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02:00
no.
LOL! Sorry, but that sounds too much like 'Where's my cow?'
@MartinJames Dude, where's my car?
I have never used a UI before.
UIs are trees.
We noticed that.
02:03
LOL, they have started selling the apartments opposite my property (which I have rented out) off the plan, even though the existing buildings have not been demolished ... domain.com.au/Property/For-Sale/Apartment-Unit-Flat/NSW/…
Actually, thinking about it, you GUI/event design is quite similar to the 'Where's my cow' game:)
not right opposite, about 50 metres away opposite the main road
Game?
Also,
I seem to be uncertain where the line for idiot proofing is.
better get back to work ...
@User17 You can get permabanned for using four-letter words like that, especially the 'w' word.
I need coffee, and food. Cheese buttie coming up.
02:08
alright
I realize this is probably completely confusing to you
this is one of the things where I never actually got around to doing it myself, although I know that this basic principle is how all UI frameworks work.
firstly, you can see that by treating two UIElements (I didn't show a Text but it doesn't take a genius), I can keep all the child elements in a vector, treat them uniformly, and get rid of all that repetition.
and secondly, I can factor out a "parent" element whose job is to hold child elements, then derive all screens from that, saving me a large amount of effort.
now the ComputerCountScreen class itself is very simple- it just creates a few child elements and also clears the screen before drawing them and that's it.
Today's C laugh: 'Ok, so I am to create a program that has 535 threads and has a circular linked list of 137,718'. It got closed:)
lol
you can also see that, rather than defining the position of the Button every time, I define a function that relates the Button to the location of its parent element.
now the system can always determine where the Button should go without me having to handle it.
so when Layout() is called, the location is updated automatically by calling the function I passed in.
Well, you got one thing right.
It is completely confusing :D
ok
let's start from the very beginning.
Why so much ->?
02:15
Most GUI systems work as puppy describes.
@Pawnguy7 GUIs are trees. Trees means pointers.
being able to place all the children elements in the one Children vector means that I can act on them all without having to know what they are, what they do, or anything about them, really.
I can't?
well, you can't, because you don't have a vector of anything, you just have a Button.
Screen..Form..panels..buttons.. inheritance tree.
and every time you want to do something with that Button, you have to handle it explicitly.
02:17
std::vector<Input *>?
..and it will drive you insane.
@Pawnguy7 Not precisely. A UIElement is more than just something that can be interacted with- it is also laid out.
and drawn.
I have no idea what calculations the layout entails.
well, it's pretty simple.
each UIElement decides it's location, relative to the parent element.
I am skeptical. This is probably why I am bad at web things.
02:19
so
when I am writing this
nextbutton->location = [](Rectangle r) { return Rectangle { r.right - 20, r.bottom - 20, r.right, r.bottom }; };
what I am saying is, "Place me at the bottom right of my parent element, in a 20 pixel by 20 pixel box.".
so when my parent element (e.g., the window) resizes, the system can automatically move the button to the correct location.
How do you deal with the bounding boxes of same-level elements?
well, you have two choices.
either you can make a quadtree and throw some kind of exception if they overlap.
or you can just assume that it never happens.
arguably, if you have two elements of the same level that overlap then your program is buggy.
I personally would write the quadtree because that's just a useful thing to have and be able to do and this is hardly the only useful application of a quadtree, but it's your choice.
> However, a recent report suggests that interns at a Chinese Foxconn plant claim that a portion of first available PlayStation 4 consoles were purposefully sabotaged during the manufacturing process. Source
Is there a time when not all your design is terrible? :\
no.
well, maybe.
02:24
Which is it?
but the crux of the issue is this: you're designing UI code, but you don't seem to have any idea or experience of what other UI frameworks are like, what they do, what their drawbacks are... that kind of thing.
@Pawnguy7 Yes - just before you start writing code. It's all downhill after that:)
The time when youve redesigned it like 5 times ;)
well
I am coming to believe that there are two kinds of code.
there's the kind where I've spent way too much time polishing it
and the kind where I hacked something together that worked quickly and I'll come back to it later and it sucks.
if a middle ground exists I rarely, if ever, see it.
but it's to be expected that it takes several iterations, or more if you have no existing experience or knowledge of that domain, to get something good.
@DeadMG Heh - unfortunately for me, there's a third class - someone else's code that you have to maintain/enhance.
02:26
true, I was pretty much exclusively describing my own code.
right now, I'd say that only the smallest component of Wide- the lexer- is in a state where I'm actually kinda somewhat happy with it.
@DeadMG Yeah - I get that:)
the parser is OK but could use work.
some of the analyzer is OK, but a lot of it could use work.
All these bad things I have made are to be expected.
If I fix them after finding them?
02:27
and some stuff I hacked on just today is a fucking embarrassment but it works.
@Pawnguy7 Well, clearly, you can only improve by learning from your mistakes.
all I'm saying is there's a vast amount to learn.
how much formal CS education did you have? you probably already told me, but I forgot.
None.
ah.
well, let me give you a super pro tip.
there are some classes of problem in CS that come up over, and over, and over again.
based on a very few principles.
TBH, I'm pretty fucked up with my keypad project. The unicode shit does not work, the flowmeter driver explodes at random after days of testing and the CAN protocol handler is dubious at best. The boot loader works well, everything else has issues:(
functions, sets, trees.
Data structures, yes.
02:31
no.
a tree is not a data structure, at least, it can hold data but that's immaterial.
I thought it holds data and nodes to nodes.
In each node.
that's just the most simplistic, most obvious representation.
I think he means, this kind of tree
02:33
but quicksort is also a tree.
most recursive functions are.
the most basic tenet of a problem where a tree is appropriate is definitely subdivision.
for the UI framework, I said, "I lay out an element X, and then each child element Y is laid out relative to X"- so this is clearly recursion.
I can't see the forest for the trees.
anyway I've totally wandered off the point.
the point is that if you can describe things in a simple way in terms of the most simple things, like functions, then you can create simple clean interfaces based on those descriptions.
@ScottW ho
my lexer is a function that takes a range of characters and returns a range of tokens.
and it's no surprise that that's the part of my codebase that I'm happiest with.
problem decomposition is one of the most essential tricks of the trade.
I'm talking to myself now.
shush you
@ScottW not yet
Been busy until three hours ago.
Been lamenting over my code since.
02:38
My code sucks.
I think I unzipped it or something.
@DeadMG anyway, I think part of my problem is
I hear "bad code"
And... I never fix it.
I don't know how to not do that.
what I would say is.
consider focusing on something smaller than a whole game
Refactoring it probably is not as bad as I think it is.
and refine it until you're happy with it.
Smaller than a whole game?
A half game? A quarter?
02:41
nah
think of just one component of a game.
like, say, some UI controls.
A reusable component.
bingo.
Not a bad idea, but.
I don't really have any interest in doing things I don't understand.
right.
And trying to do things I am not interesting in is doomed before it starts.
Isn't it?
02:43
the problem with that is that if you never do anything you don't understand, you will never understand it.
I didn't know shit about compilers until I worked on Wide.
and I didn't know shit about graphics or UIs or anything before I tried to make my own engine.
I mean, to some extent, it's got to be a question of perspective.
And me with WinAPI.
you want to gain understanding.
Didn't you want to make Wide, though?
well, technically, yes.
but the reality is, I never expected to succeed.
hell, I never expected to produce a single executable program out of my compiler.
but
I started from nothing and I refined it and I refined it and today, it works better than I ever hoped for back when I started.
I mean, I bitch about hacks I used, but holy shit, in comparison to what I used to compile "Hello, World" for the first time, it's my fondest dream.
@DeadMG I'm curious, how much effort did you exert to overcome LLVM's learning curve?
02:47
LLVM was never the problem.
I found it quite quick and intuitive, personally, the simpler parts anyway.
when you get into more advanced uses it could certainly use work.
Werent you saying yesterday that their docs and api were shit though?
yeah, and they are.
but the most basic parts of LLVM are pretty good.
One could hope the more advanced parts will get better over tie?
the guys implementing LLVM don't know what the fuck they're doing, but they certainly nailed their basic understanding of the problem.
it's really Clang that was a problem for me.
@Borgleader I've read clang's and a good reference is almost non-existent, except for that Doxygen-generated one (which doesn't give you much of an overview of its structure).
02:49
the Clang guys
they know how to read the Standard, they don't know much else.
I think they have a hard time generalizing.
they can't separate their concerns correctly.
can't break the problem of "Preprocess a C++ program" into it's component parts.
I constantly find Is* and Has*, like 10s of them in a single class.
trust me, that's one of their best attributes.
@MarkGarcia What's the problem with them?
02:51
for every feature I want to make in Wide, if it involves dealing with Clang, I multiply the cost by about a factor of ten.
@Jefffrey Only when they're too many, I'm pretty sure those need to be separated.
at least.
still
I went through five or six lexer iterations before I even started working on a parser.
lol finally solved this language issue in the web query
and I went through about the same number of parser iterations before I even started on a semantic analyzer.
and I certainly had no idea what the fuck to do.
I well remember sitting staring at the computer screen having no idea of what to type next.
Also they're not categorizing using types, though I believe they also have a good reason for packing all those Is*...
02:53
analysis is a bitch because there are, as far as I can tell, basically no useful resources about it, and it's also quite big and complex.
@DeadMG Hard to generalize, I'm sure.
maybe.
you could certainly pull out Wide's code generator and use that for a completely different language if you want.
pretty much the only thing Wide-specific in there is some ABI handling.
I wonder why I don't fix my code...
but then, it's a pretty thin wrapper on LLVM.
@Pawnguy7 Because you don't understand it.
@Pawnguy7 Might also because you're always eager to start a new feature. Happens on me on some occasions.
02:56
I mean, look
let me ask you something
you're trying to make a game, right, a Snake game?
@DeadMG Right, I forgot that part.
Yes.
well, what is a game?
Colored pixels and sounds? :D
Good job Travis devs
02:58
lol.
nah
that's the output that the user sees.
hello everyone
new here
that's the product.
Hrm...
Code?
im alex, studying in upenn
right, OK.
quite clearly, a game is progammed.
pretty undeniable.
so what is the most basic element of that program?

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