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23:01
I'd love to see a good clean implementation of some game engine some day. Some good design that doesn't require 27 levels deep hierarchies or C-style enums/arrays and unique IDs.
Ahahaha good luck with that
I gave up a few years ago.
@ScottW Zuigt zalm met rietjes
The best hope in the Game development community is a Component based framework that makes you write:
> PositionComponent * comp = (PositionComponent*)player.getComponent<PositionComponent>();
23:04
That looks absolutely terrible
Yeah, this is utterly horrible
Use auto
(:D)
@Jefffrey And what the fuck does that solve
And, use template arguments in the freaking return type. And no raw pointers
Congrats for reinventing composition, but badly
I guess
@CatPlusPlus The feeling of Enterpriseyness and code metrics
23:06
Gamedevs are bad at programming
I'd love to see you doing that.
Anything is better than something that repeats the same word 4 times in a single line.
class Player { Position position; }
WOOP WOOP COMPONENT DESIGN
lol
Entity component systems are more complex than that. It's not just composition.
Pray tell
23:08
Systems Algorithms needs to work on the base of what components an entity have, not on the type of the entity.
I looked into ECSs before and they seemed cool, but the implementations are horrible.
You can do that in non-horrible languages with attributes and reflection, but ugh
@Jefffrey hence why you don't generally need it :/
@Rapptz Even repeating the same word 5 times in one line? :-)
23:10
@JerryCoffin lol.
@JerryCoffin You disappoint me. There are so many other numbers >4
@sehe Good point. But the idea is so cool that you are eventually so infatuated that you feel like dreaming about components and entities.
@Jefffrey This can be solved by doing what the Standard library does
I knew people would say that so I just left it.
@MohammadAliBaydoun Templates all over the place?
23:10
@Jefffrey It's marketing buzzword bingo
@sehe There are, but if they repeat more than 5 times, they also repeat 5 times, so my point still stands for the others.
@Jefffrey algorithms that don't operate on specific containers
@Jefffrey Yes, templates :v
@Jefffrey Nope. I've been there. And I've spent the night doing answers in random boost libraries (, anyone? maybe, then?) You quickly learn to avoid needless complexity :/
Loose coupling gets you actual benefits, this just overcomplicates shit
@ScottW you should make a game for me.
I can show you.
23:12
@JerryCoffin By induction even.
We should make a console rogue-like game
@sehe Induction is just recursion in disguise.
// Does stuff like this work?
template<typename C> auto position(C const& c) -> decltype(c.position) { return c.position; }
@sehe Ok let's assume we use composition. And let's assume we have 20 entities type that all have a position component, and 10 that does not. Do you overload the function that handle the movement 20 times?
@MohammadAliBaydoun Needs auto and other things.
23:13
@ScottW there is this game, called footbrawl quest: here.
@JerryCoffin Recursion in the skies
Pretty fun.
It is like... grid based football, sort of.
What would be great, though, is if it actually was football.
@sehe wat
I wonder if I can decompile it?
@Jefffrey That's just static polymorphism. We can express that relatively directly (traits, of the custom or or implicit variety)
@Jefffrey Lemme show the response arrow there. There. Clear?
23:14
@ScottW grid-based?
@sehe lol, yes.
From my perspective, this is.
Not that I play many football games.
You saw the picture?
@sehe can you make an example?
@sehe ...and under the ground.
@ScottW Java, I am afraid. They messed something up, because it pegs my CPU needlessly.
Anyway, it is grid based. For example, units have different movement amounts.
23:17
@Jefffrey Yes, I can.
I think this would be pretty fun on an actual big field, with each team having the same units.
@JerryCoffin Same thing really :/
Good to know. :/
Oh, and people die.
Each unit can move, and do an action. Hitting people, for example.
23:19
It is like... football chess.
Kick Java in the nuts
And then confiscate them. Java does not deserve its balls.
@ScottW well... I am not good at making things :D
This thing was polished.
> I thought overloading was the practice of making all variables global so that they can be reused for a different purpose elsewhere in the program. Or is that garbage collection? lol
What was it again? Potion something. I always think quest...
@ScottW Same with C#.
23:22
Looking at these two pictures.
Which would you choose to make a game?
Lies :D
@ScottW Making things like I do (or not, rather) is not very good for self-esteem.
@Jefffrey Probably would have been easier if you had used inheritance for an Entity class which has a position.
@ScottW literally the console, or with those graphics?
I just realized that I could just go and get a copy of Windows on DreamSpark, create a system image and use that one every computer I have without having to worry about number of licenses.
23:26
It would be nice to have it with console-like graphics
but literally console is cool enough
@Rapptz Ok. Assuming some entities have a Movement component, some don't. Do you use inheritance there too?
@Jefffrey Make an entity base class or something
@Jefffrey How are you storing a vector of different types? Are you using type-erasure? Variant?
I searched wikipedia for Rogue.
And in the disambiguation.
It wasn't listed. Apparently it is "Rogue (video game)"
@Rapptz That's another problem that simple composition can't solve. As I was trying to prove to sehe and cat.
23:28
I know.
@Borgleader That contains what?
@Jefffrey It's.. a solved issue. Not really a problem, lol.
I was trying to find the wikipedia article on the origional.
user1804599
Use two vectors.
@Jefffrey a method to grab a component, if it exists
23:30
Use malloc
@Rapptz Much less a solved issue than usually a sign of design problem (unless it's closely related types).
@Borgleader Good. Do you have an idea on how to implement this? Because I've tried to come up with a similar design. But it's shit.
@JerryCoffin Using boost::variant is a design problem? Can't say I agree.
I want to say it would be fun making a game with somebody, but I fear I wouldn't hold up my end.
23:31
@Jefffrey Remove Component from the names of all those classes
@Jefffrey What where
and return references instead of pointers
@MohammadAliBaydoun I know :/
Yeah, precisely
@Rapptz Necessarily a design problem, no. Usually, however, yes.
23:31
In C++ maybe
@Jefffrey perhaps you want to take your mind of design, and fix my bugs.
@MohammadAliBaydoun No, because that function can return a "null" value to symbolize that the component is not attached.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, in C++ I meant.
@JerryCoffin I still don't really think so.
@Jefffrey Was answering to Jerry's
@JerryCoffin I was so about to post that, but was too pissed to type fast.
23:32
Let's start from beginning
@Rapptz Wanting to store different types in a vector is.
What the fuck are you trying to solve with this overcomplicated piece of shit gamedev design
@CatPlusPlus I was (at least sort of) taking that for granted for the moment. In Lisp, for example, it's pretty much completely inapplicable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So it's better in your opinion to do std::vector<int>, std::vector<float>, std::vector<double>, etc?
I picked random types
@CatPlusPlus Having a kind of composition that doesn't force me to overload 20+ functions just because the type of Cat, Giraffe, Raptor are different, but they all share the same component Position which is needed by the function.
23:34
@R.MartinhoFernandes Dubious at best, unless indirected to inherited classes.
Dunno. I dunno why one is storing those.
@Rapptz You're entitled to your own opinion, no matter how mistaken it might be. :-)
The thing with sum types is that they're not 'random types'
Well, I'm not really talking about shoving random types in a vector. I mean like if the user can for example input multiple data types in a file like a string, float, or int and you're reading from a file is it really bad to store them all in a vector with a variant?
@Jefffrey That's solved with generic programming and concepts
@CatPlusPlus I can't see how.
And without writing anything, no less
template <typename Positionable>
void f(Positionable const& p) { std::cout << p.position; }
Cat, Giraffe and Raptor all would share a common set of member functions that you can use in a template
Am I drunk, or clueless, or both?
23:37
@Jefffrey Have you never used templates?
Hell, just a Position member
and public member variables of course
PS - don't answer that..
@Rapptz Depends on the relationship between the data. In a typical case, a mixture like that indicates some sort of logical record structure, where each item should be given the correct type.
You can have ~~~~~component design~~~~~~ and keep behaviour on Position
Without reinventing composition
OK, I'll admit I'm a bit drunk.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmm. Ok. But some entities does not have a position member. So, what? Do the program crash every time an entity that does not have that specific component is encountered?
SFINAE?
No, the program doesn't compile
23:39
England won, even though the poles played well.
you can have a no-op as the default case.
@MohammadAliBaydoun so his solution doesnt help
I'm chalking it up to "Jeffrey has never used templates"
@Rapptz templates are useful if you know what the components will be at compile time.
you dont
23:41
@Rapptz I've used them. I'm not an expert on them, that's for sure. But I've used them.
@Borgleader How can you add members in C++ at run-time?
That's the problem Component Systems are trying to solve I guess :/
container of components?
Yeah, pretty much.
23:42
This design sounds retarded
@Borgleader I'm tempted to star that, but someone moaned that the starboard was full of non-funny stuff.
The container is the problem :|
Use a language with reflection
That's the problem. Implementation.
@Rapptz I think you just haven't looked into it enough.
23:43
It's definitely not giving a positive first impression.
Let's keep it simple. The idea is to have a container of "entities" that are passed to different functions (the collision detection/movements/drawing/etc update functions) and each function need to know if an entity have a specific set of components. If it does then the function run on that entity, if it does not the entity is simply ignored by the function.
I recall a famous 3D game engine using a similar system. Either Unity or Unreal. I don't recall exactly.
Unity.
@MohammadAliBaydoun Unity
The lounge can be summed up like so:
23:44
Congratulations at describing polymorphism, but reinvented badly
@Jefffrey When you assume the solution, yes, that is the only one.
> Design suggestion.
TERRIBLE.
Gamedev design suggestions usually are
@Jefffrey Sounds like an inheritance failure to me.
23:45
@Pawnguy7 Game dev design is usually shit.
Yeah. We should aim to SIMULATE THE UNIVERSE.
Games will just happen.
@CatPlusPlus The problem with polymorphism and inheritance, is that entities in a game have very different attributes that can hardly be described and reused with 2000 level deeps hierarchies.
Just drop all pretence of writing typechecked code, and do class ENTITY { std::map<std::string, std::string> attributes; }
@Jefffrey lolwut
@ScottW btw, if you have an idea for the roguelike I wouldn't mind helping.
23:47
@R.MartinhoFernandes take a look at UDKs source code, you'll see what he means
You can probably do it with just two levels and multiple inheritance.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What don't you agree/understand on?
@Rapptz Sounds prejudiced.
But multiple inheritance is evil, we know.
I.e. mixins
BUT I DONT KNOW WHAT MY ENTITIES ARE
THATS WHY I CAN ONLY DESCRIBE ANYTHING IS SUCH VAGUE TERMS
HELP I WANT TO MAKE AN MMO
No but gamedev design is fucking horrible
Also I'm sick and not happy about that
23:49
Has anybody here seen this used in practice?
@Pawnguy7 Unity?
Some game engines do, but that doesn't make it sane, good or necessary
@Jefffrey Well, I don't understand why you would need such an arbitrarily deep hierarchy.
Most game engines are littered with singletons and other horrible nightmares
23:50
Have you used Unity and determined it was bad?
@Pawnguy7 Have you seen gamedev code?
Unity has a weird way of doing things
Also.
Sep 3 at 19:17, by Rapptz
It's not a blind dislike, trust me I've seen a lot of code from game developers because I really wanted to make a game myself but I found myself completely turned off by it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you use multiple inheritance it does not have to be that deep. You are right on that. But I've been here enough to know that multiple inheritance is shit (at least that's what I've heard in here).
@Rapptz No.
What I do know is.
The instant I showed this here.
Instant rejection, because it was on gamedev.
@Rapptz The problem is you've seen bad code and now you assume anything that comes out of a gamdev's mouth is shit.
No reading involved.
or at least it seems like it
@Pawnguy7 This what
23:52
(I'm not gonna mention cat cuz he just hates anything anyway)
@CatPlusPlus A link to an SO question explaining this design
Oh that thing
I've read that code and it is horrible
@Borgleader Not really. I await for the day I find something decent.
But it's even less useful than what @Jefffrey is trying to do
@Jefffrey I think most regulars here do not have qualms with multiple inheritance.
(If they do, they should rethink it)
23:53
Someone told me "Ew multiple inheritance" before when I used it but I forgot who :s
@CatPlusPlus I don't recall it containing code.
Maybe it was some other one
I had this open
It was not that.
It was like a week ago that I showed it, it was older.
Why don't you link it again?
It's not on your gamedev profile so I'm assuming it's not you.
@CatPlusPlus Ugh, that looks exactly like reinventing inheritance :(
23:55
135
A: Role of systems in entity systems architecture

Byte56There are a multitude of ways to represent and implement entity component systems, but here is an explanation of one way. Keep in mind there is no concrete definition of entity/component/system architectures, so this is just one implementation. I'm going to introduce an analogy for entity/compon...

@R.MartinhoFernandes Yup
@Rapptz why do you assume one of us asked it?
Because you're talking about it?
Also it's funny to see this kind of crap out of gamedevs who are all ~~PERFORMANCE~~
We are all talking about it, are we not?
23:57
Cannot have exceptions! But let's do this shit!
@CatPlusPlus Doesn't use the language-provided polymorphism => not slow.
:laffo:
Oh right, they hate virtual calls, too
Ahahaha
That answer is really just overly complicated description of composition
@R.MartinhoFernandes I must be mistaken then.
You really have to not have any idea what you want from the code to arrive at this
Let's say I have a game editor, and I want to be able to create some game object/entity call it whatever you want that can contain an arbitrary amount of properties. Say I drop in some mesh "component" then the game designer says hey, i want it to be physically simulated, then he adds that, and then later on he wants it to make sound, so he adds that too. How do you then update those objects in a consistent manner code wise?
Without having a programmer create a new fucking class everytime
23:59
Editor can easily generate and hotswap code

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