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19:00
@Ell that seems wrong imo
Ell
Ell
@Prismatic why?
@TonyTheLion reminds me of @MartinJames
Ell
Ell
12
Q: How to avoid "managers" in my code

miguel.martinI'm currently re-designing my Entity System, for C++, and I have a lot of Managers. In my design, I have these classes, in order to tie my library together. I've heard a lot of bad things when it comes to "manager" classes, perhaps I'm not naming my classes appropriately. However, I have no idea ...

^I'm impressed with the density of uselessness in this design
seems like starting a game and running a game shares enough overlap to be the same thing. Like the UI that you use to start the game; isnt that a part of the game?
Ell
Ell
@Prismatic I'm wondering this
my terminology isn't clear also
The ui you use at the main menu to click "Start Campaign" or w/e will be different from the in-game ui which is like "attack", "build", etc.
but for example the main menu code wouldn't need a terrain renderer etc.
19:06
@Ell That's ECS for you.
Ell
Ell
@Puppy yeah
I always wondered what part of it people found useful
@Ell aggregation as a concept
thats what I like anyway
C++ has that
it's called "A class with some members"
user1804599
yaycakes
user1804599
My VM now compiles bytecode to Erlang modules.
19:10
awesome
wait what the hell is erlang
user1804599
It's a programming language.
user1804599
Erlang (/ˈɜrlæŋ/ ER-lang) is a general-purpose, concurrent, garbage-collected programming language and runtime system. The sequential subset of Erlang is almost a functional language (excluding certain BIFs such as those manipulating the process dictionary), with eager evaluation, single assignment, and dynamic typing. It was designed by Ericsson to support distributed, fault-tolerant, soft-real-time, non-stop applications. It supports hot swapping, so that code can be changed without stopping a system. While threads require external library support in most languages, Erlang provides language-level...
@Ell That was a pretty good answer from the Lounge @Pup, and surprisingly free of insults ;)
> How would you avoid managers in this code? Delete basically all of it.
sound advice from the Puppy
it cant be bad code if it doesn't exist!
19:16
indeed.
The reason I didn't use std::type_info is because I was trying to avoid RTTI. I mentioned the framework was aimed at games, which is basically the reason I'm not using typeid or dynamic_cast. Thanks for the feedback though, I appreciate it. — miguel.martin Feb 13 '13 at 5:54
I don't get it
@Prismatic Brevity is the soul of excellence (especially in lingerie).
7
rtti is slow (is his reaoning)
Is it slow? I heard that dynamic_cast is supposedly slow, but he doesn't use it and he doesn't provide an alternative.
19:20
@Prismatic Pity that he's wrong.
slow is relative?
and also
But there's no reason typeid should be slow
even if he was right, that's not "Let's re-implement RTTI but shittier"
that's "Let's contribute patches to the compiler".
typeid is literally about 1-2 pointer de-refs on Itanium.
for any object.
you can use static type ids
19:21
@Prismatic Gee, I wonder how RTTI is implemented?
probably with a whole bunch of static objects.
Hmmm, I should look up how dynamic_cast is implemented
@milleniumbug It's astoundingly boring, I assure you.
Ell
Ell
IDK why the average game programmer thinks their implementation of RTTI will be faster than the compiler vendors
@milleniumbug How long is a rope? There are certainly operations that faster than dynamic_cast, but if you want the same capabilities, chances of doing the job better than the compiler are pretty slim.
@JerryCoffin Well, it really depends on the structure of your inheritance hierarchy and whether you're trying to side cast or not and that kind of thing.
the fast cases of dynamic_cast are very fast.
it's mostly when you get into virtual inheritance etc or very long inheritance chains that you're going to run into trouble
even then dynamic_cast isn't that slow
19:26
@Ell What about the above average game programmer?
rotfl Higher-order game programmer
I'm sure there are situations where you can solve specific problems better with specific solutions than general solutions
Sure, but not by cargo culting
@Ell Dynamic composition part
@Gizmo The above average game programmer doesn't labor under such delusions.
Ell
Ell
19:28
I'm prolly confusing ECS with bad design generally
@Ell That's because it's a bad design, generally.
suumon your inner mike acton
Ell
Ell
but the dynamic part makes sense vOv
And then you have better potential for automatic data reordering for better cache usage
I haven't yet looked up how it's implemented but given the description I would do const std::unordered_map<std::pair<std::type_index, std::type_index>, std::ptrdiff_t>
19:28
let the way of data oriented design guide you
But gamedev butts can't think on higher level that their OMG MACHINE CACHE shit so they do this kind of thing manually
lel I never think about cache
And before they even have actual usage patterns nailed down
I just code away and don't give anything about it
@milleniumbug That would be unimplementable, because you're a) consuming O(n^2) memory and time filling out this structure, and b), things like threading contention on updating the structure for dynamically linked libraries, etc.
19:30
While it's a perfect candidate for a compiler task
You can get usage patterns with instrumentation, then feed it to a compiler and have your component storage reordered automatically
I actually want to write something like this one day
Maybe
@Gizmo you can be reckless if you dont have performance requirements you care about
@CatPlusPlus How would that work for dynamic components?
the compiler can't re-order components that are added and removed dynamically.
if they're static then just use a regular class with data members and fuck ECS.
@Prismatic just runt it and I'm happy xD
Predictable ones should be catchable
And even if you don't use the dynamic composition part the reordering requires much relaxed object model than what class ones usually do
yeah the C++ OM is way too strict about that kind of thing.
19:34
Ugh, one of my laptop's screen hinges went fubar.
inb4 you should've bought a real PC
I think profile-guided reordering shouldn't pessimise dynamic additions later anyway
Oh wait no Bartek around.
@Puppy What do you mean by class with data members. How would you use that for aggregation?
laptops are horribad for prolonged work
They just wouldn't benefit as much
19:35
get a real PC
@Prismatic Imagine struct X { int x1; int x2; };. Voila- X aggregates two ints. Job done.
I thought the whole point of ECS is to define behaviour through the addition and removal of components. In your example you can't dynamically remove any members of X
Use Python
You're essentially doing dynamic typing on top
ie, something becomes 'Renderable' by adding a 'Render' component. Something becomes 'Collideable' by adding a 'Physics' component
"The whole point" of ECS changes depending on who you ask
19:37
@milleniumbug gimme $90,000 and I will get a real pc
@Prismatic Which in the vast majority of cases is just fine.
anything under $20K cannot be considered a real PC!.
@milleniumbug They are not - I just happened to bump this one on that part of the case... some 3 years ago.
as per usual the real problem is people being dynamic about things that don't need to be dynamic.
And really it's not as much as adding and removing them at runtime, but avoiding explosion of classes when you need unusual compositions
19:39
I am amazed it broke only now. Also it kind of works as long as you help it ;P
I'm going to look for possible replacement parts later.
@CatPlusPlus Meh, that sounds more like the classes are too heavyweight, there's not a lot of effort in making a struct with even 100 members.
Also it's more friendly to editor-based workflows
Ell
Ell
I can see this certainly
send help im dying
too hot
lol my computer's fans are going nuts too
pfft
when I went to Paris it was 40
19:47
> feels like 36
Damn 40 degrees is nuts
I dont have AC if it got that bad I think Id just go chill in a library or something
GPU temp is 40 degrees
Ell
Ell
hmm how to do parameters for skybox renderer
That's pretty good considering how hot it is, damn
Ell
Ell
template<class It>
skybox_renderer(It start, It end);
skybox_renderer(const image& xpos, const image& xneg, ..., const image& zneg);
skybox_renderer(std::array<image, 6> images);
@ChemiCalChems You're not thinking simply enough, most likely.
@JerryCoffin No, web development is gross.
@nick Is gross.
pls
19:56
why would you make your skybox renderer a class template
@Ell Actual arguments after varargs are illegal, though. Is ... used as "yeah, you get it"?
Ell
Ell
@nabijaczleweli yeah it is
@nick Really, it is. I don't like making UIs in C++ either. Was grossed out by what I saw of it in Python too.
except as a JS frontend engineer you have superior UI tooling available
APIs are the best UIs
20:03
@CatPlusPlus agreed
Make it someone else's problem
GUIs are for those who want a GUI
make a simple interface, let someone else plug whatever front end they want onto it
why doesn't std::list have reserve() :[
Why should it
So it doesn't have to malloc every time you add an element?
20:06
It's a linked list
hmm does anyone know a torrent library that doesn't need openSSL anything encryptionlike?
You want unrolled linked list, implement it yourself
@milleniumbug Why does that prevent it from allocating memory before hand?
@thecoshman then you're a backend engineer at that point
@nick thank you :D
20:07
Yes that's the point
the backend is where all the fun is at
8
I know :)
I'm not arguing for contiguous memory here, just that if you knwo your list has maybe ~1000 elements on average, you can alloc sizeof(T)*1000 before hand and prevent new being called
But then I guess you'd have to keep track of whats deleted too
@Prismatic There's no such thing because it's not relevant to the interface of the list.
Write yourself an allocator for that
user1804599
@Prismatic You can't.
user1804599
20:09
Because of splice.
user1804599
Well, you could, but then splice wouldn't be O(1).
You can't splice if the lists have different allocators
Also std::list is terrible anyway
I just want a list with stable iterators
for loop?
20:13
Because a.) it's a linked list, which is reason enough not to use it 99% of the time and b.) It doesn't provide all the goodies of having the list
ive never written an allocator before
im nervous
@Prismatic Me neither. Sounds like good experience to have (though not necessarily "a good experience").
@Prismatic Before C++11 that would have been merited. Nowadays, it's pretty trivial. You need an allocate, deallocate, operator== (and probably operator!=), but that's about it (but beware of my memory: I might be forgetting one or two other minor things).
Depending on how you format it, though, it's probably around 15-20 lines of code (including blank lines between the functions and such).
20:33
been a while since i linked that
@Prismatic If you care about efficiency in any way, you just don't use std::list. Seriously though, you'd have to build some sort of sub-allocator to deal with the possibility of somebody deleting a node in the middle of that chunk.
I don't see an alternative if I want a list-like container with iterator stability.
@JerryCoffin That's regular object-pool stuff.
posted on July 27, 2015 by Eric Battalio

Survey! The Visual C++ team wants to learn more about how developers create Internet of Things devices and applications. If you are currently or have recently been part of an IoT project and can spare around 15 minutes, please take our survey and share...(read more)

@Prismatic What exactly you mean by iterator stability? Do you mean the same iterator refers to the element, even if (for example) it's been moved to some other collection, or do you mean that the same iterator refers to the same item in the collection (e.g., fifth item, regardless of how things get moved around)?
@Puppy Precisely.
20:40
right, but what I mean is, an object pool is basically just a linked list as it is already.
all you need to handle that case is 1 additional pointer and a few (~5 or so) pointer exchanges.
@Puppy Can be, but isn't necessarily (you can, for example, use a bitmap to track allocated blocks instead).
true
but if you're going to use them for a LL anyway you may as well implement them as an LL.
@JerryCoffin The former
20:59
@Prismatic Yeah, in that case you usually end up with something at least similar to a linked list (nodes and pointers, anyway).
user1804599
It's a pity that Euro Buk Simulator 2014 doesn't exist anymore.
@caps Yeah, you are right. I'm trying to code a Log system, but it's way too brain expensive. xD
What's up punks
inb4 begging for help
Ok so here we go. I have this long long type that i wan't to cast to a function pointer, any ideas?
21:13
shove it up your punk
> i wan't to cast to a function pointer
don't
use actual types
no way, it must be long long, like the sound of long long
No, use short long long long short long instead
user1804599
@CamelToe no.
user1804599
What you want to do is UB.
21:15
@milleniumbug We could write a song in c++ together perhaps
user1804599
no time for java
that was a insult
long time no C
3
@CamelToe trolling is a art
@milleniumbug I'm not very good at it though. But if you aim for the stars you might get to the liquor store
ACE is love, ACE is life
21:23
I though there was some action in this room, I guess i was wrong. I better go to the darkside and check out how the java folks are doing
@ChemiCalChems Like a system for calculating logarithms or for logging things?
user1804599
Java > C++ anyway.
There's nothing complicated in logging
@CamelToe Lounge<C++> is currently dead and unreachable, please leave condolences after a beep
21:25
@rightfold inb4 flag
@ChemiCalChems Cat's right, you must be doing it wrong.
@rightfold Yes I agree. Only democrats code in c++, Java is better, faster and prettier than c++.
@rightfold Troll.
user1804599
No, I mean it.
2
C++ is total garbage
user1804599
21:28
No, C++ isn't total.
user1804599
It has partial functions.
Yes any language that doesn't have reflection needs to be put to sleep.
@caps It's not that it's hard. It's just that I have a hard time thinking constructively.
@Borgleader Thanks for sharing, this is interesting. I wondered about % at one time in the past. It seemed to me that it would bias towards numbers that were more common as factors.
IYAM <random> is currently the neatest and best designed part of C++ standard library
> what-boy-do-i-pick
what
oh shit, im out
@BenjaminGruenbaum Please post a SS for us low-rep peasants
I can't wait to reach 10K rep
21:33
@milleniumbug I'm pretty close
hahah i lold
Post a question I can answer and put a bounty on it
I was hoping for this to be at least from a VG
now thats trolling
21:34
@nabijaczleweli How you fixed any of the bugs I reported yesterday?
user1804599
I'm eating cheese from my bellybutton.
A wonderful experience, ain't it?
@nabijaczleweli Nice. Awesome. What an open source dev.
user1804599
like
user1804599
crumbles
21:39
righfold, pls
user1804599
@rightfold it was sad the user had no more questions.
user1804599
XD
Shouldn't it be "Lucy in the sky with diamonds" (that is, "LSD")?
@rightfold and no reverse google image search.
21:40
@EtiennedeMartel lal
since when is "lal" a thing
@FlorianMargaine since this is the internet, and lel and kek are things too
cringes
woot
found another box of drugs
6
guess I wasn't horribly late on getting that refill after all
user1804599
21:44
I need drugs.
user1804599
Can't grow tits and redistribute fat without drugs.
how does the second one work?
Females have different fat distribution than males
@nick Hormones are involved in fat distribution
@ChemiCalChems Wow, you made @nick, the dankest of all the dankers in the Lounge, cringe. Good job.
21:46
@EtiennedeMartel Thanks.
@EtiennedeMartel haha
naw it was the whole conversation really
everything and everyone in here
@nabijaczleweli That's not the answer to the question
@milleniumbug Typing one rn, gimme a sec
And AFAIK the human body will redistribute the fat based on preferred "setting"
@nabijaczleweli Based on hormones
i guess
i thought it was more about build and bone structure tho
21:47
They, too, are affected
can you even change bone structure after a certain point?
Wouldn't think so, no
pretty sure growth plates get locked by like age 22
@nick I think you can modify it slightly, but not after 21
user1804599
@nick for example, fat in belly reduces and fat in butt increases.
21:48
@rightfold That's the effect of estrogen isn't it?
As well as more female hormones
Bone manip is more tricky than iomanip fat manip
@ChemiCalChems pretty much
Radek stahp
@Veritas Who's radek?
I only know biology from Wiedźmin
(and basic biology classes)
user1804599
21:54
@nick no
user1804599
Bones are immutable.
user1804599
Voice must be trained.
@rightfold Bones are immutable after they lock and stop growing, if I'm not mistaken, but you should know a lot more about you are talking about, since you are the one undergoing the treatment.
"rightfold: The Way Of The Voice"
Is @Nooble ded?
> las seen 18h ago
he's probably doing IRL stuff
speaking of which i should probably head to work lol
Ell
Ell
22:03
@nabijaczleweli lol
people have lives
@nick You need this
@Ell Lives are boring
@nabijaczleweli No, yours is boring.
@Ell Sounds like a cool idea. Where can I download one of those from?
@nabijaczleweli Where's the world.gaemsaev file?
@milleniumbug Hmmm, it's not yet, since Noob didn't add one correctly, but I can get you a default one (it's also named "gaemsaev" now)
Also re-pull from master since I left the hard-coded map in
I'm derpier than Noob, this shouldn't happen
22:21
ok now how do I merge
pull -f
don't yell at me plz
I'm bad
I suck
@Nooble WHAT DO YOU WANT KOALA SPIT IT OUT
Ell
Ell
@JerryCoffin If only it were that simple ;)
@JerryCoffin They are very RAM-intensive, so remember to download that, too
ok I gotta admit
things are sticky when you're in the "Get out and push" phase
22:26
Hi Everyone. I'm wondering if you can help me with something.
nope
@VaughnCato Only if you read the rules first
You can ask, but don't expect an answer
@nabijaczleweli Oh, okay! Thanks for your input.
22:28
Any chance I can talk to someone here who knows a bit about HLSL?
@nabijaczleweli: I have read the rules, but I'll check again
@MNagy nonzero
I even positioned myself so that when ejecting the engines, the decoupler force was used
and so far I pushed myself from 1.02mm periapsis to 876km
There's a starb8 in there I just don't see it
There must be
@nabijaczleweli nonzero meaning I can maybe ask you a simple question? :)
22:30
@MNagy You're better off assking on Stack Overflow
@nabijaczleweli I'm sure if there was, you'd find it. You are the master b8er.
@nabijaczleweli probably, though last time I asked it didn't get much in the way of responses
@nabijaczleweli 64bit add, getting the carry bit working correctly without much overhead, that sort of thing
@MNagy Add better , make question generic/general, so it's helpful for more people
@nabijaczleweli: I think what I'm asking fits within the rules. This isn't actually a programming question, but more of a question about how I could improve my answer.
@MNagy Use + for 64-bit add
22:32
@nabijaczleweli in HLSL? Uh.
@VaughnCato Ask it, quick. Before someone sees it
@nabijaczleweli sorry, we're wasting each other's time
So far, it seems like it isn't being understood.
I've done my research, and I'm pretty sure it is correct, but apparently it isn't clear.
this is why i have trust issues
god damnit
22:34
I'd like any advice on how to clarify.
@Borgleader The problem isn't the guy in the photos.
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader lol
@Ell makeup OP
@mill did it werk?
Yup, it runs now
22:40
Gneiss
"does it work correctly?" is another question, since I don't know what it's supposed to do
Deus Ex: Mankind Divided /cc @AlexM.
@milleniumbug It's a gaem
DAyyyyyyyum
@Borgleader Awesome
22:41
You can run around and not fall down
@Borgleader I love beta / in production screenshots and video too
Sure, now how do I not fall
They let you know exactly what not to expect when the game is released
alright
110km
at this rate, I will have literally saved this mission by getting out and pushing.
in fact, I've developed a technique for getting out and pushing whilst minimizing orientational issues
@Prismatic If its as good as Human Revolution, I'm gonna need new pants.
22:42
@Borgleader Graphically very good, will it be as open as Deus Ex is the real question
@milleniumbug By WSADing
yeah right
@Puppy That's my running this summer.
Now with the EM drive I could have got to Alpha Centauri easily.
alright
33.6km
that ought to be safe
@Puppy Enough to keep you safe from a laser for 112 microseconds.
fortunately, my lander can is not being assaulted by lasers.
22:52
I like this issue
(it might or might not have been submitted by a user named "totally-not-nabijaczlewelis-alt-0")
@nabijaczleweli did what work?
@MillieSmith Ah, you're mill, too. Sorry
Can I actually plink multiple users at a time? Neat

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