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02:00
@Pawnguy7 You've got to be able to handle implementing A* from the pseudocode on Wikipedia without my help.
I have a problematic alternative: work or sleep or whiskey ;0
@CoffeeMaker that's a big nose
:-(
there
@CoffeeMaker that's a straight nose
@DeadMG well, it built
02:01
lol
That is about all that can be said.
It moved towards the food... and through walls.
Oh, and it was slow.
show me ur codes.
@Pawnguy7 you've mastered the syntax - congrats ;p
I downvoted you and then I also binned you.
@BartoszKP lol
02:02
:DD
I have like 800 lines of commented out attempts in this file :\
well, show me the stuff that isn't commented out
Technically that is commented out, but that was the A* one.
I'm still working on Lua wrapper lol
It was kind of cool though.
They got faster when they were near the food.
02:03
that is a horrible hash dude
your hash is broken
your heuristic is broken.
@Pawnguy7 lol, you use a cvs yet you comment out huge blocks of code - what for?
that's probably the worst hash function I've ever seen
@Rapptz It wasn't meant to be good
It was meant to compile.
That in itself took an hour :\
yeah but.. dude..
sf::Vector2i(10, 11); sf::Vector2i(11, 10); has a collision
02:05
Yes.
your O(N) search in reconstruct_path is WTF, unordered_map has O(1) search you know.
@Rapptz (1000, 1) and (1, 1000) collide, that seems a bit worse
@Rapptz Strictly, it will just slow things down (potentially a lot) unless == is broken as well.
but the real problem is that his heuristic is totally broken.
not sure about the rest.
Broken?
oh, wait a minute, I misread it.
that's a simple straight-line distance, isn't it?
02:07
@BartoszKP My last commit was a while ago.
@DeadMG he's comparing values not keys (I don't know why)
@DeadMG I think. Something like that was recommended in that tutorial.
@DeadMG with obsolete abs but yes
@Pawnguy7 Yeah. That's fine enough for a first go.
@BartoszKP why obsolete?
02:08
tuning the heuristic is mostly only useful for optimizing phases- for the first phase you just want to make sure that it's consistent/admissible.
Yes. It is basically like the hash function :D
@BartoszKP what's the non-obsolete one?
I don't know how to do either, really.
@Pawnguy7 because you take a square of it later so it will be positive anyway
Maybe I can be like fred, and add a bunch of shifts everywhere.
@BartoszKP oh... right
02:08
@Jefffrey one that is used when it's really needed ; p
How did I ever start doing that.
Oh wait, I used to use Manhattan distance.
@Pawnguy7 maybe you had manhattan distance earlier
I guess I am copy/paste thinking at this point.
@BartoszKP I thought you were saying that std::abs was obsolete.
@Jefffrey in this code, yes
02:10
@BartoszKP Not its use, the function itself.
@Pawnguy7 Laurent should really provide std::hash<..> for his types
Laurent?
@Rapptz I don't know. Is it typical for libraries?
@Borgleader made SFML
yes
@Jefffrey I meant the use, sorry for the confusion : D
02:10
@Borgleader SFML's author
Laurent does not like me :D
@Rapptz have a better hash in mind?
I can probably send him a pull request, see if he'll accept it.
How many types do you have in mind?
alright
02:12
Summation of std::hashed components seems okay.
well here's half your problem.
just sf::Vector2<T> and sf::Vector3<T>
your open and closed sets are just vectors.
that's not how they're supposed to work.
they're the only comparable types in his library I think
oh, time too.
Nothing else?
02:13
the closed set can be an unordered_set, because all you care about is whether or not the current node is in it.
not that I know of
Then again, I don't know what else you would store in a map.
the open set needs to be a std::set or something like that, because you're performing an ugly n log n sort every single iteration.
no wonder your performance is abominable.
Though that probably isn't a valid reason.
@Rapptz sf::String
02:14
oh right.
he has his own string class.
Every library seem to have their own string class.
@DeadMG I don't know what it is about this psuedocode, but it is not intuitive to me
Then again, never seen pseudocode with maps either.
I was thinking of making one, but not std::string-clone, just a constexpr string
also wat with the indentation.
@DeadMG looks like I might have a tab problem
02:17
float dist_between(sf::Vector2i first, sf::Vector2i second)
{
return 1;
}

:D?
What else would the distance be?
user3010322
...
user3010322
What
@Pawnguy7 you are probably using both spaces and tabs
user3010322
o.0
user3010322
02:18
@Pawnguy7 second - first, maybe.
@Jefffrey Not sure, I C&Ped the code form wikipedia
lol..
@ThePhD it is always one unit away, though
@Pawnguy7 Oh no!
@Pawnguy7 that's why you should always use just spaces and never have to worry about such stupid surprises ;0
02:19
@Pawnguy7 Add an assertion to check that it's really the case.
user3010322
@Rapptz What's your Lua wrapper look like so far?
user3010322
Is it going to be hard to port like Lia? ._.
@DeadMG if you can only move in four orthogonal directions, what else can you get?
@ThePhD I doubt it.
@Pawnguy7 Bugs.
02:20
The only C++11 stuff I'm using is auto, type_traits, variadic templates and.. move semantics.
@DeadMG is the function called somewhere else than between neighbors?
@Pawnguy7 BUGS
user3010322
@Rapptz It's the "type_traits" bit I'm worried about. >_>
never ever ever assume that bugs don't happen and produce results you can't understand.
@Pawnguy7 if two orthogonal vectors with common start point are equal length, then the distance between their ends is sqrt(2)
02:21
@ThePhD They're the ones in std::..
seriously, nothing crazy!
user3010322
@Rapptz IS IT REALLY PART OF THE STD, THOUGH?!
Oh I'm going to use tuple and indices too
Does VS support that?
What is the concept behind std::set?
user3010322
Uh.
My snake code is 1.414 times worse than it should be.
3
user3010322
02:22
Yeah.
it does if you're using a version with variadics.
@Rapptz 2010+ I think.
std::tuple, that is.
user3010322
@Rapptz Can always just implement it as a native type list, though:
then it should compile fine in MSVC unless it sucks :v
@Pawnguy7 It's a set, where lookup/erasure are based on a BST.
user3010322
02:22
template <typename... Tn>
struct type_list : indices<sizeof...( Tn )> {};
@DeadMG I don't know what a set is :\ is it... a list/vector with no duplicates?
user3010322
^ Wish this is how tuples were packed in the first place, jesus. Implicit indices would be amazing, especially for std::get<N> ._.
@Pawnguy7 Er, give or take.
TIL std::pair doesn't have std::hash defined for it
either a set has an element, or it doesn't.
02:24
@Pawnguy7 Like an std::map with the key as the value.
user3010322
@Rapptz It'd have to take care to do the combining. Sounds like a minefield t me.
Or more like the key is the value.
even boost does it
Why have a key and value if they are the same?
02:25
@Pawnguy7 Sorry. See edit.
they meant if they're both the same
and SO is down...
SO offline - backups, probably.
@DeadMG here is where maths come in handy - basic set theory makes people understand what a set is ;P
@MarkGarcia why refer to them separately?
02:26
@BartoszKP No, that's just "This is a set.".
@Pawnguy7 You only store the key. The key is also the value. Some call the set as a "bag".
@DeadMG ..?
@MarkGarcia So it is like a vector, but you has the values so you can find them faster?
You just put things in there, some operations are for finding out if there's a specific value inside it, some operations for getting those values.
@Pawnguy7 Yep. Exactly.
What if the hashes of two are the same?
02:29
@Pawnguy7 The world ends.
@Pawnguy7 if x == y => hash(x) == hash(y) (so hash(x) != hash(y) ==> x != y), but hash(x) == hash(y) doesn't imply x == y (they are compared explicitly then to verify equality).
@Pawnguy7 operator== is used to distinguish them.
@Pawnguy7 That's for std::unordered_set. More or less the same behavior as unordered_map.
We are dealing with an issue in our primary data cluster, we are trying to return service ASAP.
I like how chat's alive.
Some penalty running on CTP.
02:33
I need to download VS2013
all those C++11 features calling to me
anyone plays chess?
@DeadMG do it!
Is set.insert the proper version of push_back?
@BartoszKP I did
@Pawnguy7 No, not really.
What is? :D
02:34
set.insert inserts into the set... it's not the same as pushing back into a vector.
use emplace
@Pawnguy7 do you have chess.com account?
I guess you could argue that insert is the same as push_back in that when it completes, the value is definitely held within the set.
also btw
holy shit, you really need lambdas.
Why do you have an emplace and not a push?
@DeadMG Where?
er, quite a few places.
give me a sec and I'll find them all.
02:35
hehh insert
fuck.
@Pawnguy7 emplace is for insert where emplace_back is for push_back.
googling for Lua help is going to be difficult now :(
thank god for google cache
@BartoszKP I think I had chesscube before they ruined it
If you want to play there was some no-account site though.
@MarkGarcia I don't follow
I don't get why Lua broke so many things in their API
02:39
What are your thoughts on Hungarian notation?
it's retarded
@Pawnguy7 std::vector::insert and std::vector::push_back. See that they both take an iterator. The difference is that emplace constructs the object in-place.
it sucks
@Domecraft I use it for naming widgets in my GUI
What's so bad about hungarian notation
02:43
@Pawnguy7 Here's my first-pass refactoring
And it's back...
@Domecraft what's good about it?
@MartinJames welcome to the club.
:)
oh I forgot to insert the start node into the open set, lol.
@DeadMG I think your lambda lost the wrapping
ah maybe it did.
oh well.
I'd just leave the wrapping out for now, personally.
02:46
@Pawnguy7 if you have time now - let's play
@DeadMG Don't we want the AI to consider it?
actually, I think the wrapping might fuck you.
Well, actually I use <x>_t to identify typedefs/using so, I might be using the hungarian notation myself
pretty hard.
now that I think about it.
02:47
Oh?
Not required, really.
@Jefffrey don't your members have m_?
@Jefffrey That's not hungarian.
In computer science, a consistent (or monotone) heuristic function is an estimated path cost to a goal for a search that approximates the actual path cost in an incremental way without taking any step back. Formally, for every node N and every successor P of N generated by any action a, the estimated cost of reaching the goal from N is no greater than the step cost of getting to P plus the estimated cost of reaching the goal from P. In other words: : h(N) \leq c(N,P) + h(P) and : h(G) = 0.\, where :* h is the consistent heuristic function :* N is any node in the graph :* P is any descenda...
that's a C/C++/POSIX convention
@Pawnguy7 not anymore. It's deprecated in favor of _.
@Jefffrey deprecated convention?
02:48
your straight-line heuristic covers the second condition just fine- the distance from goal to goal is zero.
but
the first one is broken by wrapping.
@Pawnguy7 yeah, I like to do that a lot
@Jefffrey I always liked _
@DeadMG how about this: if the food is more than half the level away, check if the other distance is shorter
If that makes sense.
@Rapptz Thanks god, then.
the last "big change" to my style was in november of last year when I switched from myFunction to my_function
02:49
Not counting for walls, of course.
just ditch the wrapping for now, I would say.
That might be a problem though.
@DeadMG sure
@Rapptz that's a very nice change
you can come back to it once you know the heuristic works (it's definitely consistent without the wrapping).
@Rapptz what do you use for classes?
02:51
It probably would have easier if I stuck with Lua 5.1 instead of Lua 5.2
@Jefffrey same thing
basically, A* only guarantees that the result is an optimal path if the heuristic is consistent.
can someone explain pointers in layman's terms
I really hate things like missing operators for algorithms.
@CoffeeMaker they point at things
All there is to it.
is there any difference between them and any other reference
What do you mean by any other reference?
02:56
like int x = 1
isn't x just a pointer that points to 1
lol no.
Let's say we have a pointer.
dude.
02:58
A pointer points to a memory location.
help vampires and the feeding thereof.
don't make me smack you
Oh.
In that case, I am quite positive google has information.
@DeadMG did you compile this?
intellisense didn't cry.
that doesn't necessary mean the compiler won't, of coures.
probably the std::set constructor that the compiler won't accept.
I seem to be comparing something without operator==
well thanks for at least attempting an explanation unlike others
brb google
02:59
@Pawnguy7 vector2i has one, right?
@DeadMG yes
... ok
When I got this earlier, it was...
then what the fuck is "someting"
could you be more vague?
Something to do with std::find on the unordered_map.

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