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03:00
I'm also looking at stuff like ScreenStuff.h, ScreenEngine.h, owch.
and Screen/Screens? seriously?
What do you propose Game be called?
I considered it things related to gameplay.
Um.. yes, Stuff was a tragic name.
I'd probably name it Snake, since you have all of your Snake-logic-specific stuff in there.
much of it, anyway.
Snake as in the concept, or specific things to this project? (e.g. what would not be carried over to any new projects).
lol, ScreenStuff.h is nice.
hmm.
let me try that again.
I would call it Simulation, because it's the stuff you use to simulate the game state.
also, your headers are way too fine-grained here.
also
03:04
@DeadMG What do you mean?
why the fuck is ScreenStuff full of getters and setters for every variable?
Simulation does not meananything to me.
Well.
@Jefffrey He has a separate header for like, every enumeration, every type, every free function.
Yes, I do.
03:04
even though, let's face it, ScreenStuff is absolutely fucking worthless without a Screen to construct.
there's no reason, ever, to use ScreenStuff when you're not using a Screen.
That is the entire point.
which is why it should not have its own header.
Where do you propose it be put?
well, let's see.
@WillP Well I've literally am in my first C++ class. I have made memory match game, tic tac toe, and some other small stuff like that. I have a little more experience with C# I'm currently building a asteroids remake in Unity.
03:06
having your various Screens have a separate header/TU is something I think is fine.
They failed to make the right crown for my tooth again, this is the 2nd time ... I am going to be toothless for a long time ... with that said I do have a temp. fake tooth in place
I personally would probably put virtually everything else to do with screens in IScreen.h.
also I'd rename IScreen to just Screen because ewwwwww I prefix, but that's another matter.
especially ScreenStuff because IScreen.h includes ScreenStuff anyway and you can't even define a Screen without including IScreen.h
That is a good point. Not quite sure how I developed this habit.
Wait... I bet it was Java.
Java does this, doesn't it?
yep.
So, how does one determine when things should be merged?
03:09
generally, you should say "If it's not really useful/possible to use these two components completely independently, then they should live in the same header".
some headers are bigger than others.
for Wide I have some 20-line headers that define things like, for example, the Bool type.
but I have another that defines the Type machinery and it's about 350 lines
and the Parser is an 1100 line header (but to be fair, most of that stuff is implemented in a header because it's a template)
So, for example.
I have this Sounds enum.
It should be in the player?
Don't look there much, they kind of... well, don't work. At all.
yep.
well, what I'm going to say is, when you have a header e.g. SoundPlayer, that already includes another top-level header of the same component e.g. Sounds, that's a prime hint that you've done it wrong.
So, ScreenStuff. As far as the getters/setters... well, the transition info was by reference, for some reason...
I remember, I think.
These various things have to be passed to the screen's update.
yep, I got that part.
The window, for example.
03:15
didn't see why it shouldn't be just a struct of pointers, though.
So the problem isn't the pointers, but getting/setting them?
well, the getters and setters don't add anything useful to the class struct.
I am sort of idiot-proofing my code against myself.
That is also why ScreenChange exists.
that is not done with getters and setters.
Othewise, the engine would have the changeScreen method.
But if I pass that into the screens.
They can kill themselves via recursion.
03:16
it's done with some comments to tell you why you did it a certain less obvious way.
@Pawnguy7 I'm sorry, wat.
Well.
The engine has, say, update,which calls it on the current screen.
So if you pass the engine.
engine.update->screen.update->engine.update...
Now, I have no idea why you would do that.
But as I said, idiot-proofing.
well.
since the debugger will trivially tell you if you enter an infinitely recursive loop like that
there's little reason to defensively code against it.
if it ever occurs, you'll know.
also
you could fuck up your code base in a million ways.
you can't defend against all or even many of them.
the idea that you might stupidly write an infinite loop- sure, true, but you might also do millions of other very bad things and break your code.
or you might just go ahead and write an infinite loop anyway.
So, for private (non public-facing APIs and such), idiot-proofing isn't really required?
At least to this degree.
yep.
On the other hand
03:21
it's one thing to write a public API that's safe for public consumption that minimizes the possibility of misuse
and another to try to guard against unpreventable basic programming mistakes in your private API.
Somewhere in here.
I basically return a pointer.
Same idea of screen states.
If it is nullptr, it terminates.
Is that acceptable?
With comments,of course.
I think that seems pretty logical.
Hrm.
So I basically need to rewrite my entire project :D
so what's new? :P
most of Wide could use a solid do-over.
From what I have heard.
Scrapping a project is usually a bad idea.
03:26
yep.
I have also heard this.
But in this case, the problem really is everywhere.
Haha.
well what I'm gonna say is
your Snake4 code is only like, what, 1-2k loc?
Close enough.
I have no idea, really. Not that big.
that's not too bad for re-authoring.
Perhaps I can make stacking screen states while I am at it.
Say, if you pause in the game.
Not needed exactly, but more organized. I think.
03:28
I agree.
And...
Assuming the pause menu is unique to this screen - which, it probably is in this case.
It would be put into the same file?
yep.
factor it out again later if you need it somewhere else.
Assuming there is a rewrite.
Are we talking new repository, or the same somehow?
depends on how extensive.
if we're talking about "Scrap and start again", then I'd make a new repo.
Should I also try to do more forward declarations?
03:31
eh
used to be that I would forward-declare ALL THE THINGS I could get away with.
these days I don't do that so much though.
What reasons would you cite for not doing it?
the rule I go by today is that if you cannot use the thing in your header without the thing in another header, then you're just wasting your time by not including that other header.
because you make everyone including your header include that other header anyway, it's just that they have to write the include a million times instead of once, and they get an annoying surprise when they can't use the API.
Makes sense.
I think I was lazy, though.
Say, places where what you describe does not come into play, and the header only dealt with references/pointers.
Kind of funny, considering how much time it took me to make my abstractions :\
I do say, "Don't include a header you don't need".
I think I am guilty there as well.
The screen headers were a bit of an evolving mess.
03:35
I have that too.
found a bunch of LLVM header includes (and those things are fucking massive and take forever to compile) that I didn't need.
it's a lot harder to remove headers you don't need later.
If you have, say, an interface.
I'm considering that for some headers, I might leave a comment listing their dependencies.
And after having made several implementations, you notice, most of them use the same thing.
Should you include it in the interface?
Like Resource, basically.
this really depends on what "most" is.
A percent, or?
03:37
also
your Resource class is absolutely terrible.
I guess you kind of expected me to say that now, huh.
I think it was indirectly described as terrible before, actually.
@Pawnguy7 I think that you should only include things in the interface if all derived classes need it.
I was asking if I should make it non-copyable.
if the derived classes want to share something they don't all need, they're perfectly capable of composing themselves of some other component and performing their own code duplication reduction.
@Pawnguy7 Burn it in the fires of a thousand hells.
How do you propose it be made?
It is about as singleton as they come.
Just... in a passed form.
03:40
instead, why don't you just do sf::Font font(...); sf::SoundBuffer clickbuffer(...); in main() and then pass them wherever they need to go?
where even is Resource used anyway.
Or maybe create a struct that contains game resources and pass that around.
@DeadMG everywhere
Not kidding.
@Jefffrey that is basically what it is, I think
I didn't see any uses of it in the Screen files I looked in.
They are the middleman, sort of.
oh by the way
03:42
Every form of input uses it.
I have some sympathy for you in this case because SFML's API here is disgustingly bad.
Which part?
sf::Font
font.loadFromFile, seriously, what an embarrassment.
@DeadMG ?
You want font("file"), or?
03:43
@Pawnguy7 auto font = sf::Font::loadFromFile("file");
@Pawnguy7 Yep.
@DeadMG Oh well, they adopt that idea pretty much everywhere. sf::Image, sf::Texture, sf::Sprite, etc..
Here is how I see it.
Loading the resource more than once is wasteful.
And many things need to use them.
I don't know how else to do it.
@Pawnguy7 Sounds like a job for a cache.
@Pawnguy7 Just instantiate the sf::Font directly in Main, and pass a pointer to it.
03:45
@DeadMG I think this brings up my screen-needs-everything-constructor again.
pack it in a struct.
What do I call it? BigRandomStruct?
eh
does it really matter?
it only serves one purpose and that purpose is blindingly obvious, so just name it something equally obvious, like "ScreenCreationParameters" or something.
Probably. Unless we want to repeat ScreenStuff, which we kind of are.
ScreenUpdateParameters.
03:48
Should I be trying to make games to learn design?
hmm.
the overwhelming problem is that if you learn to make games that are well-designed (as in, code design, in this case), you would probably be the first.
it's not like making, I dunno, ranges or something, where there's lots of smart people working on ranges.
That's offensive. Kinda.
Somewhat, then again everything Luc says goes over my head, so :D
well, maybe there is some super-secret game codebase out there that doesn't suck horrifically.
all I know is, virtually everybody I've ever met and all the code I've seen on any game programming related website, book, library, etc, it was all universally terrible and the standard of discussion was lower than the time I spend listening to Telkitty.
That does seem to be general opinion.
I don't know what I could attempt to make that would be useful, though.
03:52
in a very real sense
it simply doesn't matter.
In the game industry, I think, there's much more of "Let's make this work" rather than "Let's make is beautiful/reusable". Even at "advanced" layers. That's the main problem.
@Pawnguy7 IMHO, strive to make reusable components.
@Jefffrey Oh no. I'd forgive them, for that. You can find that everywhere.
it's the "EXCEPTIONS SO SLOW" and "TEMPLATES SO BINARY BLOAT" and that stuff.
@MarkGarcia definitely makes sense. I have been trying to moreso. Not sure if it is specific to games or not.
@DeadMG Also "STL SUCKS".
03:54
linked lists so great!
lol
And "USE POINTERS EVERYWHERE, AND IF WE HAVE TIME USE REFERENCE COUNTING". Let's get these messages to the standard committee.
immediately, sir.
@Pawnguy7 Oh yeah, speaking of which, I found some raw delete in your code. Fix immediately.
@DeadMG in the engine?
I think it was in a screen somewhere, but it doesn't matter
@Pawnguy7 Surely not specific to games. And it's really hard to make existing components more reusable.
03:56
Does std::unique_ptr operator= call delete?
with the appropriate deleter.
Hrm.
Is there any sort of binding, wrapper or library you can think of that I could make (or re-make?)
Thus not a GUI thing.
ultimately, it probably doesn't matter.
just make Snake again.
So remake?
Oh.
your past mistakes will be most relevant.
and it'll be easier to compare old and new.
03:59
True.
Night.
night.
night
TIL of this. Pretty cool.
04:15
lollll
@Borgleader I guess that makes them worthless?
@Borgleader You sound awfully Canadian.
@Mikhail No I just found it funny when you put it in perspective. These things are expensive...
@Borgleader So you just replace them with cheap poison gas, get a soldier to get near the tank and release the gas. Simple and effective, and you get a bonus unscathed tank.
:)
Might be the reason why they don't like chemical warfare. They're cheap, so cheap they can't get they're hands on the large lumps of money on expensive modern weapons.
Fuck, anybody used VirtualAlloc?
04:33
I have done.
@DeadMG I'm trying to solve some io problems where my io performance is 10x the bench-marked and all my program is doing is writing 10 megabyte chunks from memory. VS profiler says extremeley high rate of paging. Do you think large pages will help?
@DeadMG they don't help much
well, if you ask something so pointlessly generic as "Who has used VirtualAlloc", you get a whole bunch of people whose only experience with it is to allocate executable memory.
instead of people who give a shit about your crappy I/O performance.
Is there a simple utility that you can just virtually use a computer that is on the network and turning into and additional monitor such as what air display does? Actually creates your desktop monitor that you can extend too.
04:48
@FredMcgiff use teamviewer to visualize a mock monitor?
@Mikhail It It will not extend your monitors To a addition monitor
@DeadMG I can't ask it on SO because discussion is against the rules :-( . I think I just want friends who have experience with real world performance optimization.
well, it's funny, because I don't recall ever seeing you here unless you had a problem
not really what I'd define as being friendly.
but you might want to try Mysticial, he's more forgiving than I am and also has more experience with that sort of thing.
@DeadMG yeah thats true
Well is utility for display To add additional 1 or 2 Monitors using Computers On the network
With the air display app Enables you to go to Control Panel click extend monitors
04:56
@FredMcgiff use teamviwer
also try not to feed the other vampires.
teamviewer doesn't allow you extend the Monitor dragging a window into that monitor it just Enables you to view the computer
For example if you wanted All the after effects panels spread out over additional monitors
@FredMcgiff enable a virtual monitor drag it into the virtual monitor, see it on your network computer, profit
@Mikhail Enabling in which application
?
05:20
If I call it just once it only works maybe 5% of the time, but if I put 40 of the same statement in a row it usually always works. source
5
lol
lol
05:47
@MarkGarcia I wonder if the other window is really running a loop that sets its position while he is running a loop setting it to his favorite position?
@Mikhail That's also my guess, or the other window responses to sizing messages sent by SetWindowPos in such a way that its original orientation is restored.
@MarkGarcia Probably because accessibility tools have a nasty way of always being ontop of everything. Although one wonders what the hell is writing that he needs to manually trigger the onscreen keyboard. Probably some mallware kit that needs to emulate the user during some secure login stage.
06:13
@MarkGarcia Statistical approach to programming.
@MarkGarcia lol. The guy knows math.
@StackedCrooked lol
40 tries at 5% will work about 87% of the time.
So tell the OP to do even more.
100 tries will be 99.4%.
@Mysticial By that time he would have a melted CPU. :P
Depends on the type of distribution I think
06:23
@Mysticial Fantastic design innovation! I'm block-copying my entire codebase for all my projects as we speak. I'm going for doing everything 10000 times, (in each of eight threads).
For idiots, probability always works against them
At 1000 (assuming independence), the probability of it not working is 5.3 * 10^-23. That's less than the probability of a hardware error.
You know your calculations are meaningless because 5% was a gross estimation by OP
@Borgleader Then tell the OP to run infinitely many iterations. :)
No, I'll tell him his code sucks
06:28
@Borgleader That's just insult to injury. :(
:)
More like the cause of the injury :P
The worst part of working at Google, for many people, is that they're overqualified for their job.
^^ Soooooo true...
I linked that earlier...
and you were there =/
I was here?
Many of the engineers are arrogant.
^^ That's also very true. It bugs me sometimes...
Google may understand engineering, but not design.
^^ Not necessarily true. We have entire teams dedicated to designing things.
06:39
@Mysticial I hope you don't become like them. :)
9 hours ago, by Borgleader
Google Employees Confess The Worst Things About Working At Google Not sure how much of this is accurate and how much is just disgruntled (ex-)employees being whiny.
@MarkGarcia I can't even even if I wanted to. Since I'm quite literally the bottom of the of ladder.
Your office space can be too small.
^^ Very true.
The culture is immature.
^^ True, but it's exaggerated and I don't think it's a bad thing.
@Mysticial I thought the same when I read that. No reason why that's a bad thing.
How can anypone be arrogant when they are paid to be told what to do? The only people who I consider are entitled to be arrogant are the creative people who are knowledgeable and logical enough to bring their innovation into life ...
otherwise you are just an employee like everyone else
And I don't think you can get away with doing nothing.
06:43
I have plenty super smart phd friends who are paid to do something beneath their ability
that is life
@User17 Perhaps we should work hard to avoid that?
they are paid decent though, way above the average salary
but there are millions of people in that category
you can't be special without being weird
has anybody used frepo before?
(g++ -frepo)
never heard of it
that reminds me of -funroll-loops
06:46
Hm. Essentially I have a bunch of templates and would like to compile quickly anyway.
One option is forward-declaring everything and pre-instantiating the templates.
Which is going to be a pain.
But frepo seems to do that pretty well too.
Or at least sounds similar.
TIL Windows Aero is actually an acronym (Authentic, Energetic, Reflective and Open).
@U2EF1 perhaps adjusting your makefile so as not to recompile?
We are generating code and would like it to compile quickly.
Makefile's fine.
@MarkGarcia "open"
@Mysticial I was more surprised/bummed about the people are douchebags thing
06:51
@Borgleader I figure it's probably the same everywhere.
When you're at the bottom (like me), you get routinely stepped on by the higher ups.
Depends, I assume theres a way to foster a company wide culture of cooperation and minimal ego
That's not to say I don't like my job. I love it so far. But there's a lot of things that I can't do which - well tend to hold me back.
@StackedCrooked Seems like the marketing guys can't think of any more positive words starting with O. :)
@MarkGarcia Orifice
@MarkGarcia Libre Orifice
Oblivious, perhaps, is more appropriate. Considering Win8 and stuff.
@Mikhail After searching what that means... ;)
06:56
@MarkGarcia They could have used oenophile
1.
a connoisseur of wines.
07:12
@Feeds Why is Feeds frequently in the Java Sucks room?
@Mikhail Aka: "A person of intelligence and taste"
@Mikhail Because so many sources (albeit, sometimes unwittingly) point to how much Java sucks.
07:42
Hello all you wonderful people :)
hey hey
goooood morning. (while it's still good)
note to self: more fun, less whining
@ArneMertz Note to whining: More fun, less self(ishness).
@JerryCoffin in the end, anything we do is at least indirectly selfish - but that's a philosophical problem on its own I guess.
07:58
@ArneMertz A deep philosophical discussion of that very question.
Xeo
Xeo
Mornin

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