Im not using the latest version though, I think the author was making some changes to it (I actually talked to him on #OpenGL recently about some cool stuff he implemented)
He added pre and post callbacks for every gl call... or he's going to
what is good practice for generating verbose output? currently, i have a function
bool verbose;
int setVerbose(bool v)
{
errormsg = "";
verbose = v;
if (verbose == v)
return 0;
else
return -1;
}
and whenever i want to generate output, i do something like
if (debug)
...
@Prismatic Sadly glfw has glfwInit() and glfwTerminate(). Maybe I should switch to SDL. So do you call gladLoadGL() on construction of your Window class?
@Nooble Yeah, after I create the context. I don't know if you only need to call it once, or every time you create a new context... I haven't done multiple windows yet. Either way you can create a static variable for that case if you only need to init once
Right. So if you're calling SDL_Init at the constructor, you call SDL_Quit at the destructor right? The problem then is that if you have two contexts, and one destructs, SDL quits.
You can have a window count. If the window you're creating is the first window, call SDL_Init in the constructor. If the window you're destroying is the last window, call SDL_Quit
Or you could create a single application class to manage your windows (which would be a singleton... though I never really enforce singletons; if you're dumb enough to make multiple 'Application' classes without reading docs, reap the consequences), and just call Init and Quit in that classes's constructor and destructor
lots of options, all of them ugly. bless C and C++ :p
Its not as good as VA for the time being, but I'm giving them a chance because VA pissed me off when I bought a license (they kept telling me "hey new version available" and if i updated well it was too recent for the license i had so it would shut itself down)
also the license is supposed to cover a year of updates, im fairly certain i got at most 6 months
> borgleader@Ayden:~$ sudo apt-get build-dep boost-all-dev Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information... Done E: Unable to find a source package for boost-all-dev
@Borgleader is that build-dep? Sounds a little like it's something else. Or drop -dev. Oh well. I should have known better than to serve these from (distant) memory
E.g.
clang++ -std=c++03 -Wall -pedantic -g -O2 async_client.cpp -o async_client -lboost_system -lboost_thread -lpthread
Assuming your system's packaged version of Boost (or pre-configured include & lib paths). To make use of your custom built Boost library tree in ~/custom/boost:
clang++ -std...
@Borgleader Ok, then don't use a prefix, or use /usr and --layout=system (that's default on Unix anyways)
@Prismatic I believe I once saw one. It's a rarity
If you compile and run that in gcc, it works as expected
But in clang I get a seg fault! (on coliru anyway... on my computer, clang manages to run the application, but the output I get is wrong, it creates 5 different types instead of 3)
I don't think I'm doing anything too far out of the ordinary, but I might be doing something that isn't well defined? OR MAYBE IVE FOUND MY FIRST COMPILER BUG, SO EXCITING
I wrote a class template based on two types that is assigned a unique index based on its template parameters:
template<typename SK,typename T>
struct Component {
static uint const index;
};
The expectation is that for each new type, index is incremented:
Component<X,A>::index; // 0
Component
@Prismatic Amusingly you can change Z to foo<Z> and it still does the same thing.
main.cpp:3:7: error: typedef redefinition with different types ('int' vs 'unsigned int')
using uint = int;
^
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/sys/types.h:153:22: note: previous definition is here
typedef unsigned int uint;
This looks like a bug to me. I am not aware of C++11 rules that should make a difference for function local types and global types.
If you dump the assembler, you can notice that while for X and Y the values get actually computed, for Z they are precomputed. The guard variables for the counter s...
Short example:
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
int n;
[&](){n = 10;}(); // OK
[=]() mutable {n = 20;}(); // OK
// [=](){n = 10;}(); // Error: a by-value capture cannot be modified in a non-mutable lambda
std::cout << n << "\n"; // "10"
}
The ...