« first day (1510 days earlier)      last day (3665 days later) » 

00:00
Well most games are known to be very bad ports or just poorly optimized or released in debug compilation mode.
when I close a level, and I'm taken through two loading screens, one for the menu, the other for the new level, and I see the framerate dropping abnormally then being fixed by a restart
I can only think of resource leaks
Ell
Ell
SIGGRAPH is awesome
Probably some unreleased graphics assets which interfere with the graphics loop yet aren't used
still resource leaks
yup
00:01
uncleared stuff from the previous level still being updated
no idea
@Puppy That's of course correct. My point was: Is there any large, fairly complete open-source API that has a good design? (Not that they couldn't have one.)
maybe they included -bitcoin- woofwoof_woof_woof_woofwoofwoofcoin miners!
user1646075
it's the AI. the NPC are sentient, and they're running around the GPU trying to escape and survive the checkpoints.
^^ It didn't delete the question. I'm confused now...
@Columbo Probably not, because the number of competent programmers that have a say in how large APIs look like is close to 0.
(Hell, if that sentence was just "the number of competent programmers is close to 0", it would still be true.)
00:07
@Griwes Not really
Perhaps the percentage
Yeah, that would be slightly closer to the reality.
But just slightly. :P
@Griwes .. pretty much. Why would any competent programmer participate in open source projects when he could do some work that he would get paid for?
@Columbo Notice that I didn't use "open source" in my claim.
@Griwes Ah, yes, yes indeed.
Commercial APIs are also horrible.
Often even more so than open-source ones.
00:09
@Griwes Are they? On the other hand, why wouldn't they be
Wait... so would you say libpng doesn' t have a well designed API?
@Griwes Well, the main feature people pay for is 24h bug fixes and support (and such), isn't it?
Or is it not large?
Yes, because corpos love "design patterns".
@QuestionC That's C, so... hardly.
png_malloc nope.
@Columbo Dunno about that part, but corporations tend to attract people who just admire overengineering, patterns, "managers" of kinds, abstracting everything 5 times more than necessary, naming all the things horribly, and not listening to common sense.
Ell
Ell
@Columbo glm has a good api
00:14
Or s/tend to attract/by they nature put together many/
Ell
Ell
I've heard llvm has a good api
hm nullptr == 0 is true on MSVC++, is it also the same for all the other compilers or isn't this in the standard?
Ell
Ell
some boost libs have good apis
@R.MartinhoFernandes "live" as it were?
@Gizmo Should be, yes.
00:15
@Columbo let's hope for no bugs ^.^ thanks :)
@Gizmo Both are "null pointer constants".
C is like the lingua franca of linking. If you disqualify any API written in it, I think I found your problem.
C APIs are almost always completely terrible.
wasn't the point of nullptr to be a constant for null pointers regardless of implementation?
so that there is never the assumption that 0 == NULL == nullptr?
(Probably has something to do with C being completely braindead.)
00:16
"Two operands of type std::nullptr_t or one operand of type std::nullptr_t and the other a null pointer
constant compare equal."
[expr.eq]/4
@AlexM. I never assume because I shot myself not once by assuming
@Columbo Oh, so it's by definition, not by some weird conversion rules. Nice.
Actually I once crashed everything that I could crash just by assuming.
@QuestionC Who starred that, lol.
@Columbo ah good
00:17
@QuestionC look, even your nick tells me to question C.
@QuestionC Also nothing wrong (and nothing hard) in providing proper C++ wrappers over the "linker level" C API (or rather, over your library's ABI, because that's what you really meant).
my acutal worst assumption was that I could gracefuly exit and in meantime perform a database save operation whenever a crash occurs.. jeez. never assume. especially not when your process is dying
@Griwes Someone with good taste starred it =)
@QuestionC Someone having no clue that C should die already.
I recommend quadruple checking every rule
maybe formally prove everything
00:19
C should die? why.. it's much easier to write a C compiler than a C++ compiler
@Gizmo What kind of argument is that
why do you think no one can eve manage to implement the whole standard by the time a next standard has been released?
I fail to see how that's an argument.
That's like saying you should provide proper python wrappers over your C API.

A lot of professional APIs are multi-language, but I wouldn't expect that from something free.
Ell
Ell
@Columbo a fine one imho
00:20
It's easier to write a compiler for brainfuck than for C.
So... should brainfuck dominate?
It's a nonargument.
Ell
Ell
but brainfuck isn't half as easy to write and use as C
@Ell No, it's completely nonsensical.
@QuestionC C APIs are almost always horrible, period.
@Columbo well I can pretty surely say if we need low level access yet high level languages then C is one of the easiest and best options
@Ell Yes, and that does not apply to C and C++ ... !?
00:21
I might've seen one or two that made sense.
Ell
Ell
@Columbo pardon?
if you have a platform that has no C++ compiler.. I wish you good luck
Ell
Ell
Can you rephrase? I don't understand
^this!
The rest is just "ugh, manual error handling? No, I'll just reimplement this thing myself, thanks."
Ell
Ell
Not all systems are targetted by c++
00:21
Yes let's kill C APIs, not like it's the only way to have a stable cross-language interface
Ell
Ell
I'd always prefer c++ over c when possible
but it is not always possible
and what cat said!
And yes let's kill C and forget about all the valid uses for it
@Gizmo If you have a platform with no C++ compilers, wait those 4 months for LLVM to add a backend for it vOv
@CatPlusPlus There are no valid uses for C.
All we need is a stable ABI for C++. :P
I have a good emoticon for that gimme a sec
lol
00:23
@CatPlusPlus I though you were a computer. You don't need SECONDS!
max 2 ms.
@Gizmo You mean to tell me that C++ isn't significantly easier to write and use than C? (If you know what you're doing.)
@Griwes It's called C ABI
3 mins ago, by Griwes
All we need is a stable ABI for C++. :P
We do, it's called C ABI
00:26
@Columbo it is easier, in my opinion at least
Like, an ABI that actually supports C++.
@Gizmo Typo.
@AlexM. No, that's not the point at all. Most of the real point is to have a null pointer constant that can't accidentally be used as an int. In the long term, you'd also like to eliminate all implicit conversions between pointers and ints, but that is longer term. I don't think conversion from 0 to null pointer is even deprecated yet, even though nearly everybody wishes it were gone already.
If you want a stable ABI that can be used cross-language then "supporting" C++ is not a feature, it's a liability
But yeah, whatever, do live in a world where no progress is ever needed vOv
00:27
@Columbo Well I myself do preffer C++, but reading the docs and things takes more time than debugging and writing
I'm just a hobby programmer so I don't do it for a living
Because being stuck with decades old ABI is completely, absurdly terrible.
Ell
Ell
C ABI isn't standardised is it?
SysV ABI is.
It's simple enough to get by without standardising (plus platform vendors dictate it which helps)
@Ell Not formally, no--but for most practical purposes it is on most typical platforms.
00:28
Please tell me why we need a C++ ABI for things that have nothing to do with C++
And who do you think will ever implement that nonsense
@CatPlusPlus You are kind of right - because it would require coordinating multiple languages to actually try to work similarly, which is mostly an utopian dream.
But grr C
Any ~~~~modern~~~~~ ABI you'll come up with is likely to be similar or even the same
Still, C for that sucks, because using it basically means dumbing the interface down to mechanisms no-one wants to use.
Even if you had a C++ ABI, it would be useless if you're not working in C++. A C programmer can't use your vtable madness.
No, it's dumbing the interface down to mechanisms everyone can use
00:30
I don't give a flying fuck about C programmers.
Just write your low level code around the C API and then never touch it again.
Nobody cares about your fancy C++ API
Yes, never, except when it needs changing.
It's not usable at system level
There we go again
00:31
@CatPlusPlus ...because we are using C as ABI.
@CatPlusPlus I'd rather it was not a C++ API per se, but it would be really nice to have an object ABI so (for example) a C++ object could be used from C# (and vice versa) without jumping through hoops. Unfortunately, that gets pretty difficult from other viewpoints (dealing with things like GC, not just the ABI itself).
It's a vicious circle.
endless discussion
@JerryCoffin Yeh
I hope you guys reach std::numeric_limits<unsigned long long>::max()
discussions.
00:31
@Griwes For a reason
@Gizmo __int128_t
because with such speed it certainly is possible
Keeping C++ ABI stable is impossibly hard
@CatPlusPlus We are using C ABI because X, and X because we are using C ABI.
@Griwes didn't know that exists?
00:32
(Even within one platform one compiler)
Notice the pattern?
Ell
Ell
It would require standardising standard library implementation wouldn't it?
It would require a lot of things
It's funny how I got 155 rep yesterday for doing essentially nothing. inb4 cat lol you post on snack overflow
00:33
It's like with C++ driver interface for Linux kernel. "Why are there no C++ drivers?" "Because there's no C++ interface." "Why is there no C++ interface?" "Because there are no C++ drivers."
We are stuck in this loop pretty much on every front.
There's no C++ interface because core developers don't care about C++ interface
if you have C code all over the place can't you call C from C++ and C++ from C?
Ell
Ell
the classic chicken and egg
There's no loop
@Griwes Why is that:
> 13.11.2014 is the day I lost any interest in C++'s future. Because it has none.
Ell
Ell
00:34
@JerryCoffin at least the layout, calling convention, padding though right?
There's just people who are cargoculting 'grr C' and not thinking
@Columbo The committee is mostly total idiots.
@Griwes What specific decision...?
It's extremely easy to break C++ ABI
Unintentionally
@Columbo Want to scare the C++ standards committee? Run into the room, yell "monads folds monads monadic bind folds" and run out.
00:36
They'd only be scared because there's a lunatic idiot running around
Ell
Ell
> Binary files /dev/null and b/assets/Swerve Shot/swerve shot.blend differ
thanks git
@CatPlusPlus Sure. It's also easy to keep multiple versions of the same library (for different ABI versions). It's also kinda easy to keep multiple versions of the same symbol in a single library (if the entire environment agreed to follow that).
Don't inline shit like that
@Griwes I don't get it, but I recall some proposed feature including monads
00:37
@Griwes lol
(Notice how glibc symbols have this tiny "@GLIBC2.23" (or whatever the versions are) in their names.)
@Columbo "But why call it monads? Why have an uniform monadic bind syntax?"
@Griwes Notice how that causes endless problems
@Griwes Is it about this?
(@folds: yes, there's been a proposal. I want to see how long it lives.)
Ell
Ell
@Mysticial lol
I liked that
00:38
@Mysticial Fuck all language comparisons that imply C is the normal one
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Yeah.
@CatPlusPlus Notice how that shows that even system ABIs are horribly unstable.
And your solution is to make ABI that's even harder to keep stable
Good fucking job
@milleniumbug I concur.
What was that about overengineering
00:40
@CatPlusPlus ABIs are already unstable.
@Ell Even exactly what factors a standard needs to consider probably vary by platform.
So making them worse helps how?
(it doesnt)
Heck; noticed that C++ got this beautiful inline namespace thingy?
@Griwes Microsoft managed to keep ABI pretty stable.
@VáclavZeman And keep everything else absolutely insane.
00:41
@VáclavZeman Mediocre, but yes, quite stable.
Yeah WinAPI breakages usually happen because of behaviour changes, not ABI
Also MSVC's runtimes also come in multiple versions.
libc is not really relevant
Oh. Suddenly libc is not relevant.
Is libc++ also not relevant?
It was never relevant to this discussion
00:43
Also it's not overengineering; it's trying to solve a problem (that, as you have noticed yourself, is not solved even by using C for binary "compatibility").
@Griwes This won't help you if you break ABI because a complex object size changed and you have it passed by value on the ABI boundary
Anyway, I should probably sleep now, since for some reason I have to wake up in the morning and go to work to pretend I did something useful after the day.
@Griwes What problem
Because it's not a problem of ABI stability
Because your 'solution' makes it worse
@CatPlusPlus I changed the object? Good, inline namespace v1 -> inline namespace v2. :D
If you know your change broke ABI
Ell
Ell
00:44
I think the proposal has good suggestions
My solution helps you not recompile everything.
@Griwes And now go and propagate that manually through all usages.
Ell
Ell
Your abi will change when your api changes anyway won't it?
Not necessarily
00:45
@Griwes No, it doesn't. struct oops { that_type_you_changed x; };
ABI can change without changing the API and vice versa
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure. The solution assumes we have better tooling for compiling libraries than we have right now. :P
When you take everything, and change it something else, you will have a different thing!
AMAZING
But I want to have both things!
00:47
Plain C doesn't let me have both things!
Better reinvent everything because I want to have std::string on ABI boundary which nobody will ever consume
Reinventing things is good.
Have fun doing that then, but never get anywhere near making decisions in real world
Ell
Ell
I'm confused about what this discussion is about
kthx
@Ell grr c
Ell
Ell
00:48
I thought it was about c++ abi standardisation?
@Griwes Would your glorious C++ API be remotely usable by someone coding in assembler?
Ell
Ell
C abis break on changes too don't they? :S
@QuestionC Why would anyone be writing code in assembly nowadays?
@QuestionC I don't care about assembler! In my perfect world everyone will code in C++!
00:49
s/assembler/assembly/ guys
@Ell Yes ABIs break on breaking changes
also not C++, rather my vaporware language called vapor!
@Griwes whatthefuckever
Because if you can't do it in assembler, you probably can't do it in anything besides C++
My ABI nobody can use is better because
its new
Ell
Ell
00:50
@CatPlusPlus right so I'm confused a to why a c++ abi would be worse than a c one if they both break on change
you probably never heard of it
its not mainstream
@QuestionC A shocking truth: nobody cares about assembly nowadays.
Sure it's not mainstream :P
Mainstream people would never understand why it's necessary :P
@Ell Because it's much easier to make unintentional breaking changes with more complex ABI like C++
C#, Delphi...
@Ell Because a C++ ABI has to take into account overloading functions, vtables, lots of ugly stuff humans shouldn't think about. A C ABI basically looks like the code.
00:51
Plus it requires much more effort on the consumer side
(Did I mention the ABI allows you to get automagically generated proxies between different languages? :P)
It's called libffi
@QuestionC Humans shouldn't think about function overloads? lel
Good job not solving anything yet again!
@CatPlusPlus Or a zillion of other existing solutions.
00:52
@Griwes Not how to name them uniquely.
@QuestionC But... in C people do have to think about how to name them uniquely...
I'd rather deal with that Wide ABI with randomised function names
@CatPlusPlus lol
hehe, that was funny
00:53
Oh god help you if your API uses templates too.
@CatPlusPlus GUID..
Some shit just isn't useful to people who aren't C++ programmers.
@QuestionC Of course it does, duh.
Random GUID!
Un-templated APIs are unhelpful!
00:54
Sometimes I wonder if Griwes isn't just Bartek's runaway second personality.
@QuestionC But it's useful to people who are, so we shouldn't dumb it down.
I'm just gonna make a page that's 1920x1080 of just this dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/26824/SA/emot-jerkbag.gif and paste it every time
(Do you also want to remove types, because assembly pretty much doesn't have types?)
@R.MartinhoFernandes :D
@Griwes lol
We should make an ABI that has first-level support for every language ever invented then
@CatPlusPlus Yes!
00:55
Why is C++ special
And allows generating wrappers that translate between similar constructs on the fly.
Ell
Ell
Couldn't you just have the compiler emit the ABI against which you can check for breaking changes on compiles at a later date?
Just to get out of the weeds a little...
Would you say the windows API is bad? Like... what's a good API?
Ell
Ell
I this k the windows api is relatively okay
00:58
Good API makes simple things simple and complex things possible
@QuestionC Cue "it's C"
There was some guy who reimplemented COM presenting at C++Now.
@CatPlusPlus [Not that I think you're serious, but...] certainly pointless and impractical, and probably impossible. Quite a few languages have been invented for specific hardware, and attempting to supporting them outside that environment varies from pointless to impossible.
@JerryCoffin We'll just reinvent things until it's possible!
Ell
Ell
00:59
Why can't you just do what I said to prevent abi changes?
@JerryCoffin He was mocking me, you should probably point that message at me :P
Ell
Ell
Ie dump abi to a file for checking against next time

« first day (1510 days earlier)      last day (3665 days later) »