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04:08
@R.MartinhoFernandes You mean the code has a bug or the idea itself is broken?
Also, skipping the end iterator would never make sense.
@StackedCrooked you need one of these :p
user3010322
04:33
This name is bothering the fuck out of me.
user3010322
Rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgggh.
Oh wait.
04:42
missed it
No. 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌 — Lightness Races in Orbit 12 secs ago
I can't see it, but I know what it says.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit You need a +1 for a nice exact 100k rep, which can be hard to obtain.
people have all sorts of opinions about my current displayed name
@MarkGarcia He can always downvote 9 answers and gain 50 rep :P
@Borgleader That... is a perfectly plausible idea. :)
100k incoming! :)
user3010322
@sudorm-rfTelkitty No, I meant TextCache. =[
@ThePhD If you can't find a name for it, chances are your abstraction is wrong.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit You want a 99,999?
user3010322
It's the correct abstraction.
04:53
10001 night
user3010322
It's just a hard-to-name-one.
Congrats @LightnessRacesinOrbit!
I am going to spread a rumour: ghosts are 4d hologram (3d + time dimension) of human images cast by aliens ~_~
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus RenderTarget2D derives from ShaderResourceView. When someone takes a ShaderResourceView who's target is a RenderTarget2D and tries to use it as an input for some shader (e.g., reading from a frame that you just drew into), that render target 2d cannot also be an output (something you draw into). If you try to set it like that, D3D has a conniption and explodes.
user3010322
To solve this problem, I was casting ShaderResourceView* with dynamic cast to RenderTarget2D* and checking if it was currently bound, if it was indeed a RenderTarget2D. However, since I removed a useless virtual function (that didn't need to be virtual), I now have to find some other way (without introducing extra cruft into the API or taking extra memory) to do this automatic unbding, so D3D doesn't explode.
user3010322
05:01
I have no idea what's the failure condition for the static_cast people have been telling me to use: if I use a static_cast for this situation, does the static_cast return null? How do I know whether or not the type I've casted to is actually a valid RenderTarget2D ?
05:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes Slightly improved. Let me know if you think it's wrong. If you want to :)
05:26
@LightnessRacesinOrbit congrats
WOOHOOO!
yeahhhhhh biatches
claps menacingly
oh that feels good
now I don't have to hang around with you fuckers every day :)
@MarkGarcia Gracias Garcia :D
user3010322
05:49
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Woo! Oh my poor aching heartmeats.
user3010322
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Congratulations. :D
user3010322
I forgot the maximum of a uint64...
user3010322
18446744073709551616
user3010322
I don't think I'll reach the maximum of that no matter how long I leave my game on.
user3010322
Even if it is counting ticks, not seconds or even milliseconds.
user3010322
05:57
Assuming I render every millisecond or update every millisecond...
user3010322
My game could run for 5 years with no overflow.
user3010322
Oh wait, I read that wrong.
user3010322
5.84555e8 years
user3010322
I can run my game for thousands of years with no overflow.
user3010322
For nanoseconds, I could do it for some 584 years.
user3010322
06:10
!
user3010322
I know a way to immediately trash my game and make it exit when someone says Game.Exit().
I mean... throw during an exception
user3010322
Game.Exit() will throw a GameExitException, which the internal loop will catch if and only if you're using the internal loop system.
user3010322
That way you can actually physically nuke the game with Game.Exit()
user3010322
Or, perhaps I should call it Game.Terminate() instead, and reserve Exit() for nicer cleanup.
06:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, I see why it's broken now. the maybe_skip function needs to perform a while loop to skip over contiguous sequences, but that would require it to also check end-of-range which it cannot do since it has no access to the end iterator.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So I've been working on collation a bit and the first step is to normalize the input sequences. So I started with that. Problem is I'm getting errors because some of the test strings are ill-formed?
One could fix it by also providing the end iterator to the SkipIterator. But if the SkipIterator knows both the begin and end iterators then it becomes basically a range itself.
user3010322
Wow.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit, congratulation for your 100k, bitch. ;)
user3010322
In one fell swoop, I maintained all functionality but managed to eradicate ServiceProvider from the Game class and all runtime checks. :O
user3010322
06:18
The only thing left are the barebones required to have an update and render loop going, with customizable high-precision clocks backing them.
user3010322
Wins. <3
user3010322
@melak47 Hey, heeey.
user3010322
You did the whole render target thing for D2D because it drastically increased your draw speeds, right?
06:34
Good job
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Wat. That doesn't make any sense. o.0
> What next ?????
English
> Under no circumstances should you hijack OID namespace!
I WILL AND THERE IS NOTHING YOU CAN DO TO STOP ME
06:44
@Borgleader Target destroyed placed on (terminal) hold.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ok, fixed. I'll stop bothering you now :)
user3010322
07:04
Has anyone come up with a range concept that isn't based on iterators?
Luc
@ThePhD Andrei
I've always thought of a range as a pair of iterators.
But I guess that is limiting.
@StackedCrooked I thought so too
Say you want to represent PI as a range.
Then you have begin but no end.
07:12
Yes you have an end, infinite digits ;)
Range is a range
Or "end" would mean the calculation limit.
it honestly does not matter if it's implemented with one or two iterators.
Range is a bunch of things, iterator is a pointer to a thing
iterators are a good way to implement ranges, doesn't mean you have to think in terms of iterators (yes, there is a problem with infinite ranges in such case)
07:13
I've made infinite ranges with iterators before, it isn't as complex as you make it seem
Enumerable is a better name anyway
@Rapptz you just push the iterator if something beyond is requested or what's the idea?
There's no "beyond"
you just make it generate values on the fly with operator* and the "end" iterator does absolutely nothing
07:16
This is also why conflating enumerables and enumerators/iterators is meh
@Rapptz More specifically, no matter how often you increment the begin iterator, it never compares equal to the end iterator. There is one problem with that though: such iterators can't be used with essentially any existing algorithms.
Yes. It's expected though since they're "infinite".
If the algorithms were built with ranges in mind they could have checked if a range was infinite beforehand :v
Should a range itself have operator++ defined? (increment begin iterator)
@JerryCoffin But that's because the existing algorithms don't support infinite ranges. (You can't sort PI.)
07:20
Range is not an iterator
@StackedCrooked No. If you want to go the iterator route, then you could just do begin and end member functions on your range to return their respective iterators and have those iterators define operator++.
@StackedCrooked There's a lot more than sorting that you can't do, but yes: the existing algorithms are defined for finite ranges.
Some aren't. Like std::find, however I don't see much use in it since it can be tricky to get correctly.
user3010322
I'd like to define a range and a set of operations on that range, outside of iterators.
user3010322
I think I'll read Andrei's paper/powerpoint/rant at some point on it, I guess.
user3010322
07:26
Though, I think I did a long time ago...
user3010322
IMHO at the moment the "ideal" range would be something std::vector-like
ITT same font looks different on different operation systems
@Rapptz I believe even those that might not theoretically require it still specify that the end shall be reachable from the begin.
Range can be a generator, it doesn't have to backed by anything
user3010322
Indeed.
user3010322
07:27
Like Haskell's [0...20] thingy.
user3010322
Or python's numeric range that was updated to generate numbers in a pattern, rather than store it all at once.
@JerryCoffin std::find returns end if it isn't found, so you have to be careful that the element can be found otherwise it's an infinite loop.
user3010322
I want to define a range, though
find cannot terminate on infinite range if a thing is not found
user3010322
And then apply it to bus
user3010322
07:28
I think there needs to be a slight separation of concerns, though?
Oops -- beaten by the cat.
user3010322
range should be the backing store / generator that does the heavy lifting, but how do you walk over a range? What does that look like in terms of a range object, per se?
that's what I said :v
user3010322
My initial approach to "walking" over a range would be to use an enumerator.
user3010322
07:30
The goal of an enumerator is to go to the next element in a range, and provide a boolean saying when its ready to stop.
That's an iterator
user3010322
So ideally you'd have a range -> enumerator pairing, or you'd have a range, to which you apply an enumerator (that would be better wording, I guess)
user3010322
So you can have a range, and then apply a 2-step enumerator (skips every other element)
you mean like how Andrei ranges have pop_back and a boolean empty?
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Well, iterator's concept still needs an end iterator to do comparison against. enumerator is self-sufficient, in that it can determine by itself with no comparisons if its empty.
user3010322
07:31
IMHO the biggest weakness of iterators is the comparison part.
user3010322
@Rapptz Yeah, like that.
user3010322
I suppose I wouldn't call it pop_back.
user3010322
But same idea, yeah.
@ThePhD It doesn't need a separate end iterator
(No I don't care about C++ iterators strictly)
user3010322
Ah, okay.
user3010322
07:33
I would avoid calling the enumerator iterator, though.
user3010322
Because pedants will throw a hissy fit.
Same thing
user3010322
And its just confusing.
IMO, it's worth at least considering defining a range as nearly synonymous with a Lisp list, with basically just two operations: refer to the first (or Nth) element (car/cadr), and create the remainder of the range after the first or Nth element (cdr, cddr, etc.)
And, of course, you need some way to detect when it's empty, and a few of minor details like that, but the basic idea remains.
user3010322
07:35
get() and empty(), I suppose
user3010322
For other kinds of ranges, get( n ) is added for getting the nth element.
Generators are generalisation of containers, so make all ranges generators
What kinds of ranges
user3010322
Uh. I was thinking those that supported arbitrary jumps.
When do you need to do that
user3010322
I guess the only way to specify those jumps would be in positional offsets. Or at least, the conventional way of thinking about it.
07:37
Which algorithms jump over elements like that
I guess you make skip a core operation somewhere
@CatPlusPlus Binary searching and (especially) interpolation searching, for a couple obvious ones.
user3010322
For certain generators, you might only also be interested in the nth element of a generated sequence as well.
I wanted to toy with the Boehm GC but can't figure out how to compile it into a fresh Visual C++ project. Anybody have any suggestions to get my started?
You can't take nth element off a generator without consuming n elements before that
Hence skip, not get(n)
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Well, certain pattern-based generators (an equation, for example) can get you to n without actually skipping forward....
07:40
You can express get(n) as skip + get anyway
user3010322
Still, get( n ) is a specialization, so I don't have to worry about it.
And if generator supports skipping then it can do that without generating n elements
user3010322
At the baseline, skip, get, and... empty looks like the things that are needed, then?
user3010322
@JerryCoffin mentioned creating a remainder-range.. I suppose that'd be something like a slice? I don't know how I would generalize that, though.
user3010322
07:42
A remainder is just various skips over the original container.
user3010322
The thing that makes it harder is that it can be skips at various locations for varying amounts.
Maybe get returns element and the remainder
does source stepping .net 4.5 work for you?
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Ooh, that sounds nice
user3010322
But now I have to wonder.
user3010322
07:43
Do these things modify the original range?
And now we have cons-lists :v
No, I wouldn't
user3010322
... Ahh, wait, no we solved that problems: this is all things on enumerator.
user3010322
SRP and all.
No, that should be on range
I guess
user3010322
Well, there's 2 ways to go about it: we can have the range modify itself in order to facilitate mutations, or we can have a "view" into it of sorts with an enumerator that can skip, get, and remainder/next on the range.
07:45
Your enumerator would be a wrapper to make stuff iterative not recursive
user3010322
I suppose if you wanted to make another range, you'd just specify criterion and then run teh enumerator.
@ThePhD Just create a new range
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus That works too.
get   :: Range t -> (t, Range t)
skip  :: n -> Range t -> Range t
empty :: Range t -> Bool
user3010322
But what triggers new range creation? newrange := oldrange ?
07:46
get is a crappy name
user3010322
It is crappy.
Maybe next or consume
@ThePhD No just those two core operations
I'd probably make a range based on iterators on the principle of getting all the standard library benefits for free
user3010322
@Rapptz I think I'd make my ranges based on range design, and then add backwards adaptors.
07:48
"range design", as if two iterators aren't a range :v
user3010322
They're one kind of range.
user3010322
Or can be several kinds.
Go hog wild, screw standard library
user3010322
Making an iterator_range should be a not-so-hard exercise...
user3010322
But the target first is just a good range
user3010322
07:49
@CatPlusPlus I don't understand some of that syntax.
user3010322
I understand empty, but what's skip all about?
n should be Int or whatever
user3010322
skip "n", returns range t, ... and returns range t again?
@Rapptz Boost.range already has analogs of most of the standard library algorithms anyway (though their version of range is also pretty much just a pair of iterators).
It's arguments basically
I hate C declarator syntax but it'd something like
tuple<T, range<T>> next(range<T>)
range<T> skip(range<T>, int)
bool empty(range<T>)
user3010322
07:51
Ooh.
user3010322
Wait, why 2 -> then in your diagram for skip?
user3010322
Shouldn't it be in parentheses or something? o.0
user3010322
I admit I have no idea what that syntax is, though.
@ThePhD Haskell.
07:52
@ThePhD all functions take one argument
user3010322
Oh.
user3010322
Well that makes it more clear I guess.
Hi guys, do you think that using c++ / qt is suitable for building peer to peer realtime apps ?
Well, time for me to sleep, I guess. Have a nice afternoon Europe (and a great early morning, Illinois).
user3010322
@BrahimBoulkriat It's good for building applications who's source code I can print out for toilet paper.
user3010322
07:54
@JerryCoffin Night!
user3010322
I should port lia to VC++12 CTP
user3010322
And then I should build the range library in there.
@_@ did hear area discrimination
I did hear no greeting to my time zone :'(
user3010322
@sudorm-rfTelkitty Convicts don't need any greeting.
Any ideas why "error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __imp__GC_get_heap_size referenced in function _main" might be occurring?
08:01
@ThePhD but the same can be said about Illinois :'(
I have added ";gc.lib" to "Additional Dependencies" under the linker settings and have added the path to "Additional Library Directories". Can't think what I am missing...
No need looking, no garbage collectors around
trash will be taken outside once cleaners come to work in a couple of hours time
user3010322
@sudorm-rfTelkitty Well then I guess you're just not important enough~
~_~
important convicts, that's a good one ...
user3010322
It doesn't matter, though, how important the rest of them are.
user3010322
08:16
Because you're the only one that's important to me, baby. <3
<3
is it because scottw is not here though?
user3010322
Nah.
user3010322
Scott already divorced me. =[
Q_Q
never knew you two were married, always thought you were only his underground mister
Just finished HL2:Ep2 for the first time
kinda bummed out by the end
user3010322
08:26
Really?
Yeah I was expecting another section before "Episode 3"
user3010322
Heh.
Which will never happen
sadly
user3010322
Well, now you're screwed.
user3010322
You'll forever wonder what happened.
user3010322
08:29
TRAPPED IN AN ENDLESS STRETCH OF POSSIBILITIES.
Well unless I manage to read Gabe Newell's mind.
user3010322
Stuck between the parallel universes of your imagination, the quantum superpositions of possibility.
Need to work on mind reading technology =/
When I played hl2, I used to read cheats before play - so the game play became smoother with less effort
user3010322
Ugh.
user3010322
08:31
Block Type is invalid. =/
user3010322
Come on, Visual C++
hmmm.... it seems that my problem is that my C++ project is expecting to find functions beginning with "__imp__" in the .lib when they don't have those. How can I configure my project to statically link instead of dynamically link?
@LeaHayes Whats the error
copy/paste
error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __imp__GC_get_heap_size referenced in function _main
There are 5 errors which are all essentially the same thing
"gc.lib" is being found properly
is this related?
> When trying to build a cross compiler for i686-w64-mingw32 target, the boehm-gc library is built with __declspec(dllexport) while --disable-shared was specified on the command line, which leads to programs linked with resulting GCJ failing to link with undefined references to ___imp_GC functions.
08:37
tbh I am unsure :S
There is an NMAKE file which does work properly
Just can't tame Visual C++
0
Q: Can we able to read compiler output(machine code)?

user2990829Me new for programming world, Tried to read object files but no idea this is cpp source compiler.

@Borgleader So I set "Runtime Library" to "Multi-threaded Debug (/MTd)" and that worked...
for my .exe
Is it not possible to dynamically link against the various Win32 dlls, whilst statically linking against gc.lib?
Can you disable that silly "sign in" thing in VS2013?
hehe once it actually compiles, it is fascinating to see how easy it is to add GC to a C++ app
Yeah, it only bothered me the first time i started vs2013, and hasn't done so since
08:55
> Congratulations! You've created a project
Congratulations, you can press butans, you're not a complete moron!
so the questions becomes... how does this library know when an object has become garbage
Black magic
(It's called mark and sweep go Google it or something)
I've read that part... I just don't understand how it knows whether the reference is being referenced elsewhere. The memory is allocated using int **p = (int **) GC_MALLOC(sizeof(int *)); (from the example). Somehow p gets forgotten but gets cleaned...
Black magic indeed :P
Starts from a GC root and marks everything reachable from that
Then destroys everything that's not marked
So presumably I need to add references to that root
Can't figure out how it can be doing that automagically
unless.... perhaps it can see the stack
very interesting thanks :)
So it looks like there is even a way to provide layout information to the collector which I guess will help massively performance-wise.
gets even better with the C++ wrapper... just inherit the "gc" base class and you can practically forget it's there
Now I can create a source-to-source compiler for a toy language :D
Why would anyone want a GC for C++
it's for the toy language, not C++ per say
You're using it on a C++ program :v
yes, but its just an intermediate stage
09:11
Gotcha.
The idea is to write apps with near native performance using the simple toy language
but where the toy language has GC
range | reverse works :) (but probably UB when using temporary containers there)
and without having to create the backend compiler
lol.
Otherwise its LLVM - which is quite intense for this little exercise hehe
09:16
@StackedCrooked why would it be UB?
I think its lifetime won't be extended.
the right hand part of the for range loop is bounded by auto&& x = range
the result of std::set<int>{1, 2, 3} | reversed is bound
but I'm not sure that means the set itself will remain alive
@StackedCrooked might be a stupid question, but were is set in this?
In my previous link I tested with different containers.
09:31
oh, all right
09:44
@LeaHayes IIRC GC uses a graph to represent all memory references. once a node or a group of nodes is no longer connected to the root node then they can be freed.
09:56
Didn't know git was so emo too @_@
thought code repository would be less emo & more professional ...
@JerryCoffin: can't sleep or is this the zombie in your PC reanimating?
10:14
my HDD died :|
I mean, it's not working, I hope it's mobo or controller
do motherboards die often?
I think it's unlikely...
I have never had a MOBO die on me
but I have had some pretty malfunctioning ram sticks :-/
anyone uses a mac & knows how to use git on one?
well CDrom controller died a year ago on it
10:18
viva la memtest, the symptoms were EPICLY random
so I hope it's the same issue
where can I find where my git repository is?
@BartoszKP When my external hd died I put it in the freezer for a hour and then it worked again for a short time. So I was able to make a backup.
@StackedCrooked ;ooo cool idea
10:19
@StackedCrooked obviously
If a HD dies it's often due to friction on the platters. The cold causes them to shrink which reduces the friction.
I'm not kidding.
I'll try plugging it to another laptop to verify where's the failure first
but if it's HDD I'll definitely try your idea
I wrapped it carefully in a plastic bag before freezing it to avoid getting frozen water inside.
i hate HP ;0
10:22
Starcraft 2 tournaments are exciting. Watching Scarlett vs Bomber now.
I wanted to put the disk into secondary bay, to check if it works there, but unfortunately in dv9000 only the first bay is bootable :|
@StackedCrooked this is live?
no, it's from august
But I hadn't seen it before, so it's exciting :)
10:24
Not sure if I've seen this
Scarlett o_O
I bear grudges!
how dares he?!
@StackedCrooked they're great, but their public appearance ... :D
10:26
@BartoszKP hm? what about their public appearance?
Esports will never be not funny
@StackedCrooked in the beginning, they're standing like they're going to be executed : D
this game will give you nerd chills
watch it
Ah, I skipped the beginning and seeked to the beginning of gameplay :D
@Borgleader OK. After I finished the current one.
THE WAY SHE MACROES
10:33
@StackedCrooked Heh - I don't disbelieve you, but would the bearings not also shrink?
@MartinJames I don't know. I just read this on the Internet and it worked for me.
Maybe I was just lucky.
@CatPlusPlus I don't even know what macro means. (Micromanagement I know.)
I don't even care
@StackedCrooked Yeah - who cares about the reason, if you get your data back, great:)
@StackedCrooked Macro is economy more or less
I can't believe these people are 100% serious about this
10:36
It's just entertainment for me. For the players it's honor and money.
I suppose.
serious vidya gamin
It's like sports I guess.
Serious table tennis is just as silly.
Ever since I made my first game, I stopped playing games altogether >_<
user1804599
@StackedCrooked het is tijd om te gaan slapen.
jij bent dom
dommerik
wie gaat nu slapen om 11 uur 's ochtends?
10:46
@StackedCrooked maybe precise definition is hard, but intuitively it's obvious that decisions like where to set up next base, build what type of units and where to accumulate your troops are macro
that is strategy
ehhh, starcraft players need to learn them some Englishes
I always fail to understand how it's possible for a young person to not known English nowadays
@StackedCrooked yeah strategy in macro scale, as opposed to micro scale ;0
going for a jog ... have not jogged for 5 day
user1804599
10:58
Hi.

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