@R.MartinhoFernandes ECMAScript is a theoretical concept, right? not bound by any lobbying companies. As a language, it's evolving nicely, I think. However, actual implementation means everything, and for example Chrome still blocking ASM.js is extremely annoying.
and as I said, as long as you're actually not writing JS, it can be looked at as a nice language
but once you start doing development, all the painful flaws become so annoying I personally want to wear a metal bucket on my head and bang it against the wall
That's why ASM.js is the best thing to happen to JS
and that's why chrome sucks terribly for not adopting it yet
@R.MartinhoFernandes When I have to create a, for example, temporary global vector3 variable, because recreating the object is too costly, I call bullshit.
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, I am complaining that I am forced to use one language and one VM, and that's called "Free and Open Web", and that particular language is fucking annoying to use.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit well pretty much that, yeah
Kids these days. "You're making me do this, do that." No, we're not - get off your arse and use something else, if you want to. Nobody is forcing you to use the WWW.
@BartekBanachewicz What? You disagree that you are free to make your own version if you are unhappy with existing ones? What happened to "free and open web"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes When I have to create a, for example, temporary global vector3 variable, because recreating the object is too costly, I call bullshit.
> Because asm.js is a strict subset of JavaScript, this specification only defines the validation logic—the execution semantics is simply that of JavaScript. However, validated asm.js is amenable to ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit You're never forced to program at all. But if you want to write something on a web page that will execute on the browser, your choices are extremely constrained.
> Stunningly, I’ve even met firmware developers who’d never even heard of a buffer-overflow! They appeared genuinely shocked when I explained the concept.
oh god.
we're doomed.
I am now genuinely scared of buying an intelligent fridge.
@JerryCoffin nobody's perfect, I guess. I've kind of enjoyed writing Ada, too bad we didn't really use its potential and instead used it to solve a threading problem (yay uni)
@BartekBanachewicz The little I remember, however, says that it's kind of a cross between OpenMP and a CUDA/OpenCL kind of thing -- implemented as directives, but intended to let computation be offloadd to a GPU (or some other highly parallel co-processor) not just using multiple cores on the CPU.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Even without bringing ranges into it, the results of many operations are less restricted than inputs -- e.g., division over whole numbers gives rational numbers, square root over reals gives complex, etc.
I wish the media would stop with their stupid "oh look they hacked the new iPhone's biometric scanner". Damnit, that's old news. We already knew long ago that it was easy to break that.
Shaddup
@R.MartinhoFernandes I learned last week you can't catch that.
What the fuck. In the OpenGL superbible they use thousands of other mid-sized library to handle basically everything, using only glClearColor as an OpenGL command. WHAT THE FUCK! I WANT TO LEARN OPENGL, NOT A SHITLOAD OF OTHER RELATED LIBRARIES. Why am I not using SFML already?
@JerryCoffin The use of GLUT is not a problem, I can map their function to other libraries (like glfw). What would you suggest to get started (knowing pretty much nothing very well), that is not this or the superbible?
My trick for the red book, was to generate an OpenGL 3.3 header with glLoadGen, and whenever the book would talk about a feature, check if it was in there. If it wasn't (which I assumed meant deprecated) I would skip. You should probably generate a 4.x header though. My edition doesn't cover ogl4 so 3.3 was fine for me.
@Jefffrey Well, I mostly learned from the Red book, and managed to get by, but it takes a fair amount of extra effort to figure out what parts you should ignore completely, and what parts should be taken with large grains of salt. I can't really say much about the site you linked -- I've glanced at it before, but not much more than that.
So, what's the best advice to give to people who are terrible at asking StackOverflow questions? I mean, people who border on copy&paste homework assignments as questions. I heard some classmates complaining about the lack of help they received on StackOverflow recently.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't expect people, that don't have the courtesy or patience to make a decent question for their own good, to read a long article on how they should ask questions just because @nhgrif here ask them to.
@Jefffrey You can write a pretty short summary, just with a lot less detail and/or examples. But in the end, the robot is right -- there's not much you can do to help somebody if they just refuse to learn.
@Hobbyist Always try to think from the viewpoint of whoever's going to use your code (not just the end user, but anybody who write code that uses yours).
@R.MartinhoFernandes When it comes to explain the basic it uses GLFrustum, Math3d, glut (obviously), GLShaderManager as well as what it calls "GLTools" defined in <GLTools.h>.
user1804599
// How do you guys usually solve this problem?
class foo {
public:
T& foo() { return foo; }
private:
T foo;
};
@Jefffrey This one only seems to use a vmath namespace for linear algebra (totally understandable since OpenGL doesn't provide one) and something for the window system crap.
Oh, and it uses something called "Triangle batch" like: triangleBatch.Begin(GL_TRIANGLES, 3); triangleBatch.CopyVertexData3f(vVerts); // array of vertexes triangleBatch.End();
Hmm, there's also Design Patterns on the shelf. Maybe I can finally fully understand that old Stevey's Drunken Blog Rant™, Singleton Considered Stupid.
Nope, still don't get it.
He seems to think the Interpreter pattern is super important.
> We’ve fooled those older games into thinking they’re being played with a keyboard and mouse, but we’ve designed a gamepad that’s nothing like either one of those devices.
I'm intrigued by this ^
I mean, I'm curious to see how well it will work even on games that were not designed for it.
@Xeo They could just keep it, in case we don't need the number generator doesn't need to be random and we happen to have one that is faster than a uniform one
Going Native 2013 ended a few weeks ago, but the sessions live on in a series of videos on Channel 9. Don't have time for all of them? Here are some of the most-viewed sessions: Bjarne Stroustrup, The Essence of C++: With Examples in C++84, C++98, C++11, and C++14 Andrei Alexandrescu, Writing Quick Code in C++, Quickly Sean Parent, C++ Seasoning Herb Sutter, Keynote: Herb Sutter - One C++ Ste…