@SpongyFruitcake it was sensibly prepared in anticipation of raids, but since it’s such an integral part of the gaem it’s proved extremely valuable. e.g. for large events you can /squadjoin commander then hop to their map instance
@SpongyFruitcake I forget where we left things off, the rifle was the most recent one
@SpongyFruitcake I forget if I already told you but: I like their effects a lot in still images, but I don’t think it looks as good in actual gameplay. and then they’re the oversized kind of greatswords :(
An update: looks like GCC has stopped rejecting my previous -fnew-inheriting-ctors example as well as my actual code. I still don’t know how the P0136 changes are supposed to be read though.
@nwp it’s also likely incorrect
well, 'incorrect' is too strong since you set argc correctly. I meant it’s too brittle for my taste
still, when a function asks for a (pointer to start of) array I suggest passing it exactly what it asks for and not going through hoops or being needlessly clever
Anyone know of any articles/papers/bug tracker comments that talk about performance impact of using an atomic before locking compared to just locking earlier?
I'm having trouble searching for this scenario.
Just imagine you are implementing a barrier and are counting down the number of threads still needing to enter and then locking afterwards to either do a wait or reset the barrier.
I can measure on my one system but I know from experience this sort of performance doesn't necessarily port so I was hoping for some sort of analysis or at least some project that runs on multiple machines that deemed it worth it or whatever.
The Wikipedia article on spurious wakeups has this tidbit:
The pthread_cond_wait() function in Linux is implemented using the futex system call. Each blocking system call on Linux returns abruptly with EINTR when the process receives a signal. ... pthread_cond_wait() can't restart the waiting...
> Parametric polymorphism is bane for compilers, linkers and resulting binary size (L1 cache line says *****). Sum types are truly amazing things, but most of the codebase contains it like "I couldn't create a proper abstraction, so here, have a set of different types which have nothing in common" (reddit.com)
wrt your gist, not sure what's the issue - trying to follow your version with no colors and different names than the paper is proving hard to my tired brain..
Ok, so I've been using Java for a long time now and have recently been preparing for my OCJP exam. I was wondering if anyone might be able to provide any insight into why the method names "poll" (as opposed to the more traditional "pop") and "offer" (as opposed to the more traditional "push") wer...
@EtiennedeMartel Impressive--they did such a great job of back-porting that this wonderful new feature has suddenly become present even in ancient IDEs as installed from the CD-ROM. Obviously the "RO" part of that name was a lie!
@wilx don't lose const, that's orthogonal. as_const or keep the name. Simple (clang_tidy/clang_modernize don't do the substitution if it changes the iterator type. Technically, the non-const iterator could do entirely different things)
@Puppy I think this is largely a matter of taste (and perhaps accustomization). IMO, truly great books are hard to find--but books with at least as good of a story as any game I've played...well, that's a lot easier (but maybe I've just never played a truly great game--hard to say for sure).
yeah, but the story is never what keeps me coming back
in fact, even if games have a great story, they just fall into the same problem- I hear the first ten lines and remember the next hundred thousand words almost immediately
I doubt the performance is better on windows because I've yet to see unity throw out a game where lots of things happen and the performance stays great
that's more up unreal engine's alley
fwiw the bug hasn't been fixed yet years after release so I don't think the devs can do it
it's maybe an unity quirk and how it works with X or w/e it's called