@AlfPSteinbach I've made no personal comments whatsoever. And if you'd paid a bit more attention to the conversation, you'd see that there was a good rationale to say that we don't know the return type was non-ref. It was not clear. The term that the OP used is the same one that even the standard itself sometimes uses in a context where it means returning a reference. So, yea. That's the last I will say on the matter.
@DeadMG the advantage of having a graph is that you can multiply transformation matrices when rendering, and doesn't have to keep a global xform matrix for each object if you don't want to.
@DeadMG suppose obj1 is at 0,0,0, and obj2's position is relative to obj1. How do you achieve that? You need to somehow multiply their xform matrices to place obj2 in the right place. Think of a solar system, where a planet orbits the sun.
Scenes in scenes :) I am used to scene nodes. Each scene having a single root node, and then everything else a child of that root node, or a child of another node. So, one would just hide the parent node and all children would automatically go with it.
I have no idea, I am not writing your API :) You asked why I was confused with terminology, I've just told you what i am used to, hierarchies of objects (or rather, scene nodes) and where/how visibility got set in that environment. Not bashing your API whatsoever. :)
@DeadMG by traversing a plain list, you'll have to compute each xform matrix independently. Suppose you have a relation of parent -> child -> subchild. To render it, you'll need 6 matrix multiplications instead of just 3, because you have to multiply the parent matrix to render a child. This assuming you're using relative positions. If you're not, then you should, because otherwise you'll get in a hell dealing with matrix updates when you change a parent's matrix.
Hm, I get notified of Tomalak's message when includes ref to me. So, "ignore" is not "ignore completely", it slips through with direct references, and in transcript.
@DeadMG, cool. When I was doing some 3D coding I had a single object in which you could add/remove components to induce behaviour (MeshComponent, MaterialComponent, LightComponent, SoundComponent, AIComponent, etc). Made it very easy in an editor to plonk custom objects in and get them to do shit :) Probably nothing like you're doing :)
@JohannesSchaublitb you might first try just writing to the moderators (see banner at end of each article, the csc++ FAQ is not updated with right address). if not work, try contacting James Dennett. He's the one to update the FAQ, btw.
I searched around and could not find the performance time specifications for bitset::count(). Does anybody know what it is (O(n) or better) and where to find it?
@TomalakGeretkal well, let me rectify my statement. Google Groups has a front-end that send out digest emails with usenet contents. See comp.lang.c++.moderated.
@Alf ah i will look up. never used thunderbird. currently i use knode + gmail for usenet/email. I'm not up on all this stuff. I just found out about gmane :)
You'll need an NNTP server. I just the free news.eternal-september.org. There's also the free Italian AIOE, but it has lots of spam. If you're willing to pay just a few Euro's for quality service then there's a German service I used to use, I don't recall name, but very good (it was originally free, by some German university).
@CharlesBailey You're right :) I actually just interviewed a guy and asked that question then my coworker came in and told me it was wrong because the A byte gets lost in the right shift. Then I got confused. But I knew I was right!
The current reputation system isn't something I'd rely to estimate knowledge though. Basic questions & answers get much more upvotes then advanced ones, because nearly everyone knows the basics, while few know the advanced. Yet, you're not supposed to vote on something you don't understand. Concluding, the reputation system is kinda bad.
@jweyrich I think rep of some of the guys here (e.g. Johannes) constitutes counter-examples. but i agree with general observation that rep != knowledge. I think rep is in general just measure of activity * how long been here.
Proposed Q&A site for feedback on projects you're working on, by sharing your code with fellow programmers and getting extensive feedback/review of best practices, design pattern usage, application UI, security, etc.
@Alf his constructor definition later on is invalid. it shouldn't have template<>
@Alf i did a PR against clang that contains some explicit specializations and when/when not one needs to write template<>. I put the link into the other guy's comment section.
@Alf I guess i would only know when trying to write a compiler why the spec requires template<> only when it's followed by a template<something here> and not when it would only be followed by others template<> all the way down
i came to the conclusion that such questions most probably aren't answered at such places. the ones that really know seem to think "let the guy find out himself" :)
@JohannesSchaublitb question of object starts life or ends life, i think it's simply that we know what we'd like the rules to express, namely that if you know what's there you can use it, but problem is then finding interpretation of abstract rules so that they express that simple POV. i think that means that rules are simply too abstract, too removed from what one wants them to express
@DeadMG Just because something no longer exists means very little. We're in an age where we have fast access to historical information. You wouldn't start a colony and call it The Roman Empire just because the empire fell some time ago.
@DeadMG Then you're simply being selfish by propogating it. Other people do.
It's just that your youth explains the way you conduct yourself on my answers' comment threads. There's no need for me to continue trying to figure it out.
In practice it's less of a punishment for accidentally killing someone, and more of a punishment for shooting someone in the head, where it cannot be proven that you didn't mean to just shoot them in the shoulder.