I'm hoping they thew it in the trash because they were done with it though. :( That's quite a bit of effort to spend on getting rejected. Especially for prom :(
Haha, I was actually thinking more along the lines of a plain keyboard for word processing, or if it would have special functions like macro support for coding/gaming/telegraphs or even silly things like mini displays
If it's only a few keys, it isn't hard to whip one together with an MCU, a serial>USB interface and 3 or 4 keys for macroes
@sehe It looks good for moderators at least. I think they're good recommendations in general so far, though you'd need a clause to explain that negative behaviour towards other users is an offense at the discretion of moderators.
@Aaron3468 yeah. I realize that as a "part time half-mod" (owner) I should probably avoid making fun of certain events/contributions. It sends mixed signals. That's... fair. Never really realized that fully
In my experience, interesting premises usually come from inexperienced writers (not necessarily a bad thing; just let go of expectations or you won't enjoy them). I still love Asura Cryin', but in hindsight it wasn't that good.
@Mysticial Sounds epic! I run out of space even with 2 monitors. So usually I have my laptop or phone nearby as a crude 2nd or 3rd monitor for reference material
@user5600875 That book will cover the majority of topics. Everything else comes from making mistakes (or poor code), and learning not to make them again. Don't be afraid to research things you don't understand
@user5600875 I enjoy it from time to time. Like ordinary television, it gets boring once you know the genres. So videos tend to be a diversion more than a thing I like
@Mysticial No worries! What type of project out of curiosity? (so I have an idea of how tough the refactoring is)
< Codeblocks, sometimes VC++ if needed. No matter which tool you use, it won't magically stop you from writing poor code, so find your favourite and go from there.
Alrighty, I'll note that. Yeah, processor and RAM in particular. Some IDEs like VS and eclipse are 'heavyweight', others are very light and run on low-end computers too
@user5600875 Ah, that would explain it. Laptops do not play nice with big IDEs. Try out CodeLite or Notepad++. Vim/Emacs are both great, but have a learning curve
@user5600875 I recommend you upgrade and give CodeLite a shot. Notepad++ is a very basic but functional. Imagine a good old electronic multimeter (Notepad++) vs a $500 oscilloscope.
@Aaron3468 All I can say is that Akiba's Trip runs no problems with a Haswell @ 3 GHz with GTX 750 and Skylake @ 3.2 GHz with GTX-970. But it does like to cause hard freezes on my Haswell box when there's something else playing video at the same time. That even happens without the overclock and it seems to be a driver issue.
@user5600875 The primary two components of my development/gaming desktop were a $400 gpu and a $400 cpu. It isn't often anything crashes. I could've gotten by with a $200 cpu...
But honestly, gtx 6xx and up is sufficient for most needs. Same as dual core at 3GHz usually is provided the architecture is recent. I went way overpowered because I'll be using my machine for years
Especially without any word on support for Windows.
@Aaron3468 I've found that certain games have performance issues on that Haswell box.
Not because the CPU isn't fast enough, but because there are too many cores for Windows to properly manage.
Windows likes to bounce threads around so much that before a core can get out of low-power mode and turbo up to 4GHz, the OS has already moved the thread to another core.
So single-threaded tasks are perpetually running at some shitty frequency that averages around 2 - 3 GHz unless I manually pin them.
It's a fucking pain in the ass. But that's what I get for trying to game on a coding box.
@user5600875 You generally get what you pay for. About $200 per component builds a really nice desktop these days: $200 motherboard, $200 cpu, $200 gpu, $200 case, and $200 ram. btw, double-check this
@Aaron3468 But trying to compile a large template-heavy project with a $200 processor will be very painful unless you have an unlimited number of swords to use.
@user5600875 Configuring new tools the first time is a game of trial and error that can take up to a week. Keep trying to get it working every few days until it does. Once it's set up, you can leave a 'here be dragons' sign and use it forever until you break the settings.
@user5600875 Depends. Usually the compiler does the right thing. But that isn't the case when the code-size is too large and there are too many things that need to be inlined.
It's very unpredictable. And varies heavily across compilers and compiler versions. So the only way to guarantee that that 15 levels of "zero-overhead" abstractions remain "zero-overhead" is to actually force-inline it.
And then look at the assembly to make sure it actually is inlined. Hence that massive assembly dump to the right in that screenshot.
@user5600875 To put it simply, good coding practice means the cost of choosing one or the other will be very small. Bad coding practice amplifies the costs of your design decisions.
In that screenshot alone, each instruction you see there was probably the result of 3 or 4 levels of inlined function calls. So that loop in the middle is at least a hundred functions in source code.
it specifically states : "it suggests that the compiler insert the complete body of the function in every context where that function is used ". Well then i tried this:
But I highly recommend you move s into the only place it needs to exist; as an argument for hello(). The reason is that having more than 1 or 2 functions know about things outside of themselves makes it hard to tell which function changed s.
The 970 is a great compromise considering it's a less stringent 980. AMD tends to outperform Nvidia at the expense of heating up the pc. Do you think the new 1080 and titan x deflated the prices?