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02:00
@Rapptz Did he use that one too?
@Pawnguy7 Your problem, as far as I can tell, is that you cannot think in terms of functions, only classes.
@Borgleader looks the same in a distance
you should try doing some more functional programming
Ell
Ell
Yeah looks like kboks
Damnit... gotta find a new one
02:01
my basic design principle is "make it easy to use"
I think it was Djikstra who nailed it on the head
the design should be as simple as possible.
That Einstein quote is also very good.
I wonder if this is why I get nothing done now.
@DeadMG Yep. Simple and easy to use => all I think about when designing
I used to just crank out stuff - terribly designed, but it worked. Well, until the straw that breaks it.
Ell
Ell
02:03
Simple to use is my main concern
Because its what I look for in a library
Now I get some... not entirely terrible design, but I don't get anything done.
@Ell Yeah same here. If the library is easy to use then I consider it well designed as a user.
Also being intuitive.
Ell
Ell
For me personally ease of use goes waaay above performance
@Pawnguy7 It's definitely a bit of a pit.
Ell
Ell
02:03
But I haven't ever needed good high performance
when you start out, you throw out any old shit, so you feel like you're getting things done even when in reality it's unmaintainable crap.
Ell
Ell
So I guess it would be different if I was mysticial
when you get to the middle, you realize you don't know what the fuck to do, so you feel bad.
but in reality, you're still better off than you were before
In theory. Doesn't feel like it, sometimes.
but when you get up the other side, you really get shit done
02:04
I also have this thing with static stuff.
I am pretty sure it is bad.
and not the kind of "get shit done" where you have to revisit every line of code in your application to change one little thing.
@Pawnguy7 is she hot?
@Pawnguy7 There's nothing inherently wrong with static non-const variables, if presented in an as-if-constant fashion.
I only use static with stuff like static constexpr bool value = true;
statics are pretty much (like) global variables.
02:06
Not just static variables. Entire classes. Basically an alternative to singletons.
then yes, that's super bad.
Although, it must be a natural thing, because as I take it, a lot of people start off using one or the other. Right?
yeah.
@Pawnguy7 Remember that singletons are just glorified global variables.
as far as I am aware, it is basically the "I can't figure out how to design things" response.
02:07
Static classes can be replaced with namespaces.
I don't know what to do, so I throw it all in a giant jumble.
unless we are talking about a common used library class where you don't need to initialization of the class to use the functions
you might as well start hitting your CPU with a hammer the next time your PC crashes
Design with reusability in mind. Singletons in some sense, in not reusable.
like a user written specialized string class
02:07
@Rapptz how can a 44k guy not know just to look at the binary
it's not rocket science
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Er, you know that #includes don't actually result in any changes to the binary, right?
I am guessing the main reasons I usually think of are, I don't want more than one of them, and I just don't like passing stuff around everywhere.
@DeadMG at the compiled result they do
er, no, they don't.
I'm saying after you compile you can check
02:08
only using a thing that was included can affect the binary.
dude look at a.out
Yes, that will be very useful.
@DeadMG yes that's what i mean. if you use things it goes in the binary
Is anyone not commenting on the fact that his shitty library forbids me from using constructs that are common in C++?
@MarkGarcia static class doesn't need to be singleton
02:09
well, that's completely different to what you said.
Who cares where the things are used in source.
@Rapptz Which shitty library, and which constructs, and who's "his"?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 But they commonly are.
he doesn't explicitly say after or before he just says not at all
8
Q: How can I ensure no code uses an API?

Billy ONealI want to ban use of iostreams in a code base I have (for various reasons). Is there a way I can inspect symbol files or force the compiler to emit an error when that API is used?

02:09
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Also, it's not really provable if you strip debug symbols and stuff.
@DeadMG i have no debug symbols
do a hello world and look at the binary
I'm just generalising from that question and answer.
That entire question is utterly silly.
@DeadMG i just used -O3 it still shows up in the binary (it being the cout decl)
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Dynamic or static link runtime library?
02:11
@DeadMG #<iostream>
that's what he showed
#include <iostream>
int main(){
std::cout << "hi" << std::endl;
std::cerr << "hi" << std::endl;
that is not an answer to the question that I just asked.
no it doesn't
but too much work
ok back to tv
@DeadMG wait so you are saying that what I include doesn't get compiled?
am I missing a lot of context here?
@A.H. everything not used gets stripped out
look at the GCC -O option. even without any optimization it does it by default
@EiyrioüvonKauyf To be more accurate, the compiler simply only generates it on demand, rather than generating it and then stripping it later.
02:14
ok now we're being pedantic. stripped out from the source code happy?
er, what?
even with no optimization ?
the compiler never alters the source code.
@A.H. yes even without optimization
@DeadMG that would be weird
02:14
So, you get out of the design pit eventually?
@A.H. It's an optimization of compile times. Why would the compiler waste time generating binary code for symbols you never use? Not to mention that stripping is never going to be the same as not generating it.
compiler would be like : here FTFY
> Without any optimization option, the compiler's goal is to reduce the cost of compilation and to make debugging produce the expected results. Statements are independent: if you stop the program with a breakpoint between statements, you can then assign a new value to any variable or change the program counter to any other statement in the function and get exactly the results you would expect from the source code.
@DeadMG check syntax
@A.H. That's a completely different thing.
02:15
dinosaur flip
whatever yo
the compiler can check the syntax without generating binary code.
back to drama
not to mention that a number of includable things do not have any possible binary code interpretation... for example templates and macros.
well yeah but it would have to parse it
well, yes. but that's not code generation, which is what was under discussion.
02:16
ah
ok then what if its a library
symbols have to exist in the final binary
and not actually used inside the lib
nope.
symbols only have to exist in the final binary if dynamic linking them is required (and calling mangled names "symbols" is a big stretch).
for example when creating a .a or .so you might (should) write tests for them but the library itself doesn't have an entry point so how can the compiler only generate code on demand?
Got to love when you ask depressed questions, hoping for a hopeful answer, and it gets ignored :D
@A.H. The linker can strip them post-linking for final executables. You're right that the intermediate library files have to ship all mangled names, at least (this still isn't really the same as symbols)
that's also why for dynamic linking, you can't strip the mangled names- you need them to know what to look up in dynamic libraries.
@DeadMG i cant tell the difference between symbols and mangled names
02:22
but if you link statically to a library there is no need for any symbols for that library to ever be anywhere in the final binary.
@A.H. A mangled name names a thing- usually a function or global variable.
a debug symbol maps binary to source code for debuggers.
ah
if you import a C++ function from a DLL
you have to know it's mangled name.
but you sure don't need the symbols.
@DeadMG That's what pdb files are correct?
@Borgleader Microsoft's implementation of, yes.
@DeadMG can you elaborate on what you mean by me thinking of classes and not functions? I think you might be onto something.
02:26
@Pawnguy7 Well, whenever you have a problem, you always reach for a class and an interface to solve it, even when it's totally inappropriate.
@DeadMG it needs to be a exported (or something) to be linkable though right?
the function is the most basic unit of a program.
like the .global directive or is that just for assemblers
@A.H. Yep.
@DeadMG I think I may have caught that from Java.
02:28
yes.
over-use of run-time inheritance is one of the worst sins you can commit.
inheritance is one of C++'s least useful tools.
How often are free-standing functions used in.. "the real world"?
all the time
very often.
About as often as yo momma.
but what I often find is
conceptually, an act is a function, and I expose that interface, but the implementation is almost entirely a class.
02:30
@Pawnguy7 to me one of the main problems of Java is that it doesn't have free standing functions and I end up using classes as containers of some sort
for some complex functions, anyway.
I think people who avoid free-standing functions have flawed thinking imo.
agree.
@Rapptz I think universities are to blame for that
Is it correct to say the C/C++ standard lib and Boost use many of them?
02:30
@Pawnguy7 Yes.
of course, the C std lib doesn't really count because they don't have non-free functions.
@Pawnguy7 The entire <algorithm> header.
@DeadMG Oh. Very good point.
of course
there's a difference between "Use free functions" and "Eschew run-time inheritance whenever possible".
gah, font rendering
You know, I've never included <numeric>.
02:33
@Rapptz Hardly a single free-standing function there (mostly function templates).
Is it explicitly included somewhere else by the standard?
for example, the Wide lexer is not a free function (although in it's simplest form, it could be), but nor did I use inheritance (the parser is a template).
@Rapptz Nope. Pretty sure that <iostream> including <istream> and <ostream> is the only example of that.
And <initializer_list> in all the containers..
you know
speaking of which, I should really refactor the Wide lexer to be a function.
@Rapptz I don't think so. More useful directly than many people realize (especially std::accumulate -- has a lot of non-numeric uses).
02:34
@DeadMG is there a possible free-standing function that could take place of something in my packet scenario you see?
having accumulate in numeric is a bitch.
@Pawnguy7 Yes.
ultimately, getting the right design is about de-composing the problem.
in this case, let's say
we have a class Login, and a class Message, and they represent certain intended actions by the user.
and the problem is to send them over the network and receive them on the other end.
would you agree with that?
@JerryCoffin Yeah to my surprise <algorithm> only has to explicitly include <initializer_list>.
I've never included <numeric> for std::accumulate, always got it through <algorithm>.
@Rapptz <algorithm> isn't required to declare accumulate.
silly really since fold is one of the most basic algorithms.
@DeadMG Yeah -- makes no real sense at all.
02:39
@DeadMG I think so, yes, though I seem to think about it in terms of sending packets rather then events, though they are the same in the use thereof.
@Pawnguy7 Right. Here's your first mis-step.
the whole "packets" thing is totally an implementation detail.
the rest of your system should neither know nor give a flying shit about packets.
True. I am guessing it has something to do with me knowing the main goal behind this project was to learn it, and it is kind of implanted there.
all they care about is that their data ends up on the other computer, with the maximal speed and correctness you can achieve (possibly involving a tradeoff here).
std::ratio's pretty decent.
Shame I can't think of any uses for it.
so here
you're plain over thinking it.
the solution is right there in the fuckin' problem statement.
"send them over the network" -> send(socket, Login), send(socket, Message).
" receive them on the other end" -> boost::variant<Login, Message> receive(socket).
02:42
@Rapptz it's used in std::chrono
@Borgleader yeah still not a use for it.
Wow, it's a sign. I typed something about being screwed and kana, but I typed Java instead.
problem solved
Wouldn't send be a function of the socket? I wouldn't think you would have more than one connection to a single client.
no.
the socket class does not know or give a shit about your Login or Message.
it would probably have to provide a kind of send(bytes) dealie which you would implement send(socket, Login) in terms of.
02:44
socket class should probably only care about bytes
Ah. Would these be free-standing?
I'd argue that send(bytes) should probably be a member, since the socket class would need to protect internal state like OS API handles and stuff like that to implement it safely.
I think generally if it has a state and behavior it should be a class
Erm, I meant, your send(socket, Message). send(bytes) is a member, yes.
send(socket, Login)- needs to be a member of Login if and only if it depends on state of Login not available from public interface.
which in this case, seems pretty ridiculous IYAM.
02:47
It shouldn't. If it has an interface at all.
I agree.
I'd assume most packets are basically structs.
therefore, it's highly unlikely that send(socket, Login) should need to be a member.
@Pawnguy7 Packets and structs are the wrong things to think of them as... but I get your point that it's quite unlikely that they need complex behaviour and it's really just a data holder.
I started with the assumption it wasn't a member of (Login, in this case) because it took one as an argument. Which would be really odd.
yes, I found it very unlikely that you would have a genuine need for it to be a member.
02:48
Erm, I mean.
Let's take the login event.
Wait, no, let's take a Chat one or something.
It has two things, right? Who said it, and what they said?
sure.
so let's say struct Message { unsigned UserID; std::string message; };.
And I assume most... what would they be called, if not packets? - follow suit.
it's a message.
you send a message.
packets are just a networking-specific way of chunking them up into smaller messages.
so anyway, each message in this case is going to have to depend on each other in a very small way, because you need to identify to the receiver which message those bytes are.
so let's say, for a simple example, enum MessageType { Chat, Login, ... }.
Yes. Still prepended to the message I imagine.
yes.
02:53
@Pawnguy7 I take it you are writing a chat application ?
then you simply author send(socket, Message) so that the contents of the message are converted to a bunch of bytes (with the necessary type prepended)
and then call socket.send(bytes) to send them.
@A.H. Simple client/server chat for learning purposes.
@Pawnguy7 yeah I made one last semester was fun
I wrote one really quick and nasty in a couple of hours one time, never tested, never compiled, never saved, because I lost the will to continue.
02:56
basically had an enum of different types and messages were type separator data
of course
given these examples, it's not really that necessary.
after all, you expect a Login first, then a bunch of Messages.
I sense something that usually makes me contemplate for a while. Right now it is whether they shouldn't be structs, but rather have a constructor and just getters, in case somebody would change the details. It doesn't make any sense that they would, but these kinds of things occur to me, and I get stuck :\
well, here's the thing.
I actually didn't have an object to represent a message
you can design any system to virtually any arbitrary level of detail.
the key is knowing when to stop.
02:58
just a function that sends a string as a message to a room id from the logged in user
there's no reason for a Message to be mutable but there's also no particular reason for it to be immutable and in C++ most people expect mutability.
@Rapptz Hmm.
and making it immutable would be effort and YAGNI really applies here.
@EtiennedeMartel Females have breasts! Can you believe it?
02:59
@Rapptz well some games do go overboard but they do the same for males
Hopefully I get better at this.
you know, I feel that I'm missing important context here.
Anyway, night.
are those the guys behind Dragon's, er, Circle? Dogma?
@Pawnguy7 night
02:59
@DeadMG Who Xseed?
yeah
This is about a localisation of a japanese game where all the characters are female.
breasts, etc
yeah
I'm really seeing that the same person drew every one of those, and they're like "Face, if it's not covered by hair... TIIITS! armswaistLEGS"
@Rapptz That's not what he's saying.
@EtiennedeMartel Right. Objectification of women because they're showing off their bodies -- the game in context is showing off their breasts.
03:03
@Rapptz Hm, the game seems to be using a lot of fanservice.
How original.
@EtiennedeMartel Yes.
It's like they said "fuck it, just give them large tits so we can go for lunch".
well
Seems to me like an exercise in phoning it in.
ultimately, what surprises me is that they didn't bother for those guys who prefer ass or legs over tits.
03:06
It's a fanwank game, not really those gameplay games.
you'd think that if you wanted to pander to the male demographic, you could at least pander to all of them.
Ah, so it's not really a game then.
I see it as the equivalent of complaining about pornos being sexy.
Might be just me.
Ah, Japan. They seem to be unable to grasp game design.
well, the first step is to design a game rather than "Wank at the female characters during the not-gameplay"
because frankly, if I wanted to do that, I'd just watch some porn.
03:08
Yeah, I can't efficiently play a game with only one hand.
although frankly the amount of terrible porn on the Internets is shocking
Sturgeon's revelation, commonly referred to as Sturgeon's law, is an adage commonly cited as "ninety percent of everything is crap." It is derived from quotations by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author and critic: while Sturgeon coined another adage that he termed "Sturgeon's law", it is his "revelation" that is usually referred to by that term. The phrase was derived from Sturgeon's observation that while science fiction was often derided for its low quality by critics, it could be noted that the majority of examples of works in other fields could equally be seen to be o...
I expected that if your entire business model was going to revolve around attracting men to your website with the promise of watching women have sex, you would make it so that this activity was actually arousing as opposed to, say, laughable, pathetic, or just plain disturbing.
Sometimes I watch bad porn on purpose.
well
it's hard to suspend your disbelief and put yourself in the position of the actor screwing the really hot chick when he is doing something totally ridiculous like spending all his time smacking her arse.
03:13
TIL Nintendo has an app on iOS.
@EtiennedeMartel You saw this right? It's a bit old, but just curious.
@Rapptz Well, it is true that Japanese games are getting shittier every year.
(Or rather, they're stagnating while the rest of the world is moving forward)
well
Nah, I disagree. Western games are moving backwards IMO.
whilst some of the rest of the world is moving forward.
it's hard to argue that Call of Duty isn't stagnating.
@Rapptz People are pushing the boundaries of what can be done with games in the West.
03:25
the indie scene is where most of the actual innovation is, and AFAIK they don't have a Japanese/Western divide like AAA.
Not so much in Japan.
@EtiennedeMartel What "boundaries"?
That's the Activision way, "1) Find formula that works, 2) Proceed to milk said formula until everybody gets fucking bored of it." Exhibit A: Guitar Hero
Is this a muh graffix thing again?
@Rapptz Interactive storytelling, for instance. Or better ways to convey provoke emotional responses or convey a specific message to the player.
Sure, western AAAs have a huge problem with Hollywood envy.
03:27
Huh, funny. That's what I dislike about western games.
But in Japan, they don't make games. They make interactive films.
Wot? That's what I think about Western games not Japanese.
I don't feel like I have real agency in there.
I'm just cartwheeling a character around.
And when shit happens, it happens to my character and not me. Because I'm unable to fully immerse.
@Rapptz Western games isn't just Call of Duty and Gears of War.
>implying I don't know this
hey everyone
03:29
Hi.
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/11189768#11189768
I love the plot in this one
I can't honestly remember when was the last time I played a Japanese game.
sometimes I feel like the only one who likes BF more than CoD
I don't like the current trends we're taking in video games.
I think it was during the sixth gen.
03:30
@nightcracker Yes... "plot"
We've been riding the dick of shooters for about ~6 years now.
@A.H. BF is a superior series.
@nightcracker Fun fact: "plotte" (pronounced exactly the same way) is Quebec slang for a vagina.
@Borgleader I watch porn for the plot
@A.H. I hate CoD, I bought MW and heavily disliked it.
@A.H. I definitely prefer BF to CoD.
03:31
@EtiennedeMartel but whenever someone talks about the genre they use CoD as the example
Now we're probably going to ride the dick of interactive films.
@Rapptz No we're not.
@EtiennedeMartel We probably are.
@Rapptz Too expensive.
@A.H. I assume by someone you mean "the media" ?
03:31
It costs a lot to create those set pieces.
It's no longer as profitable as it was before.
You can get more mileage through emerging gameplay.
@EtiennedeMartel So? It's selling and getting good reviews. People will ride that to infinity. See: Bioshock Infinite and The Last of Us.
Although that's harder to design.
@Rapptz Not selling as well as it used to.
@Borgleader media , boards just now here
Also, BioShock Infinite blew my mind.
Speaking of TLOU I still have to play that... Been too lazy to go to the store and buy it
03:32
I thought they were both meh.
I like stardrive been playing a lot of it lately
But I find myself not enjoying video games anymore anyway.
You should stop being so cynical and watch My Little Pony instead.
I'd rather have my gameplay back.
What kind of gameplay?
We still have a lot of it.
There's not less gameplay in modern games, it's just different. Perhaps it's simply not your style.
What's your kind of game?
03:34
Me? I don't know. I think I'm just mad at trends.
I watched someone play XCOM: Ennemy Unknown on friday, I hadn't really considered it before but after watching it, it seems like a boatload of fun.
I just want a game without a gun; maybe one without violence since that's exceedingly rare. Something not following a trend. (and.. not racing)
@Borgleader You mean Day9?
@Rapptz blowing shit up is fun
03:35
@Rapptz Try Machinarium.
@A.H. You get sick of it after 6 years of it, trust me.
The last good shooter I played was probably CoD4
Also, you're going to have a hard time finding something, because most games revolve around competition, and violence is the simplest way to get it.
I really like Railroad Tycoon
no guns
Last game I played was Pikmin 3.
Is that considered violent? I don't know. I killed a lot of things so I guess so.
@EtiennedeMartel Oh I have this.
I only played it twice I think and stopped.
You should go through it.
It's one of the best point-and-clicks I have ever played.
03:40
@Rapptz Are you less confused by my avatar now?
@Borgleader Yeah I guess.
wot.
It bugs me when a game has a "director".
Why
Is it bad if I keep editing comments on gethub issues (I don't do it if there's been a reply)
it doesn't like email for each edit or something right?
@Rapptz Because films have directors and that's what it sounds like.
I always have this image of someone carefully crafting every scene in the game.
03:47
@EtiennedeMartel And..
But gameplay is something that's supposed to emerge through the actions of the player.
I don't know about western directors but in Japan they kinda do that, oversea the decisions made.
So, yeah, I don't like the word "director" because it sounds to me like they're trying to make a fucking railroad.
@Rapptz We don't really have game directors in the West.
We have lead designers.
Or maybe we have directors. But that's the same issue.
I remember seeing "directed by..." in Battlefield 3's credits.
And it always smacks of Hollywood envy. Like, "hey, films have directors, maybe we can have too!"
@Rapptz hehe oversea
damn. Too late to edit.
03:57
@EtiennedeMartel I dunno. I can logically see that for cutscenes, you could definitely argue that they need to be directed.
truth be told, I don't know that much about what a director does on a film.
I should do something productive
> Recently, I have delved into the world of C++ from Java. With Java, things were so much more simple, because there was pretty much the one official compiler that everyone used.

With C++ though, it seems like there are trillions of options. The most obvious selection seemed to be Microsoft compiler, as it comes with a great ide.
damn markdown.
Markdown is down. :)

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