@LightnessRacesinOrbit It's the way in which you do so that elicits that rare kind of general admiration that's so hard to come by. I think it's a gift
@StackedCrooked In case I wasn't clear, I just meant for the TCP sliding window. Of course, that size you need depends on the latency, but with high latency it can get pretty big in a hurry...
user1804599
There is nothing wrong with overloading—on dynamic types.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Also, I think you could improve your style by varying your use of rhetoric devices. I don't minde the fallacies, but I do if they get too repetitive.
@Puppy The basic problem is that the number of overloads is quadratic (i.e., with N classes, each class needs N-1 overloads for collisions with the other N-1 types).
PSA: I'm going to go back to systematically ignoring LRIO trolls again. It was a good sniff, but that stuff is toxic. I'm not going to make that a habit.
@Puppy Not necessarily. In some games, for example, you want to be able to define new shapes for possibly-colliding objects as DLC and such. And the number is potentially quite large (well into the hundreds in some cases).
The irony of publicly announcing you'll "ignore me for trolling", when all I'm doing is responding to your abject nonsense, asking you questions about it in order to try to better understand you. I guess I'm the one being sucked in.
@sehe I didn't jump to any conclusion. You accuse me of invoking a logical fallacy, but since I did not, you made it up. Your ability to take simple logic and deem it "trolling" is quite remarkable.
@JerryCoffin Yep, however, the user can configure window scaling option to increase the window size. Up to a theoretical maximum of 1GB. However, performance peaks at around 1MB. (So it can send ~ 700 segments before it must wait for ACKs.)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Come come. All in good fun, eh! A bit of your own medicin. For precisely, maybe, a day? In total about 20 minutes. Maybe you should experience this more often. Then you might draw the same conclusion as I just did. It's fun to do, but it gets old. It's boring as heck and - for me - it makes me appear more of a jerk than I want to be.
@StackedCrooked Yup--that's definitely a long ways from the 3 (or so) that used to be typical in most stacks in stock configuration. I haven't checked recently, but I'd bet most are still only set for a dozen or so (and fewer than that wouldn't surprise me a bit).
@puppy it depends on whether AABB happens to give the right answer for that particular circle and polygon. I want polygon+circle collision detection, not AABB+AABB collision detection
@sehe At one time, I wondered whether he had chosen a part to play, and was playing it to the hilt, or had defense mechanisms so thoroughly ingrained that he was really incapable of seeing his own hypocrisy. I've since decided it just doesn't matter though--pointless to worry about it.
@JerryCoffin I have a feeling the defense mechanisms might come off when nobody is watching. I wonder what it would be like to be him, at such a time. But yeah, for half strangers, I don't feel like true contact is possible. At least, I don't know how.
what it really boils down to is that you're using inheritance for a situation that it's poor at, so it's totally unsurprising that you get poor code back out.
@StackedCrooked Let's see. 1500x8 = 12,000 bits. At 10 GB/s that's roughly 1.2 microseconds per frame. So three frames covers 3.6 microseconds. At normal wire speed, that's a transmission of ~3600 feet. Probably adequate for most data centers, but almost any transmission between buildings could easily need more.
@StackedCrooked Yes, but the sliding window is primarily to cover in-flight packets. Also, thinking about it, I should have cut the distance I figured in half (time for ACK to return). For example, if it takes a minimum of 10 microseconds to get a packet ACKed, then your sliding window needs to cover at least 10 microseconds, or you start losing throughput because your outbound packets get paused waiting on ACKs.
> Outside embedded systems, dynamically linked libraries are almost universally used with C++. Thus, a design for open-methods that does not allow for DLLs is largely theoretical. We do not currently have an implementation supporting dynamic linking
unordered_map<typeinfo, function<sig>> works just fine with dynamic linking and code generation, and doesn't require re-writing vast quantities of existing toolchain.
@JerryCoffin But once it receives an ack it's allowed to send one packet again. So it reaches this state where it's receiving one and sending one packet at a time. I noticed that it's faster if I buffer my sends a little. Say, wait for 10 acks and then send 10 packets.
And after a while the congestion window grows only 1 byte per ack.