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21:00
omg why did i not get a proper set of speakers sooner!!!
user3010322
@DeadMG Justifiably so, I'd say.
user3010322
@thecoshman Is the sound wonderful? :D
@ThePhD I agree.
even the Committee didn't know why template specs are so restricted.
@ThePhD it's glorious!
user3010322
@thecoshman What speakers did you get?
21:08
they already voted to relax the restrictions in C++14 I believe
user3010322
Thank god.
it's like I have spent my life listening with crusty shit packed into my ears
@ThePhD Generic(ish) Logitech ones... box is behind me, but I dunny want to disturb the cat from being friendly.
my previous setup was crappy speakers built into my generic brandless monitor
@ThePhD Logitech Z130
user3010322
@thecoshman Oh god, those sound SO bad.
user3010322
I'm glad you got some regular speakers.
@ThePhD ignorance is bliss
21:12
@DeadMG Not that I know of.
Don't even recall a single paper.
user3010322
@thecoshman Indeed, But now that your eyes are opened...
@Rapptz See TOTAL RETARDATION IN C++
user3010322
ARE YOU PUMPIN' DA BASS?
@ThePhD indeed, I can see such better sound now
@DeadMG I don't think someone's raged rant is enough to make a magical proposal and then that magical proposal get accepted.
user3010322
21:13
@Rapptz It could have just been voted in directly.
no, it's one of the responses to that rant.
@ThePhD no, but I am haring things in youtube show little intros
which stated that it was brought up in Committee.
and that nobody could give a reason why it was that way.
guy with the incomprehensible 'how do i compiled C in fortran?' question is now at -9
and responding to comments in a way that makes it sound like he thinks he knows what he's talking about
it looks like he just wants to link to fortran
or more likely link to C
either way the question is completely incomprehensible
21:19
poor confused cat, too cold to not sit on my belly, too proud to not sit on her own chair.
user3010322
Question.
user3010322
For an API, wch would you prefer?
@ThePhD good.
user3010322
void SetTheType( TheType* ); // passing null will clear `TheType` internally
--- or ----
void SetTheType( TheType& );
void ClearTheType();
the latter.
21:23
ugh getter and setter
@ThePhD I try to avoid making nullptr an option
It is by far superior, as I know can make a very safe assumption about what 'ClearTheType' will do
well, really just a setter for some reason.
why not just make a public member variable and be done with it.
aye that's a very very good point
also
user3010322
21:24
It's nto really a getter/setter, there's a long method attached to it. I was just wondering the preference.
both options are bad, I'm going to venture.
depending on the semantics of what exactly having a TheType implies.
my personal preference is to follow the CQRS pattern, with highly focused commands and queries
@DeadMG just because a function is of the form 'set*' does not mean it can be mapped to just one variable.
true.
no but anecdotally it tends to be true a majority of the time
and at least to me has a bad code smell
user3010322
21:27
Well, the method looks a little like this
you also have the ever pressant 'what if now I am just setting/getting an variable, but latter want to do more than just set/get, not the user will see it directly'
I agree.
user3010322
I removed the checking for null bits, but
user3010322
the idea was that null just goes straight to the internal API as null,
21:28
ok, that is... very bad.
user3010322
and anything non-null will bepassed to the API as non-null, all through the same method (SetRenderTarget).
user3010322
The other option is to have SetRenderTarget that takes a reference and always sets it to a valid value.
@ThePhD ah, well it depends how much you want to hind the underlying API. If a user your API will be familiar with the underlying API, and how that accepts null for the same functionality, you probably should too.
user3010322
With a ClearRenderTarget as well, which always sets the internal API to null.
well, here's what I'm really saying.
21:29
side note... if you're going to pass around COM pointers... PLEASE use a smart pointer class
user3010322
I am using smart pointers.
having <1 RenderTarget does not make any sense whatsoever.
there are three available as of VS2013
user3010322
Just, uh. Type-erased ones.
so why would you ever provide for it being null.
user3010322
21:30
@DeadMG I know: I'm keeping a list for all 8 allowed render targets.
ok
so what happens if I call SetRenderTarget(9, nullptr)?
user3010322
Out of Bounds on the internal std::array
which is undefined behaviour.
user3010322
(In debug mode)
fail early... fail often
user3010322
21:31
In release it's UB
well
check yourself... and let PGO make the exception the unoptimized path
and wat with the rendertargetviews thing
that doesn't make sense.
if irendertargets is a std::array<ID3D11RenderTargetView*, 8>` then data() will already be an ID3D11RenderTargetView** and there's no need to cast; else, you've just committed horrible undefined behaviour.
user3010322
irendertargets is a void* array
why would you do that
user3010322
21:36
It's for not making the user include D3D11.h or anything other dependencies.
oh yeah riight
then use a fully abstract interface?
user3010322
The code hides all dependencies in its TU, and uses casts and accessor functions to get the right type.
@Mgetz What I said.
user3010322
@Mgetz The D3D interface is already abstract, but includes too much baggage: the next minimal step is basic type erasure.
21:37
@ThePhD there is no need to even expose a private member to the user
well
all the render target slots are the same, right?
just use a factory function that constructs a private implementation class and returns a shared_ptr
if I bind a render target to 0, 1, 2, doesn't matter (assuming there's nothing in that slot to begin with)
argh, too much crappy talk
user3010322
@Mgetz The private member has to be stored somewhere. I want to avoid storing it dynamically by using PIMPL and new or a special allocator, so instead I just used type erasure.
21:39
so the way I see it
you could avoid all of this by having, say, a public std::set<RenderTarget2D*>, then lazily bind the render targets on draw.
user3010322
I don't know... what you mean?
what's wrong with make_shared?
well
you don't need the render targets bound to the device until you actually render something.
so why not just take a set of render targets on Draw call, or bind them on Draw call?
that would save you all of this hassle.
user3010322
@Mgetz Nothing's wrong with PIMPL or make_shared: it is my personal design preference to avoid the PIMPL or the new or the indirection that comes with a shared ptr.
as you will, it would seem to me that is causing worse code smells. Personally I avoid type erasure whenever possible if only for safety reasons.
user3010322
21:43
@DeadMG I... I'm not sure I see the reason? The only reason I'm doing this is so that a user can bind whatever render target they want to the API. When they call draw -- if they call draw -- they just need to make sure they have render targets bound to the places they want it. At the moment, shaders have to specifically name which RT they output to (0, 1, 2), so the indices have to be specific to what the user asks for.
so just replace set with vector, problem solved.
all I'm saying is that what you really have here is that when you draw something, you need to know the render targets. Most people call things functions need to do their jobs a "function argument". And you're going a hell of a long way out of your way to obfuscate this function argument into a non-function-argument.
user1804599
That reminds me of what a guy once said.
user1804599
He said it’s better to pass arguments by globals instead of normal arguments, because then you could at one point add another global “without breaking existing code.” :)
@rightfold I'm fighting that pattern at work right now... fortunately I'm having luck on it
it completely destroys any concept of data flow
user1804599
And it breaks existing code when you add a new global!
user3010322
21:48
@DeadMG If you had to pass the render target -- or half the other things a person needed do draw with D3D -- all at once, function calls would be 20 arguments long
Ugh. This thing is made with Swing.
user3010322
You'd need a render target view, depth stencil view, vertex buffer, index buffer, primitive toplogy, vertex offset, index offset, base vertex...
@ThePhD that's why there are POD structs
user3010322
That's way too much. It's better to have a minimal-switch state machine.
or better yet focused commands
21:49
@ThePhD No. You already put the render target view and depth stencil view into one object. And most of your other suggestions are really just one thing- a mesh.
Why is Swing so slow
you can compose your arguments into fewer objects just fine if you want.
@Rapptz because it's completely blocking and single threaded?
user1804599
@Rapptz Because the JVM is still warming up!
Horrible.
21:54
I'm half convinced that WPF and all the other Reactive UI frameworks are a reaction to just how bad swing is
user1804599
MVC.
user1804599
Observers ftw.
user3010322
@DeadMG That's not the point: if I have to ask the user for them to pass in everything that they needed -- samplers, shaders, render targets, depth stencils, and all mesh-like attributes -- all in one call, there's no way in hell I'd be able to keep the underlying graphics state machine from having to change everything that was passed in on the GPU.
All UIs are single-threaded
user1804599
Wrong.
21:58
UI is an mostly idle event loop what on earth would concurrency give you
@CatPlusPlus aye... but there are ways to push off most of the non-essential stuff to other threads
grabs popcorn
@CatPlusPlus well, the human facing part is yes.
user3010322
Performance would tank to below 1 FPS as I strangled the system, demanding it change every single thing (or every thing asked for) when really a lot of these continually passed-in components are things you want to set once, and then run a million commands against the one state that you need.
@Mgetz Yeah, so? Saying Swing is slow because it's single-threaded is stupid
21:59
@ThePhD take a look at the quake source code... Carmack did exactly that
user1804599
Mouse movement is not controlled by the same thread as the one that responds to mouse movements.
Mouse movement is not controlled by your application
@CatPlusPlus no swing is stupid because it's blocking
Blocking what
it blocks on the UI thread
21:59
What blocks on UI thread
instead of doing anything non-rendering related on a separate thread program logic occurs on the UI thread
If you're terrible and write it this way, sure
user3010322
@Mgetz Carmack didn't reset the sampler state, reset the rasterizer, or completely rewrite all related state in a single function call to just draw some primitives.
I saw that coming
22:00
point taken
You can do that just as easily with any other UI framework
user3010322
He set the state, then he drew a bunch of primitives, then he set the state again.
@ThePhD no, he did focused commands, e.g. set state, render primative etc
I don't think I've seen an UI framework that wouldn't run UI event handlers in UI thread
Because that's dumb
user3010322
... Which is exactly what I'm doing and wdnwajdwadkaw
user3010322
22:01
:frogout:
ok... didn't look that way to me
@CatPlusPlus WPF
Microsoft runs all handlers asyncronously
also the WinRT apis are all non-blocking
Only if you make them async, which is syntax sugar for doing what you'd do in any other framework
And the handler itself runs on UI thread anyway, because that's the only way to make UI updates safe without locking everything down
not disagreeing with that
I'm talking about ISV code though
not framework code
user3010322
ArgumentOutOfRange
ArgumentOutofRange
user3010322
22:05
Which spelling?
1st for sure
Although I'd go for argument_out_of_range
(if it's C++)
user3010322
It is C++
C++ doesn't like camels
22:06
Call it 'woof'
user3010322
I'm trying to keep engine code out of the snake_case space.
if I write an event handler for WPF, then my event handler is called on a secondary thread. Yes the original input handler happened on the UI thread, but in theory unlike winforms I don't need to worry about making sure everything I do is on the UI thread.
If it's an exception
it already exists
std::out_of_bounds
or whatever it is
user3010322
It derives from std::out_of_bounds.
user3010322
22:08
All engine-based exceptions will include their own stack trace and other information.
@ThePhD Why? That's kind of standard notation in C++, isn't it?
honestly this actually should probably be ::std::invalid_argument
@ThePhD Perhaps you want to use boost::exception then
@AndyProwl He's just weird in everything he does.
22:08
as std::out_of_bounds is really intended for iterators
no it isn't
im too excited to code. I made progress in my development on a game. However, I'm to damn excited that I can't even think.
> Defines a type of object to be thrown as exception. It reports errors that are consequence of attempt to access elements out of defined range.
(also, it's std::out_of_range apparently lol)
user3010322
To be std::compatible, if the std:: already defines an exception that's like one in the engine, it will derive from that one in the std::{special exception}. If not, it'll just derive from std::exception.
@Mgetz Nope
user3010322
22:09
@AndyProwl Probably, but I've not used boost just quite yet.
@CatPlusPlus nope what?
I wonder if anyone delt this problem before.
Print out thread ID in event handler and UI class ctor and you'll see
@ThePhD Then I'd suggest you take a look at it. It is especially designed for transporting info
And then break and look at which one that is
22:11
@cyberspace009 Getting around to coding is the quickest way to substitute excitement with crushing despair.
5
user3010322
@AndyProwl I know, I've seen people use it and I saw @thecoshman using boost::exception along with @kbok and @BartekBaneschwiz, I just haven't used it myself just yet.
All right. Just saying it's worth taking the time :)
Or even easier, add Thread.Sleep(5000) to the event handler and try to do anything with the UI
user1804599
Can sleepsort be considered pure?
(btw async modifier itself is also not enough, you need to have awaitable thing to perform the task itself)
22:13
@ThePhD (btw I don't think it's spelled "Baneschwiz")
Banana Sandwich.
user3010322
@AndyProwl (Probably not. I'm used to just saying @Bartek, though. :D)
@CatPlusPlus I'm going to cede you this one because WPF is a charlie foxtrot of "We were going for this but failed".
Every UI framework does that
It makes no sense to fire handlers on non-UI thread
You always need to remember to offload to worker thread to not block UI
22:17
which developers never remember to do
user3010322
I wonder
user3010322
... Ah, nevermind.
22:40
0
Q: PHP for loop vs C for loop

NikolayIt is known that to do following in PHP is bad idea (because count ($array) will be called on every iteration which can seriously slow down script execution): <?php for ( $i = 0; $i < count ($array); ++$i ) { // Code here; } Instead one should calculate condition outside of the loop: <?php...

That's been answered before hasn't it
These are all common optimisations and you should not even think about them
Compiler-done optimisations that is
Because who the fuck wants to write microopts
hmm good point
@CatPlusPlus raises hand Mysticial
"The compiler can't do the optimization for you", what? The function call it already removed at O1 or higher in GCC. This is an extremely common optimisation as long as you don't change the size of the container inside the loop. — Rapptz 6 secs ago
(this one was easy Cat, next question)
22:54
@Rapptz they have apparently never heard of inlining
@ScarletAmaranth I'm not at all sure @Mysticial really wants to--it's just that for the kinds of things he's doing, most compilers produce poor enough code that if he didn't, it'd waste a lot of time.
@JerryCoffin you're very good at taking statements without a pinch of salt :)
@ScarletAmaranth I'm good at twisting statements any way I see fit to find (what seems to me like) humor in them. :-)
@JerryCoffin yep, truly admirable! I usually giggle at your (ab/mis)use of explication
user3010322
Teehee~ ♬♭♪
23:21
yeah that. sorry about the delay. Don't you think it ruins the consistency (Teehee~ ♬♭♪) of C++ language design?
:)
You have a friend?
Congratulations! (Or should I say Kondolences)
Also, only 12 days, Impressive
ho ho ho ...
@sehe lol
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Or you buy a really large backpack, and get running with a fairly beefy laptop again with an onboard GPU.
Speaking of friends, I have been roped into diving tomorrow by one of them again ...
user3010322
The costs of these get pretty pricey, but if you avoid SSD and keep to non two-plated HDDs, you can afford it pretty nice (500 to 600 GB)
user3010322
23:27
@Telkitty Do you even like diving?
nope
@Mysticial Good thinking. I suppose the major breakthrough is you kept this "secret" for a while. And second, you found a partner in crime instead of meddling on on just your own . I suppose, it's probably a crying shame offline verification can't work, or can it?
@ScottW It was a reply :)
12.1 Trillion digits of uniform random. It's really impressive. I like it a lot
user1804599
Hey sehe.
user1804599
Why so late pas.
@ScottW Because they suppressed caller ID?
@rightfold Well observed. I crashed on the couch. Sometimes that happens when I mistakenly orient towards a television instead of a PC. I slept like a baby.
23:30
@sehe We keep it "secret" in case the computation fails.
Jay is close to nay on a keyboard
@Mysticial Yeah. I can see that.
Not bad actually. ~4 months means really solid improvements to the algorithms
user1804599
@sehe You are a baby.
@Mysticial Did you check the previous digits or reuse them?
@sehe He said he checked them.
@sehe And we have failed before. There were a few runs that failed several weeks in.
Failing meaning, verification failing?
23:32
@Mysticial what were the causes?
Hardware becoming so unstable that it wasn't worth it to continue.
how could you tell?
Or a hard drive failure that resulted in permanent data loss without backup.
@ScarletAmaranth He's usually the one that makes the call.
But when the hardware break down several times a week, it's not gonna work.
That sata cabling alone :) Weird looking
Also, his office chair wheels so close to the make-shift "storage board" seems... eeee
that stinks, would be nice to do it massively parallel with redundancy
23:37
I see, mm, given the ability to compute nth decimal digit of pi in isolation, wouldn't it be beneficial for you kids to offload stuff to GPU? or does this have the same problem you mentioned the last time I asked - supersizing the computation would result in insufficient bandwidth?
@ScarletAmaranth Then it becomes a polynomial time algorithm.
It takes O(N log(N)^2) to independently compute a single binary digit at offset N. If you want all the digits, you multiply that by N.
@Mysticial ah, it's that "difficult" to compute nth digit? alrighty, thanks
yeah, naturally
user1804599
O(1) is best O.
right, or the perl talk about computing and coming up with result "in the past", O(-1) :)
O(0) // program crashed on entry
user1804599
23:46
lol
user1804599
-1 is constant, so O(-1) = O(1).
alright, "conceptually"
although, well, it's a negative constant, so, technically...
user1804599
The eternal p̶̧̛̭̞͎͇̼̳̱̝̘̰à̴̡̞̜͔̞̙̮̝͖͚̜͕̲̬͎̥͙͠ͅi̷̶̢͇̝̜̦͡n̴̡͕̰̥̼̘̟͖͈̥̘͚̘̺̫̻̻̦͢ͅ of computer science.
@Mysticial you're not on twitter, right? (can't give a shout out?)
user1804599
> These diagrams can be categorized hierarchically as shown in the following class diagram:
user1804599
23:50
So meta. (Not to be confused with SO meta.)
@rightfold I suppose your s̹̯͔͎ͅt̴̯̻͓̜̱̰̰a̘̗̠̙̩͔̲r̡̞͍̫̩b̳a̭͎̬̫̣͞i̶͎ṭ̢̫̞ failed
user1804599
It was no starbait.
good to know
user1804599
I actually expected it to get binned.
TIL bin-bait
user1804599
23:53
Also MVC is awesome.
Dangerously close to blasphemy
user1804599
> Features
> Use of Standard C++ Library, including strings, containers, and iterators.
user1804599
First library ever to list this as a feature, instead of listing the opposite as a “feature.”
Bwahaha xD

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