It seems Hitler had an illegitimate son who (unknowingly) fought against his Wehrmacht in the French resistance. This truly is one of the weirdest stories of the 20th century.
@DeadMG not that this is my area of expertise at all (far from it :) ) but it usually doesn't matter from what programs I have made. Rarely are you ever going to make a swiss army knife of a program, but when you do, I would say that you are right :3
I think about building a robot's computer system when I code, 1.) make a literal library of functions that the robot COULD use when it encounters a problem 2.) have the main "brain" of the robot (program) that identifies the basics of the problem, determine the most efficient "library" to use, and it then implements it
Well if I wanted to dynamically configure my factory I would call for prototype, if I wanted a single instance of Factory I would call for Singletone, if I wanted to implement Factory I would call for Factory method etc.
@sehe also I was experimenting with an agent based "hive" program in python, and I made it simulate essentially a beehive. I made the agents "bees" search "fly" through my computer, and find text files, take a random character, and mark it as searched, it then used those characters to build a new hive or repair the old one, or make more agents
you could, but what if classes don't require instances to approach communication class, and what if even communication class doesn't have it's own instance? What then should be done? @StackedCrooked @DeadMG
It's hard to keep huge GUI applications clean though. The UI is where everything comes together. To keep it maintainable different kind of "controllers" and "providers" are defined. And those often end up to be singletons.
When I first learned about the singleton design pattern the provided sample was a President class. Since there can only be one President the class must be a singleton.
also, it's a really bad idea to make the render context a Singleton because in a few years, I might well decide to replace it with a Direct3D11 context
@CatPlusPlus Ooooh, make it XBRL to be more enterprisey. That way you can depend on a dozen taxonomies and require a XBRL processor to even read the config
The Design Patterns book refers to the ideas of a certain architect called Alexander. One of the ideas is that the construction must naturally blend in with the environment. This is funny because the code has the opposite effect when using names like AbstractSingletonFactory.
Ok, so the last time I wrote C++ for a living, std::auto_ptr was all the std lib had available, and boost::shared_ptr was all the rage. I never really looked into the other smart pointer types boost provided. I understand that C++11 now provides some of the types boost came up with, but not all o...