there's this armed nuke in Wasteland 2 in a museum, and you're free to trigger it
when that happens the game over screen essentially says
"You're all dead blah blah, maybe the next generation will do better OH WAIT THERE WON'T BE ONE BECAUSE <premature reveal of big bad final boss, his plot, final enemies and essentially the end story>"
I have never been trolled by a game developer like this
@Ell Because you like your friend(s) to know what makes you (un)happy? Because that enables them to make you less unhappy/more happy - assuming they might want to
Posting an answer at SO can be a lot like teen-age sex. Ten minutes of fun and then you'll have to support it for the rest of your life. — Hans Passant12 hours ago
Badges don't necessarily "encourage" what they're awarded for. E.g. Tumbleweed hardly encourages people to post questions that go unanswered for a long time. — sehe1 min ago
In other news, my very own filtering proxy (family filter style) filters 'The Definitive C++ Book List' . Did not see that coming.
(yes I'm dogfooding it to see whether it is any good)
Try asking in the room with all the moderators and admins? They've got to be good for something. Maybe they know which room to go to for laptop purchasing advice
I think promoting the idea that games are trying to solve problems that require special patterns a bit stupid. Unless he's just trying to show how the common patterns apply to games.
¬_¬ an no, patterns are not bad, it's just bad to apply them rigidly and without consideration.
ah, the latter
> with an emphasis on how they can be applied to game programming.
Yeah, reading shimming the intro stuff it seems 'ok'
@Xeo why would clean code and design be something different for game programming than for normal programming?
@ScottW what part of "game programming" is not part of "normal programming"? Are there things that appear only in game programming and nowhere else? I would think that game programming is a subset of normal programming.
@ScottW "Game programming is cool, so usual best practices and rules don't apply and I can write whatever crappy code I want" ?
@ScottW well, I think a good deal of it has to do with scope creep and lack of time put towards refactoring
@ArneMertz From what little I read so far, it seems to be trying to point out how these 'problems' in game programming are not that specific to games, it just that you can't see the generic problem that easily.
Games are also usually short term projects, a few years. That said, I'm working on a ten year old or so code-base and it's so very bad.
No big chance of running into it without literals (because I don't actually type my variables as long). It's just that I kinda mentally assume 123ul is gonna be 64 bit.
@ArneMertz of course not, but in a project that you think you'll only be working on for a couple years, why spend half of that thinking up and then maintaining a good design, just hack it together? (I think they call this 'exposition'... ie, I'm speaking the thoughts of what others seem to think)
@thecoshman the answer is in there... "you think you'll only be working on for a couple years..." but history shows that a) people are working with a codebase longer than they originally thought, and b) even a couple years are enough to feel the pain of crappy code
I think it was @sbi who retweeted some brilliantly evil idea. You have students working on a project, then half way through, swap their projects around. Suddenly, they have to work with someone else's code-base to solve some other problem.
@thecoshman what do you mean? Sure, they work on different file systems, and like I said, are handled differently in terms of permissions, but functionally, how do they differ?
@ArneMertz even better, have them hand in the projects half way through, then give them a project to finish from the person the previous year :P
@jalf functionally they are the same yes, but AFAIK the data the would be committed about a linux symlink mean nothing when read on Widnows. Just like using a dot prefix to hide folders on linux means nothning special to Windows.
Also, I don't think Windows symlinks can do hard and soft links..
well, I guess a normal short cut is more or less a soft link...
@ArneMertz plus that way, you can have them also deal with changing teams. Maybe they need to spread out some more to be smaller teams, maybe they need to combine a bit.
maybe have each team pick one other person from the class they want. So your team gets to pull in who they most want, but will also loose someone they have no control over.
@ArneMertz exactly.
basically, for the entire year, make them suffer every bullshit problem you have to deal with IRL.
At least in uni you have to learn to cope with incompetent team members :P
Well, you let them say who they'd want, like a top three. Then you just see how it plays out. As a lecturer it also helps make it clear who is the better students, because everyone will be after them,
@ArneMertz erm, no. IF the boss comes to you saying to 'quickly tweak the protoype that is horrible into something you'll support for ages' you have to say no. You have to more or less re-write from scratch, only this time you factor in handling all the problems you glossed over for the prototype as you could control them away.
ok, so that book does actually do a good job of explaining stuff.
@VáclavZeman I was in Paris a few times but the last time was 8 years ago. I want to get around but carrying around a map seems kind of silly, what do people use for directions in Paris? I noticed Google Maps doesn't work with metro
@Xeo "If you don’t want the base class to take such an active role, you can provide an initialization function to pass it in or use the Service Locator pattern to find it."
@BenjaminGruenbaum Last time I was there I used Nokia maps on E52. You do not need much more than to find street names and where they are from your Google map. Then you just use common sense and the metro transport maps to get there.
@VáclavZeman yeah, I know I can get by without navigation - I've done so successfully the last 3 times I was there. I can probably navigate Paris well enough by foot, I know where stuff is located and I remember it well from last time. I'd just rather not mess with it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Unless you are there on official business and you need to be at places on time, then what is the problem? Getting lost is part of being a tourist. :)
@BenjaminGruenbaum It's weird because he goes on at length about how bad singletons are, but then it appears he's just parroting all that and doesn't really understand his own argument.
If a certain object is removed from the stage, one of its subobjects should get a "removed from stage" event. It doesn't, if a certain other, completely unrelated object, is also removed from the stage in the same frame.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was just weary of what /that/ might do on other platforms. I have bad experiences with ull being required on MSVC but breaking compilation on GCC. I'd have to find out the exact case (it was with JSON variant construction)
@Rage How long is a piece of string? You should ideally use the features of the language where they're best applied. So knowing as much as possible about those tools is essential I'd say.
@TheForestAndTheTrees You see, now I am a college student. And they teach crap in college. And they don't even let me spend much of my time for practical programming. So, that's why I wanted to know, how deep I need to go into STL to grab a programming job.
Coz, I want to learn whatever is possible in this less time, but only if it is absolutely essential.
The thing about good programming jobs is that they're full of people who don't stop learning just because they think "this is good enough for me to get a job"