let you utilize it to the brink.
OpenGL and OpenCL are used intertwined, it was pretty much the only way to emulate DirectX 11 functionality on OS X as they are still stuck on OpenGL 4.1
and OpenCL 2.0
So you could do some compute on OpenCL and pass the results back, but nothing serious.
Not really, no. It does a lot more. It removes hazard tracking, resource renaming is in your hands, opts for the bindless model and all in all removes the terrible concurrency issues of DirectX 12. Scales really well to multiple cores and let's the GPU do its thing.
I've been working with it for a year now.
I was and still am in the Early Access program, Microsoft's initative.
Vulkan and OpenGL, as well as DirectX 12 and DirectX n < 12 will persist together. But Vulkan and DirectX 12 will dominate. Along with Apple doing its own thing with Metal. DirectX 12 isn't meant to replace 11, even though most think it is.
The jump from 11 to 12 is only for the advanced developers, the amount of work has drastically increased.
apple kind of shot vulkan in the face with metal. I don't see why they'd roll out their own variant even though they likely had extensive knowledge of the state of vulkan when they decided to work on metal
The union is basically like uninitialized std::aligned_storage for a certain type.
user406009
So @Nooble, you haven't told us too much about your future policies for your Nooble2016 for room owner campaign. What's your stance on foregin room policy? What should be done about the JavaScript immigrants such as rlemon? What have you decided to do about the star economy? Some people think the top %1 control too many of the stars.
It's working perfectly, the only issue is the boot up noise because the audio kext cranks the gain back up and then upon init restores it to nominal levels.
Well, that and no Metal support. But Metal works if you have an iPhone 5s+ device, did some tests, it's fun. Very Vulkan/Mantle/DX12-ish.
Ah, must be some caching system in place, the various parts of SO update at different frequencies.
Googled it, the flair thingy is updated every 24-36 hours.
I don't think I'll be boosting the rep on SO too far, the questions seem really stupid. Impressed some of you guys had the steel to go through all that and get up to 10k+
Must've been different in the early days, I guess.
Worried that the DPI shift between HD and UHD displays of same dimensions might fuck with my eyes, will have to replace all three. Still cheaper than the 32" one.