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00:09
@Rapptz Cool, I'm watching the whole thing :)
Only the last 5 minutes are relevant
Serious
urgh, my poor body
Don't start a question with: "this is not a question" -.-;
@Rapptz Then I'm watching the specific ones.
> When i was looking on internet, how can one rotate camera view around cameras axis in OpenGL i found 0 rezult.
00:15
@Insilico clearly he was looking with his eyes closed
00:28
Hopefully my last comment to the OP will assist in getting the OP to restructure the post better, but I doubt it.
@Borgleader now it is , ' HOW CAN I MAKE OPTIMIZE'
Yeah, he made it worse IMO.
@Borgleader pretty sure that is a real popular question with tons of answers
it is
camera rotation is one of those things that's been heavily covered. hell you can probably implement it the same way in directx or almost. I think DX uses column major matrices where opengl uses row major or vice versa.
Well he tried
00:31
I would think both would be row major since C and C++ are
> Sadly, the use of column-major format in the spec and blue book has resulted in endless confusion in the OpenGL programming community. Column-major notation suggests that matrices are not laid out in memory as a programmer would expect.
Hmm maybe not =/
@A.H. C++ built-in multidimensional array indexing are row-\major.
yes
You can interpret the major-ness (?) of an array however you like.
its faster (some cases, mostly related to caching ) if its the natural order
not just the indexing but the actual memory order is row-major
00:35
> But graphics programmers tend to be exposed to either GL (which uses column-major storage and column vectors) or D3D (which used row-major storage and row vectors in its fixed function pipeline, and still uses that convention in its examples) Source
gah, im fkn confused now
@A.H. The memory doesn't care how you lay out elements of a multidimensional array. As far as memory is concerned, it's a linear array of items.
How you index into the array (i.e. the mapping between the index of a multidimensional array to memory address) is what makes it row-major or column-major.
agender genderfluid. panromantic demisexual.
no
Also known as "I am whatever is trendy right now".
consider 2x3 matrix
123
456
00:36
The "Radek" approach to gender identity.
yes ofcourse it can exist as both
@A.H. It can exist as either
1 2 3 4 5 6
or 1 4 2 5 3 6
I typically expect 1 2 3 4 5 6
fuck how did I edit that instead of writing new message
real men use a 1 dimensional array as a 2 dimensional array anyway.
00:37
Now, C++'s multidimensional arrays uses the former. But I can write a matrix implementation that uses the latter.
R# has 40k unit tests.
if you use C++ memory layout
Poor people writing those.
and then use column major indexing its going to be unnecessarily complicated
why would you re-implement multi-dimensional arrays?
And 160MB of source code seems a little on the excessive side for what I'm used to.
00:38
@A.H. How is it more complicated? The indexing formula is the same but with the rows and columns swapped.
@A.H. Because raw C++ arrays suck.
why do they suck
@Insilico complicated = extra calculation + loss of locality
Just about every matrix implementation doesn't even bother with built-in C++ multidimensional arrays. They almost always use a 1-D array then index into it with some indexing formula.
@A.H. What "extra calculation"?
ok I see your point , yeah just loss of locality
@Insilico Well yeah. But 1-D arrays don't suck.
00:40
@Rapptz 2-D arrays do ?
3 mins ago, by Rapptz
real men use a 1 dimensional array as a 2 dimensional array anyway.
:P
@A.H. If you have a (x, y) index, how do you translate that to a memory address?
@Insilico [row][column]
@A.H. Even then that's not necessarily the case. There might be some sort of matrix algorithm that works best with column-major matrices.
then you should not use the native order
00:41
@A.H. RAM is not addressed by (row, column), it's addressed linearly. How do you make that translation?
@A.H. Native order?
oh you meant on a lower level ? load column pointer by then deference (doing usual arithmetic on both)
@Insilico how C++ orders multi-dim arrays
@A.H. Right, but that applies only if I'm using the built-in multidimensional arrays. What I'm saying is that I can make a class Matrix thing that uses column major instead.
> If you suck at it, it'll get hard.
Typically for a contiguous 2D array you just do T at(T x, T y) { return arr[(y*rows)+x]; }
00:45
@Insilico yeah totally, but why?
@A.H. It allows you to look at a transpose of a matrix without having to move any data elements whatsoever.
Indexing into a matrix that is row-major ordered using a column-major indexing formula effectively gives you a "transposed view" of the matrix.
(And vice-versa, of course)
well since vice versa not really a reason ? ;p
Wow I fat-fingered that Enter key too soon. :-P
@Rapptz wat
00:48
What's T, if I may ask?
placeholder type
If I give a double it's not gonna play good
it's an example
@Jefffrey use bool, fuck it use void
the formula is all I was trying to show
00:49
@A.H. I just don't see why I have to use C++'s way of ordering multidim arrays, if either representation works just as well.
@Rapptz Oh, k. I just came by so I wasn't really following :)
And again, there may be algorithms that work better with column-major matrices.
@Insilico It doesn't.
I am just saying using the language's native way is less confusing
@A.H. Yeah, void is good :P
00:50
@A.H. How is it less confusing? Row-major and column-major are symmetrical to each other.
I think people would expect row-major
@Insilico pretty sure thats true
@A.H. So why does MATLAB, FORTRAN, and lots of other scientific computing packages use column-major then?
@Insilico The real issue is memory.
@Insilico the convention and thus the expected is column-major in the land of FORTRAN and MATLAB
user425495
@Insilico: the interface is row-major though I believe
00:52
namely, that if you do arr[(y*rows) + x] then incrementing x gives contiguous access, and incrementing y destroys your cache.
in C I want my shit row-major , the way a red-blooded programmer takes em
user425495
at least for MATLAB
Oh Danny boy, Danny boys, Danny boy...
LET'S PARTYYYYY!
ah fuck, my head hurts
and my stomach is still revolting
@DeadMG so now its your head too ?. You need to see a proper caring doctor
00:54
@DeadMG Of course. You use the data structure that works best with your algorithm. I don't think anybody is in disagreement with that.
@DeadMG Hope you get better soon!
@DeadMG :(
Perhaps you can portray your great suffering through an artistic medium?
You buzz kill
@Insilico Yeah. What I'm saying is, the two representations really don't work equally as well.
@A.H. I already have an appointment- 13th November.
I guess the real question is which one fits the general case best?
@DeadMG different guy than the asshole who thought you were perfectly ok ?
00:55
@DeadMG For surgery?
@DeadMG WTF, are you serious?
@DeadMG Why the hell is the appointment so far ahead into the future like that?
@Borgleader No- to assess me to see if they want to schedule surgery.
dunno.
@Insilico I like that rephrasing
hm.. damn kwargs
00:57
all I'm saying is
fuck my life with a standard-issue ten-foot pole.
Jeez go find a proper doctor ffs.
I live in the swamp
We could get a kickstarted project to finance DeadMG medical issues
it's not like living in a city where there's several major hospitals
VLAs and std::dynarray both have random-access iterators, right?
C++14-wise
01:03
dynarray does.
@Rapptz I'm a real man
VLAs, well, you could get a pair of pointers, but they're exceedingly primitive and restricted in their interface.
@DeadMG That covers half of it, thanks :)
I fixed a compiler error and got a linker error...
01:04
@sehe Whoo.
@Pawnguy7 totally normal
I don't see anything in the differences between that and VLAs section of the dynarray proposal about iterators, so I'm guessing it counts for random-access.
next step runtime error
Back to the R# video.
I wonder what std::common_type<std::string, const char*> would be
Oh it's std::string, right.
Forgot common_type is weird. Order matters and what not
01:11
probably not for std::string and const char*.
isn't it true ? T : U or whatever?
something like that.
Wide doesn't have such an operator, fortunately.
which reminds me that I totally did not implement the boolean operators to short-circuit
that's pretty major
well, kinda :P
so I think there might actually be a couple bugs in my stdlib (insofar as I have one) where I wrote them assuming that they did when they probably don't
How is short circuiting implemented?
01:15
dunno, I didn't implement it yet.
but I suspect that at the most fundamental level, it's really just an if.
Well, it takes bools. But don't you only get them after you evaluate the expression?
lol, R# presentation
You press ctrl-T and what you see is...a bug!
like x || y == bool __x; if (x) __x = true; else __x = y;
I keep getting stuck on the first part.
wat
01:19
?
what first part
Up till the first semicolon.
What are you ORing?
some expression.
01:22
@Pawnguy7 if(x || y) is implemented as basically if(x) { result = true; } else { result = y; }.
or well, DeadMG says that's what he thinks it is.
Oh. Thinking isn't going so well for me right now :D
you know, it really wouldn't be much Wide code at all.
and I wouldn't have to handle special-casing it at the LLVM IR level which is super nice.
I use to be an idea guy. I sucked at programming then. Now I have no ideas, and I still suck.
I also should implement stuff like break and continue.
Those are useful, yes.
What do you think of Java's label breaks?
01:29
I have no idea what that feature is
43
A: Is there a goto statement in java?

applechewerThe keyword exists, but it is not implemented. The only good reason to use goto that I can think of is this: for (int i = 0; i < MAX_I; i++) { for (int j = 0; j < MAX_J; j++) { // do stuff goto outsideloops; // to break out of both loops } } outsideloops: In Java you c...

eh, I had something kinda similar in mind
Oh
maybe while(cond) name { break name; }.
Those could be useful, but there are other ways around that.
01:30
and I also intended to have breakable if statements.
@chris Cleaner ways?
@Pawnguy7 Depends, a function inside the loop can be a lot clearer.
@DeadMG I have actually thought of that before. Though perhaps that is more of a sign of bad design on my part.
You can take whoever's advice from GN and kill your loops.
@Pawnguy7 Eh. IME it's just irritating that you can't.
@chris That advice is full of shit.
01:33
I heard functions before, but, at least in what I have done, it would basically be either it or a lambda.
@DeadMG He still means well. It might simply not be practical for all cases, but there's a lot of code that would look a lot nicer.
What would you even break out of an if statement?
@Rapptz Consider if(cond) { stuff; if (cond2) break; morestuff; }.
if(x) { if(y) break; otherStuff(); }?
@Rapptz That's just x && !y.
01:34
I was too lazy to make a complete example
Does anybody here also suffer from having twenty tabs up?
only twenty?
people like the ape often complain of having about a hundred
I personally though tend to be a few tabs man
I have 30 tabs open right now
After 20, I cannot switch well, so I might as well close some, because I am rarely using all of them.
01:43
That's cool, R# has format specifier support.
hmm
I'm really tired, and I want to sleep, but I don't want to face the sickness again
Stay here, and the sickness will just be wiped away
heh
I think that if Lounge<C++> could cure sickness, I'd be a lot better by now
you know, it actually wasn't long after I joined that I first got sick.
maybe some of the code in here really did give me cancer
lol
Unfortunately I din't quite follow the whole sickness problem you have/had. D'you know what it may be?
doc says gallstones
01:53
Isn't that pretty common and curable?
yep
I don't know how to support targets in my meta build system.
I don't even know what you are talking about
4
Q: What is a 'make target'?

LazerWhy do I need to make a make target before being able to build my source code? More specifically, what is make target exactly?

Not that complex
02:42
I wonder how I made my executable 455 kb from 2 MB
was it defining NDEBUG? nope
o_o
0
Q: C/C++: What are your favorite clever/brilliant/useful/elegant examples of preprocessor macros?

user1299784I'm a new C++ programmer coming from Java and I'm already in love with macros - they make coding so simple and elegant. I've been using them for basic things like debugging and a loop which iterates over two integers (that is, two for loops compressed into one line). I'd like to hear more clever ...

^^ surprised that managed to stay open for 5 min.
user425495
03:11
Why doesn't the following compile? coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/e706a5be759ce70a
user425495
If I change the operator()() to some named method like generate(), and call my_a_generator.generate<int>(); everything works fine
user425495
ah! that's what I am missing
user425495
that's not as nice :\ might as well use a named method
@justinls You should, though a better thing would be to put the type parameter in the class template itself.
user425495
03:14
@MarkGarcia thank you. This was just a simple example to show the problem
That's a surprisingly hard to read SSCCE
@Rapptz Follow the errors. ;)
user425495
I actually am trying to build a random class generator :3
user425495
auto generator = rcg<A>{}; auto my_a = generator.generate<int, string, double>(); where A has a constructor with int, string, and double
user425495
that's the idea anyway
user425495
03:19
the arguments for generate will be optional std::random distributions, idk I still need to flesh it out
I'm making a meta-build system inspired by qmake
@Rapptz And from things you don't like in CMake. :)
lol
Anyone still play Age of Empires?
It's fun to write.
I don't know if I should put it in a public repo on github though
03:21
@Rapptz I'll try it if it turns out to be better than CMake.
@Rapptz You should.
It's on bitbucket because I don't want people to make fun of me
:P
@Rapptz That's exactly the same feeling I had in my previous pet projects.
It's the only reason I keep things private most of the time.
Now I realized that no people would make fun of me because no one would actually want to see unpopular projects.
user425495
I just put all my junk on github because no one looks at my repo :P
03:24
@justinls Yeah. That.
@MarkGarcia Yeah, I know that. But then I realised I browse random repos and make fun of people
So I bet other people do that too.
user425495
I have a raytracer project that worked at one point and then I decided to refactor everything and my last commit was: "this mess worked at one point - here is an image to prove it"
user425495
I should probably get it back to working, but for now it's a mess on github. it doesn't even compile :(
brb. Gotta setup some computers again.
hi there, please help
microsoft sdks\windows\v6.0a\include\gdiplustypes.h(658) : error C3861: 'min': identifier not found
conflict occurs between "min" in the gdiplustypes.h and "max" in windef.h
03:59
@paulcheung Read the tags on the room.
And the top comment on the star board.
I have this profound question, so very very profound ...
why aren't there any fat aliens?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Because conspiracy theorists haven't yet thought of that. :)
Or maybe transporting skinnier aliens are more fuel effecient ...
05:16
@Telkitty猫咪咪 no fat aliens? images.sodahead.com/profiles/0/0/1/1/5/3/4/2/4/…
Speaking of which, aliens have no tits either ...
maybe they are not mammals.
usually aliens lay eggs, so I guess that makes em birds
Hello all you bobble-heads! :D
@JerryCoffin Hey man! :D Hows married life?
05:35
Robot's been spamming!
Yay! I got lemon tea.
@MarkGarcia And how are you this fine morning?
@GamesBrainiac Noon here. Doing some coding on my pet project.
@MarkGarcia Whats your pet projecting?
@GamesBrainiac Some HTTP library using Boost.Asio. Pretty much some place to put my learnings into.
@MarkGarcia Sounds awesome. But aren't there tonnes of HTTP libraries?
05:49
@GamesBrainiac Yes. All too crappy for my taste.
:)
And all literally wants to do all things their way.
Which is the thing I hate most in a library.
@MarkGarcia Well then you sure are one snobby coder aint ya! :P
@GamesBrainiac Just trying to make something better. :)
@MarkGarcia Awesome, can I have a look at it when its done?
@GamesBrainiac Well, TBH I still haven't even implemented the client request functionality, but you are always free to check at any time: github.com/markgarcia/makopa
@MarkGarcia Following you now! :D
05:53
Hehe. I actually have a little more courage than @Rapptz for linking a project in here. :P
@GamesBrainiac Oh. Thanks! You're the first follower, besides my self. :)
@MarkGarcia lol
@MarkGarcia github.com/Rapptz lol
Well, let's wish good luck to our projects.
@Rapptz Thank the heavens you use Python.
I thought I was the only one.
@GamesBrainiac CatPlusPlus also does.
And perhaps many others in here.
05:59
@MarkGarcia No, no he doesnt. His life, his dreams and his future is to C++. Even his name.
He's a true believer.
He hates C++
@Rapptz Its tough love. You'll understand one day, young Rapptz.
Any hoo, you all have better repos than I do.
Aren't you ... like ... younger?
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Shuttup. What do you know? You're a kitty.
06:03
I am a kitty, not a pig ... (not hard feelings, pigs <3)
@Telkitty猫咪咪 Animal racist.
Shame on you.
SMÖKE.
@refp Its you again.
I löööööve pointers.
maybe that's a little bit exaggerated though..
@ScottW Yo man! :D
06:15
@ScottW good morning.
Hows it goin?
@ScottW Its night over there?
Oh, wait, you're Murican.
@ScottW Its night over there?
@ScottW Good night. :)
I might just push my stuff to github
I wish I was better at parsing
@Rapptz You should. And link it here.
@ScottW Cheer up, you can play starcraft just fine
@ScottW Then I'm ashamed of you man.
Go die! :P
@ScottW I need to download the latest version of Resharper.
Love the autocomplete.
06:29
@MarkGarcia github.com/Rapptz/Shinobi my lame thing
@Rapptz Let us see!
I'm still working on it and adding things
especially my shitty parsing ._.
Nice project indeed.
@Rapptz Still, you are still to persuade me why it's better to use than CMake. I'll wait for the goodies. :)
CMake's annoying to use for me
but I like qmake :P
and I like ninja so I just combined the two
user1804599
06:49
@not-rightfold Doesn't load in mine. :(
user1804599
'int main() { A a; B b; }' — Shreyas A 14 secs ago
user1804599
Most retarded comment of the year award.
07:04
@not-rightfold Updated with getch();! Wow.
Programming Python by Lutz is a really good book.
Are there assertions in C++ like there are in Python?
What do you mean?
@Rapptz something like assert(cheese, isinstanceof(int))
user1804599
assert(some_expr)
@not-rightfold So its no different.
07:18
static_assert(std::is_convertible<cheese, int>::value, "...");
for your specific example
assuming cheese is a type
@Rapptz I see. No, I was just learning about TDD in Python. I was wondering if it was just a python thing or something more generic.
i have a bug that only pops up with gcc -o4, and not on lower optimization levels, and doesnt show up using clang (no matter what clang optimization level i use). whats the best way to debug this? since its optimized i can barely follow the code in debug mode
Is there like a TDD bible for C++. For example, for CS math, there's Concrete Mathematics.
user1804599
@wardd Do you have any UB in your code?
@not-rightfold hmm well... how can i find that out? i ran my code through clang's static analyzer and cppcheck but they didn't report any issues
07:23
@wardd File a bug report then use lower optimization levels.
user1804599
Hmm. Nevermind.
is there a tool or gcc switch that will point out code that has undefined behavior?
user1804599
UB is not always easy to detect.
@Mark Garcia i assume the problem is in my code and not a compiler bug, but ill see if i can shrink my project to a small snippet of code that produces the issue.. might take some time to do that though
user1804599
@wardd This thing was mentioned in a GN talk; may be handy?
user1804599
07:29
Detects some kinds of UB at runtime.
user1804599
(If you're on Linux or OS X.)
ahh im using MinGW ... i dont have linux set up atm but ill set one up and try to build with the same version of GCC... i think that address sanitizer might be useful but ill need to use the GCC version because I dont think clang would catch it since it doesn't crash
Use cppcheck
Or well, try it.
Is the other c++ room still around?
user1804599
No; it's dead.
07:33
why is semicolon better than comma in that sentence?
@not-rightfold looks like GCC comes with an undefined behavior detector -fsanitize=undefined
@JohanLarsson He's Zoidberg.
@GamesBrainiac yeah, he know a lot of stuff!
@JohanLarsson No, just about ponies. He loves PHP too. Does it all day long.
user1804599
I don't love PHP, you idiot.
user1804599
07:37
It's a nightmare.
@not-rightfold hahahahahah
I can google again, chances are google were spamming themselves
was and issue with logging in to the google account

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