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00:00
@BartekBanachewicz It's your job?
@Xeo are you particularly willing to convert me to the never-use-std::function party?
eh anyway I've only spent 3 years working with obj and fbx
@sehe zing.
@thecoshman I concur, the ugliness, it is rather butt-like.
Xeo
Xeo
@Jefffrey no, too much effort. and I didn't say 'never'
user1804599
@sehe hoe spoor ik ze aan.
user1804599
00:01
Ik kan net zo goed zelf weggaan.
Probleem ook opgelost!
@DeadMG yeah... but it's something :P
oh, and you should so the arse of that thing
lui :)
Of course that works. But the school doesn't improve. At all
well it has more than 8 polys
I might revisit C++ when C++14 comes out
that's something.
00:02
it's like someone gouged out a frogs legs :S
@Xeo well, ok. I'll retire in my ignorance then
do you have blender?
user1804599
@sehe If I’m not there anymore, why should I care?
user1804599
Besides, more bad people leaving school means more job opportunities for me!
would be easy enough for me to just send you the .blend, you can export what ever you wan then
00:03
ah don't bother
I'd need to write a bunch more code before putting it to any use anyway
you may as well sit on it for a while
user1804599
I am going to sleep because I have no idea how the fuck you bastards can be awake tomorrow morning.
user1804599
Goodbye!
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold I csn't
@DeadMG ... have you considered unity?
@ScottW if that's true I think it's stateless
Xeo
Xeo
00:04
so I'll just sleep until noon :D
enum class line_cap {
    butt,
lol
@rightfold What is this "awake" you are talking about?
@thecoshman We actually have two of them. The old one was almost dead, so we recently bought a new one. I always thought the old one was pretty funny: it had like 20 speeds, and as far as I can recall, the only one that got used enough to notice was the fastest (with the kids wishing it was faster still). With only two speeds, the new one may look less impressive, but accomplishes at least as much.
@ScottW uh but you can create your own instance and manage it
@thecoshman Wouldn't deliver on a lot of the other stuff I want to do.
00:04
it's a fucking sample
@thecoshman read that as "I can't really bother reading and learning"
you know it's kinda funny when puppy has me plonked
i can comment all i want
@BartekBanachewicz && @thecoshman I see GLDR is not making any progress :(
@DeadMG you sure of that? It has rendering pipeline ~done~, collisions detection out of the box, can load blender models trivially, logic for the game itself can be applied via C#
@Jefffrey should it be making any?
yes?
@Jefffrey IIRC we put it on hold whilst other projects matured, they were basically doing a better job of what we wanted to do, and I think that hasn't changed.
00:07
so... it has implemented or I can re-implement a bunch of stuff I've either already implemented or want to implement myself in a language that doesn't suck terribly.
@thecoshman such as?
@Jefffrey ogl+
@DeadMG what is your stuff wrote in so far?
C++
@Jefffrey OpenGLPlus IIRC
user3010322
00:09
Just use glload.
user3010322
The rest you can mostly handle yourself.
it's pure windows atm though right?
@ThePhD it's a completely different problem
@ThePhD boiler plat is boiler plate.
I don't run any other operating systems
so I have no need for cross-platformity.
00:10
¬_¬ yes yes...
ahaha
that attitude
any way, time for bed for my fine self.
see ya fuckers!
Ell
Ell
Yeah oglplus really does everything we planned gldr to do
I think
@Ell especially after Matus incorporated our ideas
Ell
Ell
00:13
Yeah
I'm more interested in Haskell binds now
Ell
Ell
and also to your other question, I use open source stuff so I think I should write open source stuff
that's a challenging problem
@Ell doesn't compute
Ell
Ell
Idk, I just think its right to support open source
And promote openness in general
@Ell Just dont go full stallman.
Ell
Ell
00:15
That's just something I want
@Ell then make your own opensource fbx loader :P
Ell
Ell
The format is proprietary isn't it?
ogl+ looks lame
then again so does OpenGL so I can't say I'm surprised
@Rapptz oh right you have a better API
we forgot
@Ell well all open formats suck terribly
Right. I forgot I have to have an API to have a comment.
I forgot.
00:17
I would be interested in a full multi-media-super-graphic library from the lounge
maybe implemented with opengl + glfw
@Jefffrey in haskell?
later
jesus
00:19
later what
c++ first
@Rapptz where
@Jefffrey s/later/never
@Jefffrey I don't see the point of creating it in C++ if your goal is to create it in Haskell
@BartekBanachewicz the goal is too create it in c++, but if some wants to bind it to haskell, it's ok
00:21
@Jefffrey you can't just bind something to haskell
that's completely missing the point
port it then
I think that engineering something like this for "haskell first" would make more sense
of course you do
yeah but you actually want people to use your library
we are in a c++ room for bjarne's sake
2
00:22
especially because there's an attitude around FP that it's not practical
@Rapptz mhm. And?
Stop flailing Haskell around like your silver bullet
c++ first, other languages later
@Rapptz maybe it's not a silver bullet, but it's definitely the best language Earth has now.
there we go
Jesus.
00:24
@BartekBanachewicz OK, I'm moving to Mun.
I mean, sure, the userbase isn't particularly big now and libraries aren't really polished
But that can change over a few years.
I'm looking in a longer perspective, with actually moving the theory of programming forward.
@MartinJames I prefer Minmus. It's a lot easier to get to.
There's a lot of stuff to research in RFP and the like
We've been stuck to C legacy for way too long already
@DeadMG Yeah - I've heard that. A soon as I can get my 8-SRB cluster to stop vibrating itself to destruction, I'm going there.
Are you done being an idealistic fanboy now?
00:27
@MartinJames SRBs just aren't very useful, I find.
@Rapptz what's idealistic in realizing that with all the cruft and backwards compatibility C++ won't be able to undergo the changes needed in the future?
People take and build on haskell research a lot; just look at Scala.
But languages like Scala are still full of compromises.
@BartekBanachewicz You make it seem like this unbearable cruft is now an issue for you when you're writing when it hasn't been a problem in such a long time. Unless you're being an idealistic person hoping for no implicit conversions or better declarator syntax or whatever dumb thing you're hoping then this isn't much of a problem. I'll give you credit on one thing, it's an issue if you're browsing for sane libraries in C++.
thanks
not a single comma was given that day
7
@Rapptz hasn't been a problem? That's the whole point. Javascript room exhibits the very same attitude. Whenever someone points out the flaw in the language, the obvious defence is "but it's there and we are still able to write code". Regardless of me being a fanboy of haskell, if you want to improve you have to be able to look critically at your tools. And yes, haskell also has flaws and they have to be taken care of. Just no one says they aren't a problem.
hmmm
where can I find the recent tabs I closed in Firefox?
00:32
If anything, they are a problem to people trying to make the language as good as possible. To which workarounds and compromises just don't cut it.
@DeadMG Firefox -> History -> Recently Closed Tabs
how in the hell...
this is amazing
@Jefffrey UB
00:34
@Jefffrey you're not accessing this, so it might well work. UB, obviously
@Borgleader ty
@BartekBanachewicz right
btw Cinder @Jefffrey
yeah, I was taking a look at it as we chat
$ cabal install Fay
it has begun.
00:42
@Jefffrey basically the compiler generates a (non-member) function under the hood which looks like: void Print(Test* _this) {std::cout<<"Hello!\n";}
basically C++ is just C with syntax sugar when you go into compiler design
after all typechecking and template code generation, of course
i see
Implementing exceptions requires a little more than syntax sugar though.
when you guys put it that way, it doesn't look that surprising
@StackedCrooked right
00:45
basically any language is syntactic sugar
@Rapptz well @Stacked had a good point about exceptions
typical C++ concepts though, like operators, member functions and the like, aren't essentially different than C primitives
that being said, i wouldn't want to call C++ from assembly :S
user406009
@Ell "Gravitational flux is a surface integral of the gravitational field over a closed surface, analogous to how magnetic flux is a surface integral of the magnetic field."(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss's_law_for_gravity)
-4
Q: C++ oop project - undefined refferences error

juniorroI am currently doing project on my oop classes. I have some trouble with some errors I can not understand. If someone be please so kind and help me, I would be grateful. I'm not sure, but I think errors may be connected with constructors and destructors in each of the class. I tried to get it vi...

wtf
@StackedCrooked A lot more.
so, do we have GHC on Lounge TeamCity? @Cat?
01:01
It's installing
user406009
Is the lounge starting up another project again?
-1
Q: Compilation Error. operator >>

user3217260I don't know why i get this error. please help :). The error is no match for 'operator>>' in 'f >> user[i].user1::nrpostari' i will write some random stuff, cause my post is mostly code so i need to add some more details. #include <iostream> #include <fstream> #include <string.h> using namespa...

ugh
@Griwes that code made me sick
@Lalaland nah, but I could use a CI for Haskell->JS
01:05
Yup. I was right :) Here's the same but more flexible in 31 lines of code. That's 51 lines less than your version. See my answer for background ideas. — sehe 8 secs ago
^ Gee. This is some sweet power Spirit answer. I had not anticipated this myself o.O
@sehe Qi is similar in functionality to Parsec, right?
You tell me. I'm not learning Parsec for the purpose. But, yeah, it's a parser generator. Not sure whether that counts as 'combinator', but hey :)
> We use as much FP as we can in the design of Spirit. Spirit is essentially a parser-combinator library in the likes of Haskell parser libraries such as Parsec. The similarities end however in how we deal with imperative constructs that are taboos in the FP world.
@Griwes He's a new user. Even if he should know better, I think you should try to explain (shortly) what he did wrong. — Uli Köhler 3 mins ago
I'd like to try some really automatic parser.
01:09
He is new, so we should let him dump terrible code at us!
user406009
Does spirit still take forever and a half to compile?
@BartekBanachewicz I'd like to try a really silver bullet.
And the perfect wife harem. While I'm at it
@Lalaland go figure
@sehe I mean someone told me here that Parsec/Spirit aren't really automatic IIRC.
So what is automatic?
@Lalaland Less and less. I can, these days, compile all spirit answers on Coliru without increasing the compilation time. Sometimes I cheat, though, by using clang++ -Os
@Griwes That's not what it says. No need to be dense. People should indeed explain things.
@sehe I was kinda hoping you will tell me that.
01:19
You're really waiting for someone to point you at the hidden unicorn? The servile white raven? The enigmatic self-writing program? The eternal source of energy, sentience in hardware and holy grail of parsing.
Yeah, yeah. Maybe some other day. Can't have too much competition, you know.
man
I have so many bones in my body.
Bones, boners, bonest!
@sehe Now I'm just sure you're in a possesion of such artifact.
Which deflty explains why I bide my living days writing parsers the hard way :/
ow.
for something completely different
> Co-author of the book, Real World Haskell, and of the xmonad window manager. I founded the Haskell Platform project and wrote the bytestring and binary libraries for Haskell.
now that's something.
01:26
xmonad is easily overrated though. Though some spartan specimina from the masochistic subset of mild-to-severe autists may really like it :0
@sehe eh to hell with xmonad, the rest still shines
I've dabbled in tiling window managers for a while. I still like them for terminals. But not really for anything else. I find that simply slinging the window into the desired corner with the mouse is plenty effective and a ways more intuitive
@BartekBanachewicz But bytestring/binary packages are not easily overrated :)
I haven't needed to use them just yet
user3010322
@Jefffrey You mean... like Furrovine?~
I'm looking at DOM manipulation now.
01:30
Wtf... My phone was connected to the wifi all day and yet it still managed to dl 7Mb of data through the 3g... despite me not using it at all
what is eating that much data o.o
it should tell you in Data Manager
Well I have this app called "My Data Manager" and it says the culprit is the "Downloads" app >.>
user3010322
Or it won't.
user3010322
You never know.
for it says I used 64 B of data lol
@Borgleader When you click on it does it give you an option to restrict it?
it does for me
01:34
Ok, sleep well, everyone
@Rapptz I doubt it, its a 3rd party app.
Oh.
@Rapptz too many managers :)
I have an old phone (and therefore an old version of android)
why don't you just turn off data when you have wifi on just in case?
01:37
Yeah I just turned off the 3g
user3010322
@sehe Nighty night!
user3010322
Sleep tight!
user3010322
Don't let the stringed instruments bite!
> I have been connected to wifi on last couple of days and found out that Google+ app used 500mb+ data in 2 days. An App that I have never used. Not even once! So Fernando if you have this app installed in your phone, I suggest you remove it immediately. Thanks Google for screwing people over. When will they understand that they cant win the social network war with mandatory registrations. Seriously... Source
Oh I already deleted Google+ app.
01:39
Hmm I don't have an app called Google+ so it's not that =/
Facebook did a similar thing before I nuked it (well to the extent possible without rooting a phone)
Google Play Services and Android OS take up a lot of data for me
albeit I've only used ~64 MB of it
on my end its:
Downloads (37MB)
OS Services (3MB)
...
user3010322
Awww yiss.
user3010322
I finally found the song.
user3010322
A triangle in 3 dimensions is not the same as a triangle in 2 dimensions,
user3010322
01:43
but there's no differing name
user3010322
I guess I have to name it Triangle2 and Triangle3. =[
@ThePhD How is it not the same thing
user3010322
They differ in dimensions.
user3010322
So I wanted to give them two separate names
@ThePhD ideally a triangle would be templated on a Point that describes it
:P
user3010322
01:46
Well, at the moment I only template on the internal type (like all of my other primitives)
user3010322
E.g. template <typename T> struct TBox { TVector3<T> min, max; };
why is it "TBox"
what does the T stand for?
Template I'm guessing
user3010322
It's just an extra letter so I can do typedef TBox<float> Box;
01:48
ah I see
why
Box<float> Boxf
or something idk
@ThePhD but I think I'd rather do that myself
user3010322
The default name (Box) is usually set to a single type.
then why is it templated
>Sakurai plays SSBB with items
despicable.
Xeo
Xeo
01:59
@Rapptz best items are no items
@Borgleader HUNGARIAN NOTATION DIE INVADER!
user3010322
@Rapptz For other cases where other values are necessary?
user3010322
typedef TBox<uint32> Boxu32;
user3010322
Useful for Texture3D
user406009
I think he is talking about the copy.
user406009
Maybe.
It makes no sense no matter what hes talking about
Xeo
Xeo
@Borgleader maybe he misunderstood the 'binary' part
@Xeo Thats possible, because theres no way inserting a node in a tree involves bitshifting
Xeo
Xeo
02:40
whatever. off to sleep
@Xeo 'night :)
@Borgleader Tagged pointers?
What's that? o.o
you don't want to know, but it involves pointers and bitshifting.
I see. Well I doubt it's that, because he refers to the data itself and not the pointers.
user406009
02:48
He could be trying to make a binary trie.
user406009
Shift one bit off each level down.
@Lalaland Then it would be called BinaryTrie<T> :P
One would hope anyway >.>
03:03
lol... a little overboard
0
A: A const big array needs to be initialized

brian beuningMake a program to generate the tables FILE * file = fopen( "sintbl.cpp", "w" ); fprintf( file, "const double DFTDriver::sintbl[] = {\n" ); for (unsigned i = 0; i != tblsize; ++i) { fprint( file, " %f , \n", std::sin(i * TAU / tblsize) ); } fprintf( file, "};\n" ); fclose( file ); And then...

fuckshittles it's cold
my csg implementation spends 48% of its time in malloc/free :(
then implement better memory allocator
what's a csg anyway
I wish I could make sense of callgrind_annotate --tree=caller
constructive solid geometry - a way to add and subtract shapes, for example, subtracting a box intersecting with another box cuts out a box hole
cocksucking girls?
hmm
what data structures are you using?
I presume that you're malloc/freeing vertices here
03:15
vector, deque, extensive use of move semantics
what compiler
no it's all std containers. they all end up in malloc/free eventually
gcc 4.7.2
ok
consider replacing all uses of vector with deque
yeah? is that so that the same sized blocks will be allocated freed more?
you can use a memory pool allocator to substantially speed up deque
03:17
the deque I use a trick to use it for a pool, that guarantees that nodes won't move in memory, for BSP tree nodes
it's not as effective on vector.
I'm porting it from windows-specific code to cross-platform. it used to use a lock-free stack as a LIFO pool. I didn't want to port the whole custom allocator to std::atomic so I just used vector
now I see why my original code used a custom allocator :)
can I expect std::deque to call the allocator's allocate(n) with a constant n?
or mostly constant?
for a given T
er, mostly.
a deque is like, an array of pointers to arrays, and the sub-arrays must have constant size but the outer array resizes like a vector.
the old code had a PagedArray, which was pretty much a deque, that supported operator[]
well, almost deque, it didn't have fast push_front
as a quick hack, I tried jemalloc. I linked it but it had no effect, it still called the libc malloc for some reason
probably link order I guess, or it wasn't statically linking libc. I didn't expect much more than 2x speedup anyway so I abandoned the idea
yeah, I guess I have little choice other than a custom allocator that uses a fast pool
@lounge pedants:
You don't make it const after initialization. You declare it const which means your only chance of deciding its values is at initialization. And btw, main is the wrong place to do that. P.S: I would suggest you use vector and follow the technique in the question you linked. — Borgleader 2 mins ago
03:27
I'll try using all deque though first
I just want to make sure I'm not wrong or misused a term.
Why do people mix tabs and spaces
these people are literally the worst
@Rapptz are you a tab guy or a space guy?
spaces
@Borgleader Also, you can argue that not making it const at all wouldn't be much of a problem (can still be used as a const param, etc.).
03:29
@Rapptz me too
always-works-right FTW
And who the hell makes class members const anyway?!
@MarkGarcia Well if you need constants like uh... idk pi? You could have static const float pi = ...;
constexpr son.
03:31
@Rapptz I'm sure that looked beautifully aligned when the author originally wrote it
@Borgleader static, that is, not necessarily members of objects.
@doug65536 I'm actually not sure, it looks like ass though.
I'm not THAT OCD about alignment. all I really care about is the left margin and line continuations
plugging this code into my text editor shows that this is all spaces
either that or my editor is being extra sneaky
either way whoever wrote it is a moron
@Rapptz maybe it auto-converted tabs to spaces?
03:32
I turned that off
I use tabs cuz its the default :P
@doug65536 I'm OCD about having to clean-up the code and make unnecessary commits.
spaces are saner
I don't have to deal with that ^ for example
@MarkGarcia agree. I meant, for new code, I don't try to over-align things
I feel like opening an issue on the github page just because
03:34
do eet
@Rapptz can't you just hit the auto-format thing in your editor?
nope
better use clang :P
clang-format is nice, though I want to be able to tweak it more.
does anyone know of a reliable way to turn ePub garbage to PDF?
03:40
use calibre
^ same
I'll give it a shot.
On an unrelated note, when saying that it reminds me of Hearthstone :/
Someone suggested to cast away the constness on the const array question -.-;
03:57
I would say, just call sin or cos, it's about 28 cycles or so on core i7. he doesn't say the platform though
user3010322
04:14
Hokay.
user3010322
Now I need to write
user3010322
Sphere - Ray intersection.
user3010322
.... But I dun waannnaaa. u.u
sphere ray? come on this is ezpz stuff :p
help me instead~
time well spent
user3010322
04:15
I don't know what I'd help you with. :c
Sucks
@Rapptz whatcha doing?
attempting gamedev
:D
you'll be cowboy casting in no time!
@Rapptz Programmer lifecycle: attempting gamedev... then stops attempting gamedev... attempting gamedev...
04:21
yup
I just forgot what I'm supposed to do...
error: 'constexpr' needed for in-class initialization of static data member 'const float f::x' of non-integral type [-fpermissive]
     static const float x = 10.0f;
                            ^
this will never make sense to me
@Rapptz The out-of-class initialization problem thingie.
@Rapptz I ran into exactly that like 5 min ago and gave up
this is one of those "C++ is retarded" things
04:28
I never understood why const static members couldnt be initialized in class
yeah I know
23
Q: Why I can't initialize non-const static member or static array in class?

FANG YishuWhy I can't initialize non-const static member or static array in a class? class A { static const int a = 3; static int b = 3; static const int c[2] = { 1, 2 }; static int d[2] = { 1, 2 }; }; int main() { A a; return 0; } the compiler issues following errors: g++ m...

@Borgleader The simple answer is because that's not a definition, only a declaration, and you never have an initialization on something that's just a declaration.
There is a "special dispensation" for static const integral types, but it only applies to integral types.
you can now do static constexpr whatever x = whatever;
@Rapptz Yeah--that's one of those that really doesn't make much sense (in context).
though it doesn't work for arrays still
not being able to do static const float x = 1.f doesn't make much sense either
04:34
@Rapptz I don't think they give a shit about making it work for arrays (and neither do I).
I needed it once
I just gave up and removed it

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