because my laptop is too heavy to be portable (battery also dies fast) and taking laptop to school makes life easier. and junior year i doubt i'll have enough time to play anyways
@Columbo btw, your implementation of your relation operators suffers from the common problem of being weird in regards of values such as std::numeric_limits<float>::quiet_NaN ()
at the moment I do some kind of semi-aggressive awping and when I don't have an awp I switch to lurking around the map and trying to flank people with w/e I have
I prefer the ak when I don't have an awp because the first shot is very accurate and a headshot from the ak is a kill
the ak's counterpart (M4A4 or M4A1-S) takes 2 bullets to kill if you hit the head
this is not as much of a problem as it seems because as CT you hold sites anyway and positioning beats accuracy in all cases
@Columbo the problem boils down to the fact that !(a < b) doesn't have to be a <= b for "weird" types/values (such as NAN), I mean - this is a common problem, and depending on how you feel it might not be worth spending time dealing with
it's important that you're able to do a good job with pistols especially, since winning an eco round can save your ass and get the other team in a bad spot
@Columbo ultimately it boils down to being the same thing, and one of the reasons std::rel_ops is considered broken (but only for those "weird" set of entities that yields behavior similar to NaN)
@Columbo it's nothing super important, just the first thing I noticed
I can't understand. I played GTA5 on my friend's ps3 it was playable without any lags and stuttering but then i played it on my macbook pro retina 15-inch which has 750M 2GB dedicated memory -_-. Results were pretty bad. I got those unusually stuttering, fps drops. @Blob
@Columbo hmm, good point - I wonder if one can hack a userland std::addressof that is constexpr.. I started to think about that a while back, but I obviously didn't finish that train of thought
Although you should take into account the fact that Apple's Macs tend to thermal throttle before turning on the fans. Apple prefers silence over performance :P.
@androidplusios.design PS3 version probably runs at 720p (or 1280x720). The larger your resolution is, the more resources you need to render (because you have a bigger back buffer).
@Columbo I'm currently thinking about hacks that would allow your vector implementation to grow, circumventing the rules of constexpr - even without a constexpr counter (but with that it's quite neat)
@Nooble The only reason that card exists is that so NVidia could claim they have the best benchmarks, even though in practice it's not practical to have something that large.
@Ell that's the idea, empirical evidence shows it really depends on what type of laptop you have. In many cases the only effect is to cool your lap. The laptop might even be warmer
#include <iostream> #include <cstring> using namespace std; int main() { char a[100]; cin >>a; if(strcmp(a,"hello world")==0) { cout<<"how are you?"; } return 0; } this doesnot work either. however the below one works. the only difference being if(strcmp(a,"hello world")==0) and if(strcmp(a,"hello")==0). is it that the space between hello and world acting as the '\0'? #include <iostream> #include <cstring> using namespace std; int main() { char a[100]; cin >>a; if(strcmp(a,"hello")==0) { cout<<"how are you?"; } return 0; } — Shrawan Bk1 min ago
I just do not comprehend how someone can believe that posting code in that form is a good idea. I just... don't get it. How is their brain wired up? Badly, it seems.
Why are you using the webm output format? If you don't want output, use the null output format. Then the output file/device doesn't even really matter.