i'm interested into learning more about this (I have zero C experience), do you know any good resources? google isn't very helpful... C + callbacks + context
hm guys does someone here have some experience with compiling boost? I mean, my only question is how long it will take before b2 --link=static --threading=multi --runtime-link=static --build-type=complete --prefix=C:\Programs\Boost\installed finishes? :)
is there any thread on meta discussing of the possibility of notifying a user when he's the subject of a "meta trial" for something he did? It seems fair to be at least notified and say his thoughts when somebody is accusing him of something he did.
@Gizmo depends on your system, but that it compiles doesn't mean that it finished without errors, and ... well, installing boost from source can be fun.
@BartekBanachewicz i checked out your library, but it seems that writing it for macos would be like reimplementing everything in it. From the multiplatforms libs i've seen, glfw is the smallest one that seems to work.
Honestly no, POSIX lays claim to all identifiers suffixed with _t, see GNU - Reserved Names. So POSIX considers itself free to, now or at any point in the future, declare a new type with that suffix in the global namespace. POSIX isn't C++ so a new type won't be nested in std it will be global. If that type conflicts with a type in an existing codebase, then that codebase is considered to be (and have always been) in the wrong for not playing by the rules. — EoinJun 26 at 14:05
Wait wat. Is that true? We can't use identifiers ending in _t in user code?
@BartekBanachewicz i know, but i will be calling opengl myself, I just need a window, and max input (i'll put that in a different wrapper). If creating the window fails (or the gl context), you are screwed anyways... fprintf an error and terminate.
@thecoshman I played Pirate Fluxx at the SPIEL '14, which had 2 creeper cards, and that was boring. I remembered the Zombie version having a lot more, so I got that
i've heard the soundtrack should be good, the nicolas jaar essential mix starts with an interview to angelo badalamenti https://www.google.de/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCMQtwIwAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fvimeo.com%2F18413925&ei=SihFVP2SBYuaygP-iIDwDg&usg=AFQjCNEElB-d0JR_Ek1V1dwLCk2ntzDxYw&sig2=fsTcwBtAc_EqhIDJk0QTKA&bvm=bv.77648437,d.bGQ
@Xeo I actually thought Pirate was a great version of the game. Sure it's not got a load of creepers, but it has the surprise cards which, trust me, can really change a game.
The rules (which did not change in C++11):
Reserved in any scope, including for use as implementation macros:
identifiers beginning with an underscore and an uppercase letter
identifiers containing adjacent underscores (or "double underscore")
Reserved in the global namespaces:
identifiers b...
> The rule about any identifier ending with '_t' surprised me a lot. I think that is a POSIX standard (not sure yet) looking for clarification and official chapter and verse. This is from the GNU libtool manual, listing reserved names.
He likes to read the standard abstract and assume everything in C is in C++, even though it makes no sense (1: why the fuck would they rehash so much then? 2: it's full of conflicts, then!)
@BartekBanachewicz Feel free to add that. If you read the answer, you will notice that the additional restrictions are both in their own section and qualified, so make sure you do the same for Bartek's rules.
@Griwes (The answer is also correct in that it mentions this. Also, questioning the question's tags does not make discussing rules irrelevant. It derails the topic.)
I find the list of POSIX reserved names important because it is a widely used standard and because it is likely to cause conflicts with seemingly ok code.
No, seriously. When a standard decides to allow things that should absolutely be functions be macros instead, which leads to huge clusterfuckery, because its prime language is just bad at inlining things, the standard is broken beyond repair.
@R.MartinhoFernandes During my break, people at my work decided we needed a web app for something. Despite my suggestions, they wrote it in PHP, because they knew it and assured me it's going to be a small prototype thing. A few weeks later, it's facing our clients and collapsing under load, bugs, lack of security, means of debugging, monitoring and everything.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Seriously, I am all ears when it comes to learning new things. I love learning and utilizing niche software solutions. But PHP is just FUBAR. It's useless. Alternatives outsmart it in every aspect.
Incidentally, I started the embedded C project recently and conclusions are similar.
And sure, you can wank all day about how PHP sucks from a technical standpoint, but in that period PHP devs are too busy making stuff people actually use.
@BartekBanachewicz Yes because, unless you haven't understood anything yet, real software is about making money, not beautiful abstractions through elegant code or whatever.