most GUI event systems have functionality similiar to this: Item.onEvent(EventType, FunctionToCall) or EventSystem.onEvent(EventType, FunctionToCall) or Item::onEvent(EventOccured, ..)
When sick, don't take time off - this way you take the germs home to your loved ones. Remember, the sicker and the more contagious the virus is, the close you should be to your enemies ...
@BartekBanachewicz seems that fair, but you should really read the guy's thesis, it's 50 pages but it's easy to read (I did), and try to think where their model is inferior / superior
I wonder ... whether there are less people on the internet during Xmas-NY period - with suddenly heaps more lurking on the streets.
Local shopping centre car park is packed with people. Backstreets are packed with walkers - it's like stuffing a week's traffic in a day in the same carpark/backstreet
Suddenly people are everywhere & I live in a relatively quiet suburban district
Hey guys really quick question, there is this guy thats getting connected on my Mom's personal apartment router, even though it has password set to login. he pretty much messes everything up and take all the bandwidth, not letting my mother using the network at all! i would like to gain access over his computer through the router to, is that possible in any way? not a typical question i know but i tried almost everything but that... help is appreciated!
I always wondered, how do Stroustrup and the ISO C++ committee decide on a new standard without a working compiler? Surely they need to test their ideas
> Game looks amazing, it has survival, is rough on you until you get powerful things, sharp learning curve, even has different races with bonuses and start items, hats which provide bonuses, magical abilities, magic, melee, range, crafting and more things! Solid 9/10 It's like Terraria and some roguelike had a baby
@Ven if you don't make a mess out of it (i.e. you handle it), this is used to store an exception in a thread to be handled in another one: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/error/exception_ptr
> The game has a weird love affair with random number generators- upon leveling you MAY or MAY NOT gain any stat points and again - not a fun game design choice.
> Just a BIG thing: I rebooted your server. Way too easy : I just ran 'ps', saw 'ruby','sandbox.sh', kill'd them, then 'shutdown'. Way too easy. BTW, i'm sorry if I bother'd you, this was just for showing you how easy it was to haxx your server. Sorry.
@fredoverflow you have all the usual tools. Pretty much every lib I know offers backtracking, offers cut/commit-style constructs, ways to signal an error, etc. Otherwise, it'll just say it couldn't match rule x on input y
@ElimGarak My requirements is just that not everything has 1 flat color. Point, spotlight, directional, specular, diffuse, I don't care, I just want to see some effect of having lighting so I don't have the feeling I'm going crazy. I've set the materials just like the tutorials say and the light just like the tutorials say and I can't get to run the demo samples but all I see having an effect is ambient lights
I am trying to find prime numbers with threads and save them to the sql server DB. When I click the start button, I get the latest prime number record from DB and continue to searching with this. Prime number rule is
1-get the square of this number
2-try division from 2 to square number
And if t...
Are you implementing it yourself or using something else? In the simplest case, just specify a point with the light, get a direction to it, normalize it, take the normal of the surface at the current pixel (or just use the interpolated vertex normal) and take the dot product, max it with 0 and also saturate. There ya go, diffuse lighting without energy conservation. It's not view dependent, so it is really trivial. :D
I'm trying to convert a hex char to integer as fast as possible.
This is only one line:
int x = atoi(hex.c_str);
Is there a faster way?
Here, I have tried a more dynamic approach, and it's slightly faster.
int hextoint(char number) {
if (number == '0') {
return 0;
}
if (nu...
@AndyProwl Do you have a screenie of the fail? :D How does Mogre express the intensity of the lights? Color is really just a modulating factor. Also, you seem to be using 0.5f as a diffuse response (color, how much it absorbs/reflects). Given that light falls off with the square of the distance (if the engine models physical attenuation), it might get snuffed out depending on the scale of your scene.
Do you have to load it in externally or does mogre include a procedural generator for trivial geometry? Either a geosphere (reprojection of triangles with iterative refinement) or a stack-based with non-consistent triangle areas? In the case of the sphere, normal calculations are trivial, shouldn't have bizarre lighting. :D
It includes a generator for a default sphere or cube, but the meshes I need to display are generated by a separate program, including the normals, and they display fine on that program and on another editor as well
@rubenvb Eh, its not that advanced, I just wanted something that could read a reasonable amount of code just so i can prototype stuff based on Puppy's suggestions.
it was due to how I created the mesh. Basically there's a Position(x, y, z) function you have to call a bunch of times to add vertices and a Normal(x, y, z) function you have to call a bunch of times to add normals. I was just having all the calls to Position() first for all vertices, then all the calls to Normal() to add the normals. Turns out I have to call Normal() after each corresponding call to Position(). Most retarded API ever
@AndyProwl Ah, interleaved data. But yeah, retarded. :D
The reason it worked with a sphere is its symmetrical properties, the normals are basically normalized positions when it is centered on the origin of the world.