I really want to start work on some openGL stuff though... cat's lib looks rather nice. and it would be pleasing to use openGL with out having to work out the mangled Java version of everything
@sehe Interesting article; from my perspective, it fails to mention one relevant tidbit, which is that even if language composition were easily solvable it wouldn’t be helpful in practice, as shown by contextual keywords (e.g. LINQ in .NET) since they fundamentally don’t work when using a lexer, and many editors today rely on lexers to provide efficient syntax highlighting and further tool support. Any language which cannot be tokenised is fundamentally flawed.
@sehe (For instance, to my knowledge not a single syntax highlighter and not a single editor outside of VS get LINQ, or even simple context-sensitive keywords such as get, set and value in C# properties right.)
@DeadMG I don't think you'll find a lot of C wrappers for opengl (you have glew and glload but that's function loading). Most wrappers are there to port it to another language, that doesn't sound that weird to me...
@KonradRudolph Mmmm. I'm not convinced that get/set/value from/into/where/equals/join/on/let require context in that sense that you seem to imply (i.e. semantic context). They merely depend on the state of the parser (in this case, the state of the lexer itself). I'm pretty sure that Spirit::Lex would be quite capable of lexing this accurately
Spirit Lex is not a parser. The parser is built orthogonally on the tokenstream with Qi
@DeadMG It is. However, that is not hard to do and I imagine that all the editors outside VS that I actually use will just about get those context-sensitive keywords syntax-highlighted just fine
@DeadMG weehoo. I'd be tempted to try it out right now (gedit,kate,geany, monodevelop, gvim) but I'm should be starting dinner and my daughter deserves some attention, really
For instance, I have no idea how I would define this in a PCRE regular expression even though those technically accept much (!) more than regular languages
(I think they currently even accept more than CFGs but I never really looked at that)
@tom_mai78101 there's an unnamed user who has a puppy avatar who's known for being short with people who he sees as stupid. That's.... pretty much everyone. :D He's a smart dude though
@ScottW no, I just mean, Euthanizing a pet is a little extreme for the actions that preceeded it. I'm not offended, just wondering if he intended "neutered" instead
I find it strange to have a German speaking bonobo, a Polish speaking cat, a Flemish speaking Lion and a Portuguese robot all talking to each other in English
@MooingDuck yeah, I always forgotten about GCC , that it's open source, becuase I'm using Windows and C++ compiler, which is closed, so always forget about GNU products
@CatPlusPlus If you press F12 to go to some *.h functions, I shall see only its header, where are declared only names of functions with arguments, but no body
may be... I'm mistaken... But I go to libs with jumping via F12 , I didn't find any body structure of those functions....
@user1131997 that means (A) it was written in assembly or (B) Windows didn't share the source for that file or (C) your install got messed up. I'd go with A.
Alright guys. I got a big pile of legacy code that calls a macro with printf-style format and associated variadic arguments, and I need to put that into an std::string. And I can't go and make usage less retarded, so I need a fancy way to somehow output vsprintf (or similar) into an std::string. Anybody got a lead?
@JohannesSchaublitb no, Defensive programming, zeroing out that stuff, means that it still works even if someone changes everything else. I'm not hoping it still works. I know it still works.
hmm, my Windows Event Viewer says "Main.java" threw an exception on line 341. My main.java file only has 89 lines.
Wonder who's "Main.java" had the error?
@JohannesSchaublitb defensive programming means I don't care how it behaves with \0, my code now works both ways. If someone changes that function, I don't care. My code still works fine.
@SethCarnegie msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… "Desktop Window Manager (DWM) scales non-dots per inch (dpi) aware windows when the display is high dpi. The window seen on the screen corresponds to the physical coordinates. The application continues to work in logical space. Therefore, the application's view of the window is different from that which appears on the screen. For scaled windows, logical and physical coordinates are different."
@JohannesSchaublitb if they change that bit from working with NULL termination to not, or vice versa, I know my code still works. Of course I can't know for arbitrary changes.
@JohannesSchaublitb if someone changed vsprintf to not NULL-terminate, anything after would then break. Unless you had already set the NULL terminator like we said. Then everything continues to work.
you are trying to protect against things you have no control over. if they change their interface you have to check your code anyway whether it still works with the new interface
After manually expanding variables and logging out second time it finally works.
What a crap.
From other MS fun — CTRL+C-ing nmake:
NMANKMEA K:E : ffaattaall eerrrrooNrrM AUUK11E00 55:N88 M::f A atKtteEear rlm:m i iennfraaartttoeeardd l U bb1eyy0r 5ruu8oss:ree rrUt
1eSS0rtt7moo7ipp:n.. a
'ted by user