Ok, I think I got everything set up as I want. No more OCD-removing builds that didn't have one minor setting as desired in order to keep build number starting from 1.
on Windows not so much, although I have no idea how to make it automated to build them and it would be a giant waste to build LLVM and Clang every time to build Wide.
@R.MartinhoFernandes like, the main thing about it is that you willfully accept you are terrible at driving and then learn a bit on how cars work and stuff and eventually get a better controller and ride better.
@BartekBanachewicz Well, I haven't read the book - just watched a short talk from the author when deciding whether I should read the book. He argued that javascript was supposed to be scheme, but c derivatives were so popular it wouldn't get passed management. So the language design made it look like c so they'd stop bugging him.
Dunno about premake, but for my projects I'm going to put those things as parameters in my bootstrap script. Like bootstrap.py --boost-include=/path/to/boost.
Weird instructions on e-Fag: 'Note: Press the LED light, and inhale at the same time, then you will feel a huge puff around you, which gives you an immersive feeling'.
@DeadMG That llvm-config invocation is completely broken in the Makefile, also predefs and all might be the result of premake fucking up the GCC options
there is some books/web sites who show and do some comparaisons between different ways to code ?
I know there is a book called "effective STL" but I know that one of the method presented inside show how to read a file from disk, but some guy has a blog where he show this is a very bad way to read a file.
Also one of my teacher told me that linux kernel is well written too improve speed, I would like to know if there is a book/web site who present some tricks used by people who code in the kernel.
this whole, "Commit and sync every time you want to attempt a change, and then you can't even see the system you're working on" thing makes it difficult to figure out why it doesn't work.