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02:07
@ThePhD Thats not a security hole - thats just a creative way to mess yourself up
user3010322
I guess. :D
@ThePhD 20 characters are not enough for you :D
user3010322
Of course not!
I once had a 16 character password, but I dropped it because not all systems accepted it.
user3010322
A decent password character limit would be like, 1K.
02:09
@ThePhD Oh, apparently I only half-read your comment :)
@ThePhD Only one K? That would be easy to guess.
user3010322
Hehe.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus sfc doing a full scan and verify failed to fix Wordpad. =[
user3010322
Anyone here have Windows 8? I could use a copy of write.exe and some of its dependencies.
@ThePhD Windows 8 is one of its dependencies. You could use that.
user3010322
=[
02:21
Why can I never find DVD burning software when I need it?
user3010322
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ImgBurn
@ThePhD Thanks. I'll remember that for about a week.
user3010322
Well, I'll be here to remind you~
@ThePhD But will you?
user3010322
Of course!
02:24
@ThePhD btw, how exactly did you find this out?
user3010322
@GlennTeitelbaum Uh. You know.
user3010322
Just messing around with my own accounts.
@ThePhD My password is exactly 21 characters.
@ThePhD And how does one undo this brilliant white hat attack?
Maybe 20, lemme recount
02:26
post it, we'll count it for you
okay
*******************
I guess that's 20.
user3010322
I count 19. :O
yep, 19.
`123456789a123456789b123456789c123456789d`
`*******************`
Old school ascii ruler, ftw
02:30
@Xeo 10 what?!
[redacted]
`GameplayScene::GameplayScene()
{
objectManager = ObjectManager(this);
}`

I keep getting that I need to explicitly initialize my member -- does anyone know of a way to do this? I thought I was doing it correctly but...
@VaughanHilts Welcome to the lounge, where we are not SO, but are friendly to people that don't say hello
user3010322
GameplayScene::GamplayScene() : objectManager(this) {
     // slightly dangerous if you actually do anything with `this`, because it might not be fully initalized.
}
user3010322
That's how you initialize data members for your constructors
I'm confused -- why? Isn't that a base call?
user3010322
02:36
For multiple, add commas.
user3010322
No, it's member-initialization syntax.
user3010322
Try it.
You're a life saver.
Coming from Java and C#, I keep getting murdered. >_<
Why haven't you read a book?
@Rapptz I did.. and that hasn't been covered yet.
It's all non-OO for the first halves.
02:37
What book are you reading?
Wouldn't that be - part of a book?
@GlennTeitelbaum It is indeed, but I've been half reading and half coding. Unfortunately, I can't bring it to myself to just sit down and read all the time.
I just grabbed one off the SO list
That one looked promising since it was updated for C++11
I should have guessed it was Lippman
@GlennTeitelbaum Is that a bad thing? ;)
No
C++ Primer 5th ed is a good book
however I'm pretty sure it goes over initialisation lists pretty early
02:42
Earlier editions did not seem good for new programmers
Well, it mostly makes sense so far.
I come from other languages, so maybe that helps?
user3010322
@melak47 So I tried to do DwmExtendClientArea on a cmd.exe window in Windows 8 -- it became a thick, opaque block.
user3010322
Gonna try Windows 7 though and see if my cmputer is still busted.
It's not that he's wrong or misleading, it's just he tends to confuse :) Partially because I think he introduces things out of sequence
@GlennTeitelbaum Do you have a better suggestion?
02:46
@GlennTeitelbaum He's been here before. Relax!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I'm being friendly
@GlennTeitelbaum Yay
@VaughanHilts Stroustrup or Josuttis or Meyers
neither updated for C++11
Meyers soon will be :D
02:47
Unless you're suggesting he reads a reference book (which all of them usually are by those authors) to learn a language
:V
Yeah, I specifically was looking for a C++11 one
A few folks suggested I try one of those, because of old out-dated practice.
@Rapptz Whats wrong with reference books? It's not like I pointed him at the standards. Most of the people I know who code, only read references or library implementations to learn a language
Ell
Ell
Let Lounge<c++> be your book <3
So long as puppy isn't around xD
user3010322
@Ell You can scribe all over me, honeybunches~
Ell
Ell
02:50
Sorry I'm all out :/ just scribed not 10 minutes ago
user3010322
Aww. =[
C++ in one post: classes, private, protected, public. Multiple inheritence works, but don't use it. Use new and delete, but don't really use smart pointers instead, initialize with {}, and use lambdas with std::for_each(). tuples are pairs, except for 2 or more, unordered_map is really a hash, use the STL. Copy and Assignment are the hash/equal of C++, it's the rule of 3, which can be avoided with the rule of 0
I was told don't use new and delete.
@GlennTeitelbaum Erm. Not really.
@GlennTeitelbaum Not even close.
02:55
@VaughanHilts Exactly.
Use smart pointers.
@GlennTeitelbaum Youre trolling right?
explodes Conflicting information all over the webs.
Ell
Ell
Man that fresh prince scene is killing me :'(
the non microsoft specific stuff is worth watching
02:57
@Borgleader More like stream of consciousness
You can't actually do it in one post :)
OOH OOH OOH new community is out
@LightnessRacesinOrbit huh?
@GlennTeitelbaum "Community" the show
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ok, that makes more sense than a village just sprouting
@GlennTeitelbaum it does
03:03
OK, stupid question time. How do you initialize a member in code that require a bit of setup? For example, what if I had a player that I needed to a file lookup to get info about? Or is that kind of thing frowned upon in C++?
Ell
Ell
You'd do the stuff in the constructor
Yeah, but don't member with no default constructor have to be initialized first?
My goof here: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/13839947#13839947 indicates that you can't just intialize inside of it
Ell
Ell
Yeah the message below shows how you should do it
You could get the constructor to accept a filepath and pass that after this
welp
time to fail at sleep.
good night/good luck
03:08
it won't be either
I drank too much and ate too much.
hungarian notation is so bad
user3010322
I HAVE DONE IT!
user3010322
MY ENGINE DOES NOT INCLUDE A SINGLE BIT OF OS, GRAPHICS, OR AUDIO LIBRARY IN THE FINAL PRODUCT!
user3010322
I HAVE ACHIEVED GODHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD
make something with it
everyone always says "make games, not engines"
03:11
@ThePhD Can you write a music player, or even just a clock or flashlight with it?
@ThePhD link
user3010322
はい、ラープズさま。 ♡
user3010322
congrats
but when I tried clicking the link it doesn't work
user3010322
03:12
Oh.
user3010322
Forgot it's a private repo. xD
make it public
@ThePhD 非英語を停止するか、死ぬ
@ThePhD I'm Jefffrey on github
According to gtranslate- "You can stop the non-English, to die"
03:14
or die
it makes no sense
lol, i used gtranslate - so it's not my fault :)
I did too
@GlennTeitelbaum Rapptz can read japanese. He probably meant that the text made no sense (without translation)
@Domecraft you did it wrong
03:15
how did I do it wrong
gtranslate should untranslate back :)
@Borgleader I can't read it, so it looked fine to me
idk
rapptz what did it say in japanese
It's like when you are in a foreign country and you ask your friends how do you say, "where is the bathroom?" and then when you say it, the waitress slaps you
was gibberish
@GlennTeitelbaum Glenn I have a feeling you have experienced that before XD
03:18
So how would you say, "Stop the non-english - or die"
Hm.
I don't know actually.
I think my friends told me something like, "Mon zob est tres grand"
hm
Wait doesn't each word in japanese have it's own symbol?
*it
@Rapptz Then maybe its what I posted :)
03:21
It's not
google is better at chinese I've been told
Doubtful.
I said better, not good :)
it's pretty good for the romance languages
Like italian?
english, spanish, italian, portugese, french and a few others based on Latin
03:31
ok
03:55
@JohanLarsson nice
@GlennTeitelbaum English is normally considered a Germanic language, though it has also picked up quite a few Romance-oriented words, mostly through French (especially around the 100 years war, when England ruled quite a bit of France).
@Glenn : in all the sentence in japanese I can read : するか =suroka '_'
user3010322
@Jefffrey Wait, you actually want me to add you? D:
user3010322
@Domecraft Why? So everyone can just tell me how horrible my code is? D:
@VaughanHilts Right, because that's inside the constructor body, and everything must already be initialised by then. All you were doing is trying to assign.
04:13
The Middle English creole hypothesis is the concept that the English language is a creole, i.e., a language that developed from a pidgin. The vast differences between Old and Middle English have led some historical linguists to claim that the language underwent creolisation at the time of Norman Conquest. The theory was first proposed in 1977 by C. Bailey and K. Maroldt and has since found both supporters and detractors in the academic world.This judgement is found in both of these books: *p. 19, A History of the English Language, Hogg & Denison, 2006 *p. 128, The History of English, Sing...
@JerryCoffin English is sometimes categorized as a Romance Creole
user3010322
Lol
user3010322
No matter where I look on SO, there's JerryCoffin
user3010322
Especially for Windows stuff!
user3010322
Now it's here:
user3010322
3
A: Obtaining kerning information

Jerry CoffinYou first call it with the third parameter set to NULL, in which case it returns the number of kerning pairs for the font. You then allocate memory, and call it again passing that buffer: int num_pairs = GetKerningPairs(your_dc, -1, NULL); KERNINGPAIR *pairs = malloc(sizeof(*pairs) * num_pairs)...

04:24
@GlennTeitelbaum fair enough--though most definitions of "creole" I've seen are sufficiently loose that essentially every language on earth would probably qualify.
@ThePhD Hmm....a quick check indicates that I'v written fewer than 1% of answers.
user3010322
@JerryCoffin Well, I guess it's just the topics I've been running into have had your answers in them. :P
@ThePhD Apparently. Just for comparison, David Heffernan has roughly 8 times as many answers as I do.
user3010322
Never heard of the guy.
user3010322
The kerning for this is all off.
@ThePhD For all of the fact that his profile and mine have a lot of overlap in listed tags, I run into him surprisingly rarely.
user3010322
04:36
@JerryCoffin That is strange...
user3010322
Hmm. Perhaps SO purposely keeps you two just apart enough to maximize your answer output?
@ThePhD Anybody's guess on that, I suppose.
I should add: he does seem to spend quite a bit of time in , which I only see if it overlaps with something else I watch.
user3010322
Blarhgahgahghagha.
user3010322
I wish I could just say "HAND ME THE KERNING FOR THIS GODDAMN LETTER"
user3010322
And windows would just give it to me.
user3010322
04:43
That's what I want.
04:58
Is it just me, or does this question have more rambling than explaining?
0
Q: does unrolling loops in x86-64 actually make code faster?

honestannI assume everyone knows what "unrolling loops means". Just in case I'll give a concrete example in a moment. The question I will ask is... does unrolling loops in x86-64 assembly language actually make code faster? I will explain why I begin to question this notion. For those not familiar wit...

I don't think it's too broad
but I feel like VTCing anyway because it's not "focused" its very open ended
The problem with Haskell is that it's a language built on lazy evaluation and nobody's actually called for it.
19
@Feeds lol
^^ /cc @FredOverflow
user3010322
^^ /cc @Bartek
05:06
/cc @R.MartinhoFernandes @rightfold @CatPlusPlus ?
am I doing this right?
/cc @EverybodyInTheFuckingLounge
05:18
Haha the Top Gear guys are playing Rugby... with cars
05:40
Can anyone tell me how to remove an object from a std::list? >_< I keep getting some crap about "operands to binary expressions" not matching up
@VaughanHilts std::list::erase takes an iterator.
pop_back.
@EtiennedeMartel I'm not using erase, I'm using ::remove
@Rapptz pop_back is no good -- I got the collidee from a collision event and need to remove his object from the list
i.e: the reference the list holds from him
@VaughanHilts Is there a valid operator== overload for your list's value type?
Consider using a different container
05:42
Does the stl list copy?
They all copy.
Containers store values.
Bah, so not references?
I keep assuming things I shouldn't be ;___;
it moves...
05:44
Yeah, that too.
Anyway, I really need to get some sleep.
I just watched a guy talk about pens for 20 minutes
Good night peeps.
OK, so I'm presumably getting that error because I have no comparator.
@VaughanHilts Overload operator== for your type.
If you want the equivalent of ArrayList/List in C++ it's std::vector
not std::list
05:45
However, I don't \really\ want copies.
Yeah, I want an ArrayList.
;____;
That stores references?
no
std::list just sucks
why do you want to store references?
I might be mixing language terminolgoy here.. but I created an object in some class called A for sake of example. I want to then add it to my data structure B who has a vector of them internally. I want the copies in A and B's list to point to the same object.
user3010322
std::vector<A*>
user3010322
Behaves like references in C#/Java.
Is what I really want pointers?
user3010322
05:47
Yes.
or std::vector<std::reference_wrapper<A>> if you don't want nulls
user3010322
In either case, when an object disappears, you need to remove it from the list.
user3010322
Otherwise, you'll have a dangling reference.
That's no problem -- the objects are created and then go out of scope.
The only place they exist otherwise is inside this data structure.
user3010322
....
user3010322
05:48
Then you've got bigger problems.
indeed
Did I commit a taboo?
user3010322
If you create an object and it goes out of scope before you put it anywhere else, that means the object gets destructed and the memory inside that object is reclaimed by the system for various purposes.
Oh no.
I add the object to the structure.
Or at least, right now I'm adding copies.
user3010322
Yes, you're adding copies (or moves).
user3010322
05:50
But the original object is dead.
So if I switch it to a pointer I'll be good, right?
user3010322
No.
I'm not sure how that's a bigger problem -- the object is added in the constructor of a Scene.
That particular thing is only ever reused in the data structure now
user3010322
std::vector<std::unique_ptr<A>>
user3010322
Is a blanket fix for the problem that will arise if you used A*.
user3010322
05:51
std::unique_ptr will take care to delete the A pointer.
user3010322
When it goes out of scope.
I'm not sure I understand.

A()
{
B b = B();
c.add(*b);
}
Isn't that all I need, really?
that's some bad code
user3010322
No.
Oops, either that's acceptable in C# or I've been doing it for 5 years wrong.
user3010322
05:53
Whatever you're doing there is an atrocity, won't compile. ANd if you did make it compile, would you be in a world of trouble.
Here's the \current\ code
Player playerObject = Player(pPos.x, pPos.y);
Goal goal = Goal(pos.x, pos.y);
objectManager.addObject(playerObject);
objectManager.addObject(goal);
mate
This is a local constructor method.
you know you can construct directly right?
this isn't C# or Java
user3010322
What is objectManager ?
05:54
Player whatever(pPos.x, pPos.y); // works
That would be my data structure.
user3010322
Show me object manager.
user3010322
It's internals.
@Rapptz I read that... but old habbits die hard.
you're making copies/moves
fyi
so kill it
05:55
Right now, ` std::list<GameObject> _gameObjects;`
void ObjectManager::addObject(GameObject &object)
{
// Make sure to add the sprite to the scene graph, too
_gameObjects.push_back(object);

// Add to the scene, too
_scene->addChild(object.getSprite());

}

// Removes an object from the vector
void ObjectManager::removeObject(GameObject &object)
{
_gameObjects.remove(object);
_scene->removeChild(object.getSprite());
}
user3010322
o.0
[Was using a vector before, tried a list]
user3010322
You do realize
user3010322
you're doing what's called slicing, right?
(I probably don't.)
Nope.
05:56
lol
user3010322
Okay....
user3010322
Let me construct some examples for you
user3010322
That'll help you understand..
Unexpected object slicing can happen in languages such as C++ in which assignment by value is not polymorphic.
I think that's all I need to know ;_;
201
Q: What is the slicing problem in C++?

FrankomaniaSomeone mentioned it in the IRC, but google doesn't have a good answer.

man
0
Q: How can we handle time in SFML/C++?

FaizI am using SFML 2.1 with C++. I want to know that how can we handle our player's movement with time? for example: if(right-key-is-pressed) { player.move(5, 0); } Now we want the player to move to 5 spaces but we want it to take 2 sec to do it. How can we do it in SFML???

what the shit
05:59
OK, I understand.

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