_GoodObject3 = new ObstacleObject(L"GoodObject3",this,true,true,Vector2((BACKGROUND_WIDTH/SCALE_FACTOR)+(rand()%2),-4.5f),L"GoodObject3.png",false,1,1);
There are some many thing wrong with it I don't know where to start.
I've got a nice project that I'm either hoping to either open-source or sell. Would rather keep the details quiet for privacy, but using it to try it out to mess around with architectural patterns.
Quick query: JSON.NET provides a method: DeserialiseAnonymousType<T>(string value, T anonymousTypeObject). The T is generally inferred, is it possible to explicitly provide that T as an anonymous type, if so, how?
Not that I'd go about using it, just doesn't look like it's possible (although my anonymous type knowledge is nowhere near good).
@OMGtechy isn't that the area they've had a massive ballache with? Thinking of the time Linus gave NVidia the finger on camera
user1881400
So I've managed to make it so that I can create and load .wav files by writing the header and stuff myself (with limited support, of course). I've run into a bit of a bump, however. The specification (ccrma.stanford.edu/courses/422/projects/WaveFormat) lists the subChunk2Size as being only 4 bytes (a uint), which makes it so that my audio can only hold a few seconds at 44.1kHz Stereo with a bit depth of 16 (these are standard settings). How can I get longer audio than 10 secs?
user1881400
I would ask this as on SO, but the scope is too narrow.
I've never actually seen anyone ask about homework before...
user1881400
@gurun if you mean me, I don't have homework and am not in school. I do these things for fun ;). If you mean somebody else, nevermind because I don't know who you're talking to
@FizzledOut definition of sampling rate might also be something to do with it. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WAV the table near the bottom doesn't list anything anywhere near 44kHz
i'm saying that because there are some really cool things you can do with allocating structs from raw data. very fast.
user1881400
@CapTec I look at it a lot but haven't participated yet. I need to get my code down pat before I mess with that :). @gurun I'll take a look into it, then. Thanks for the tip.
make sure you can save the time somehow .. and keep track of that. And then you have the main "pump" running in in one thread, and the reader running in another. And based on the time, you can skip frames as you pull them off the queue.
@TomW I use properties so that when I change the data or any formatting, everything else is updated appropriately. It's just formatted sloppily. @gurun I don't know if it's correct or not, but I like to get a prototype then follow this cycle: test, fix, refactor, add new content (bringing me back to testing). I start with synchronous data because I'm kind of new to C# and I haven't used anything async myself yet. I will beautify the code and then try it when I can
Fells like something that you would use during performance and stress testing for instance, or to see how your complete system reacts.
user1881400
@TomW it's real code. The formatting is unnecessary because I can just hard-code a lot of those values, but it's sort of a template (which is being executed). The code correctly runs and creates a valid .wav file with no data in it if I choose to keep it that way. Usually after I create the WavFormat object I add data to it, which updates the data variable and runs through the set property, which auto-recalculates chunk sizes and such. The code I posted is a small fraction of the full file.
@sameer how can you profile any code without running it? A dll is not executable, that's what an .exe is for. The code has to be called into by something