@Telkitty Strump talkers? Earlier in life I rather enjoyed talking with women that at one time probably would have been called strumpets by the "decent" women of the day.
@jaggedSpire Truthfully, it was probably pretty rare, but I did have one great aunt in particularly who I recall using the term at least a few times. Not really sure if she was old, or just old-fashioned (or possibly some of both). I, of course, thought she was ancient, but I was young enough for that to mean next to nothing.
@jaggedSpire When I think about it though, I'm pretty sure she actually was fairly old. She was a (fairly young) adult during the great depression. It had affected her enough that when I was a kid she still acted like there was a depression. We kids hated visiting her: she always gave out cookies, but left out the (expensive!) sugar, and then over-cooked them. Pretty much miniature hockey pucks.
For one class I want to store some function pointers to member functions of the same class in one map storing std::function objects. But I fail right at the beginning with this code:
class Foo {
public:
void doSomething() {}
void bindFunction() {
// ERROR
...
So I have been doing OpenGL tutorials for a while now. I see people using GLuint in places where a normal uint would have done the job. Is there any particular reason to use GLuint instead of uint
@Khaled.K yeah this is (was) really popular in germany :D Although many people find it weird :D
@Käsebrot It is common that every library redefines all basic types. The benefit has eluded me to this day, but legends say that in theory it allows you to adapt the definition depending on the platform.
it is much better to use <cstdint>, but some of those libraries predate that header and use that as an excuse to never improve their code
For the older libraries, this is needed because the header in question (stdint.h) didn't exist.
There's still, however, a problem around: those types (uint64_t and others) are an optional feature in the standard. So a complying implementation might not ship with them -- and thus force libraries ...
I like to be more standard as possible, so why should I "constrain" my classes defining it's members as OpenGL types when I can use primitive types? Is there any advantage?
Here mnarked as answer: This allows platform independece, I guess?
The type "unsigned int" has a different size depending on the platform you're building on. I expect this to normally be 32 bits, however it could be 16 or 64 (or something else -- depending on the platform).
@milleniumbug I know what you mean. For years i have been thinking that I have to learn OpenGl for game developement. Then I realised that nobody needs this shit for making games
@Käsebrot problem is making the game isn't as simple as hanging a picture on the wall, it's about hanging 1 million pictures, so i'd prefer to have a tool i like to do the task
@ChemiCalChems my point is that all of them are terrible, so when you have unity which is terrible, and there was so much effort put into it, your ad hoc tools will be even worse
My network-wide gravatar identicon used to be a pleasant blue, now it's bright green. I didn't change my email. Did Stack Exchange change its email hashing algorithm or something?
@sehe Nope, std::string had to be changed to support SSO explicitly if memory serves, something about iterator invalidation w.r.t. move semantics or some such?
@LucDanton I have this issue with boost::program_options::arg. gcc links to it properly and clang doesn't and the reason is most likely that the symbol is defined as boost::program_options::arg[abi:cxx11] which confuses clang somehow.
Okay so i have an extern vector of pointer type 'Entity', and what i want to do is, when a new Entity type class gets constructed it gets pushed back in the vector of Entities, in C# this would be possible by passing 'this' as a parameter, but i'm unable to do that in c++ ! Here is my code:
'Pub...
Okay so i'm trying to create an Entity Component System, and until now its been working pretty decent, but now i've encountered some linker errors that i'm not sure why, i've tried different variations for hours but i can't get this to work, i know i have made a very silly mistake but i can't fin...
@sehe It is an advantage because when I want to look at the diffs before staging I use git diff and also look through the changes in my editor which has git diff indicators in the gutter (to the left of each line)