@R.MartinhoFernandes I've heard some Germans recommend large doses of Jagermeister. It tastes about like cough syrup, and even if it doesn't help you recover any faster at least after a few shots you'll pass out for a while...
@Nooble Given a dimension, (640, 480) for a window, you have 2 options, to use real values for inner objects or absolute values, the window will set the absolute value to every inner object based on their real dimension and thus their absolute dimension will change, and every inner object will do the same to children. What is best for you, to resize objects based in the global dimension or to resize objects based on their parent's dimension?
@Nooble Take in consideration that if a button has 0.1 as width for a panel with 200 as width its absolute value will be 20, if you attach the button to another panel with 400 as width its absolute value will be 40. It's the same for X, Y positions.
shared_ptr<Thing> thing = make_shared<Thing>();
thing = nullptr; // i want thing to be destroyed here
std::this_thread::sleep_for(some_time);
// its actually destroyed after the sleep... i think
@doc Event system is already coded with lambdas and delegates. The question was made since most frameworks deliver absolute positions and dimensions. SFML, OGRE, and such. Ogre lets you to set real positions but they will set the dimension based in the current dimension, not in parent widgets.
@doc Well, 2d objects. These are "textures", but in the end is the same, a 2d object that wraps a texture that you can handle to switch to other texture when clicked or released.
@doc I'm unaware of Qt positioning model, I've tried it but what didn't fit me very well was the signal/slot system, along with Q everything, the need for a object to inherit from Q_Object in order to be signal/slot able.
@doc It is fine now to be used for applications and your own textures but I came into trouble when creating grid-like widgets that auto-resize and aligns when a new widget is attached.
@doc All widgets work fine and auto resize but using grids is giving me a pain since they are resized to parent I can't attach horizontal_groups to vertical_groups.
@doc They scale up, 0.1 as width for any widget is 0.1 from parent's width, same for position and mouse reacts good, everything is achieved but java-swing-like grids.
I'm not really sure about implementing those tough.
Wayland is a protocol that specifies the communication between a display server (called Wayland compositor) and its clients, as well as a reference implementation of the protocol in the C programming language.
Wayland is developed by a group of volunteers led by Kristian Høgsberg as a free and open-source software community-driven project with the aim of replacing the X Window System with a modern, simpler windowing system in Linux and Unix-like operating systems. Project's source code is published under the terms of the Historical Permission Notice and Disclaimer (HPND) license.
As part of its...
There is a library that replaces DirectX calls into OpenGL calls seamlessly, I'll check it out, just a second. I think that UnrealEngine and CryEngine use it. It is open sourced.
if anything the reason opengl is so large is because of them; the CAD customers of gpu vendors refused to move to shader based pipeline stuff in opengl 3 which caused all the longs peak confusion
There is a lot of ancient crap in OpenGL that nobody in their right mind would use today (e.g., support for 4- and 8-bit "indexed" graphics modes), and getting rid of it would be good for everybody.
@doc Not really--vendors (especially nVidia) are fine with OpenGL anyway. The real problem is that MS managed to sell enough game developers on DX that the competition to produce the fastest card largely came down to competition to render DX the fastest. The vendors didn't really like that, but had little real say in the matter.
@doc There are a number of people here who dislike OpenGL themselves, and attribute quite a few things to vendors that don't seem to fit very well with any comments I've ever seen from the vendors to whom they were attributed.
The experience I had in video game environments was OpenGL first due to implementation in Android, IOS, Blackberry, Linux, Mac. DirectX was later added since it was required for all shaders to be rewritten. But in fact, what I've seen in video game companies is that they target OpenGL first due to cross-platform development.
Many of the answers here are really, really good. But the OpenGL and Direct3D (D3D) issue should probably be addressed. And that requires... a history lesson.
And before we begin, I know far more about OpenGL than I do about Direct3D. I've never written a line of D3D code in my life, and I've wr...
He didn't ask "is it that DirectX has at some point in its history been easier or better than OpenGL, and how did this change over time with every new release of each API and what market conditions led to those releases being made at the time that they were made? and more information as well please"
If you are a bunch of twats and you want the world to do what you say, about the only way you're going to be able to even have a remote chance at it is to take hostages and become feared for following through on your threats.
@Rapptz Read it, but then forget at least 50% of it. It's a wild mixture of everything from insightful to grossly inaccurate, and probably a little of almost everything in between.
Don't make the mistake that world leaders have made with smaller terrorist groups, of looking down on ISIS as some sort of group of IQ-limited sheep farmers with knock-off Soviet-era weaponry. They are not.
The only differences between us and them are: (1) ideology, and (2) brazenness of coercion methods.
I think I wasted most of my night setting up a Spotify playlist to match the tracks that came off the Spotify radio all day long (thanks, last.fm!), and that took forever.
There is a parent class with children but the parent class came from an obscured API, each parent delivers a message to children and reflection is not possible.
That way is possible to deliver orders without receiving an answer. Just like Twitter.
UNLESS you know what are they talking about and what's the current subject. But since right to left languages can be created with native languages, it is hard for some to understand the crypto-pseudo-language they use.
@Borgleader The most I've ever pulled from a single machine was 900W. Dual-socket CPU with 16 server FB-DIMMs, a shit-ton of hard drives, and a mid-end gaming card.
@Mysticial At least in the US, most older circuits were limited to 1650 watts, but most current ones are good to 2200, so they would support that, but not (much of) anything else on the same circuit.
Of course, it's a 220 volt-only item, and I really don't know much (if anything) about what size breakers they typically used on 220 volt circuits in Europe. Here 220v volt circuits are usually good for very high power, but they're normally only supplied to a few specific spots that need exactly that (e.g., stove and air conditioner).
@AMostMajestuousCapybara "power-hungry"? What do you think you're talking about? 60Hz transmits through transformers substantially more efficiently than 50 Hz does. Granted, a higher frequency would be better still, but 60 is clearly better than 50.
@MarkGarcia I figured at least one person would get some enjoyment from it. :-)
@StackedCrooked You might be able to tack constexpr onto the functions. Actually being able to use them in cases that called for compile time execution is a whole different question.
@MarkGarcia It does occur to me that 8 queens would be an interesting one to write as a template metaprogram that printed out the solutions in error messages at compile time. I'm almost tempted to work on it...
I am trying to solve the Towers of Hanoi at compile-time, but I have discovered a problem:
template<int src, int dst>
struct move_disc
{
// member access will print src and dst
};
template<int n, int src, int tmp, int dst>
struct hanoi
{
hanoi<n-1, src, dst, tmp> before;
typename mo...
@MarcoA. What stuff? That looks to me like pure C++98. For that matter, the C++ features it uses were becoming well known by around 1995 or 1996, so it's close to 20 years old...
Whats the correct return error code if the file size exceeds the limit when reading Currently I am ERROR_FILE_TOO_LARGE but the description is The file size exceeds the limit allowed and cannot be saved. I am not saving. I am just reading
So I spent a couple hours playing with Intel's Vtune. It's pretty neat. Didn't take me much time to find a couple of loads that were cache missing a lot.
So I prefetched them out and the analyzer said they weren't a problem anymore.
The other thing I played with was Intel's Cilk Plus. It's pretty awesome. y-cruncher has a routine called DispatchTasks(taskA, taskB). Which basically runs the two things in parallel. It has always been implemented by spawning a thread.
So it was a 2-line change to switch it to Cilk Plus.
When I ran it, it achieved CPU utilizations that I've never seen before. Problem is, it has so much overhead, that it ended up being slower than my old method of thread spawning... lol
So what did I accomplish tonight? Absolutely nothing. :)
@orlp If that's the case then I'll just make the program download hordes of virus code and let the anti-virus do its job of CPU utilization (which is what it does best)!