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19:00
People will lock their sights on a bunch of high profile games (and barely have the resources to buy half of them), even more stuff is going to fall through the cracks, into oblivion.
@ThePhD Reminds me of the times when I was in the Air Force, and was told things like : "You will be there and you will enjoy it. Yes, that is an order." (and they were apparently serious).
@Morwenn oh, good :)
However, right now, I seem to be interested solely into Mass Effect Andromeda. And that's because I want to forgive Mass Effect 3 so bad. #abusive_relationship
Now it's almost on par with the smoothsort implementation I have, which means that it's still way slower than a regular heapsort...
@ElimGarak You need to learn to embrace your Stockholm Syndrome!
user1804599
19:03
lol code examples in official Perl 6 documentation:
user1804599
class Bull {
    has Bool $.castrated = False;
    method steer {
        # Turn your bull into a steer
        $!castrated = True;
        return self;
    }
}
@MadameElyse This seems to leak the Rocky Mountain Oysters.
@thecoshman tutti-frutti
garak.execute(action::purchase, item_type::energy_drink, brand::dont_care, packaging::tight, 6);
// E_STRFRAWY
19:17
sup
sup bby
I'm good.
How was the tour of the world yesterday? :D
Yea it was alright :D
19:19
@Morwenn what about the results? :(
Tony, let's go visit Borgleader <3
@Borgleader What do you mean?
@ElimGarak Yeah... me too. Once you go blue you never go back.
@ElimGarak Yea <3
19:20
@Morwenn Those are benchmarks, did they change?
@Morwenn We're running out of time...
@Borgleader Did they change compared to what?
@Morwenn Previous ones?
i was under the impression you changed your implementation of something existent
@TonyTheLion Bring warm clothes.
Alright, time to go buy some nice drinks and go home.
@Borgleader Yeah, poplar_sorter2 is the original implementation (copied straight from the research paper), poplar_sorter is mine.
I haven't heard that name in ages
I swear I said that before seeing your pic
I don't think any other reaction is possible lol
I had to do foxpro for a semester in high school
evening
19:43
evening
evening
user406009
afternoon
Yo
19:54
Wellp, I am home. Feels good.
Yeah, me too
Sup @Shoe!
I really feel like home here :P
But no really, I'm away since 7am this morning and I came back at 8pm at home
Feels very good
Some dude that was at the table next to me in the coffee shop didn't take a shower in 2 years. I mean, bruh...
@Shoe :D
@ElimGarak ugh, its just wrong when people smell
19:55
@ElimGarak It's fine as long as he bathes.
I mean, take a damn shower before you leave the house
About 6 hours of discussions on Use Case diagrams and how they should be written
Real fun :/
Sounds like massive phun
Nobody has an idea of how they should be written yet
I don't know any software developer that uses them
19:56
You guys don't do requirement analysis?
I somehow managed to politely sneak a few whiffs of my blazer every few minutes before diving into the pile of shit that was the local volume of air.
@Shoe No. I get told that "it doesn't work as I thought it would" by the people that test my software, after I've made it " how I thought it should", having been told in an email "please make this"
@ElimGarak oh my
hah ahaha ahha ah a h requirements
Amateurish, I like it
In this industry, any kind of spec is miracle
19:58
@Shoe The last place I worked had more extensive requirements. A paragraph or two detailing the thing wanted
Requirements analysis in rendering is:
1) this looks like shit
2) this runs like shit
Listen Cat, I know it's probably a bunch of crap; but I really want to believe in software engineering... just for a few months
And it never stays the same for more than 2 weeks
Pleeeeeease?
Proper requirements or specs are rare
19:59
I actually feel more optimistic about software now, don't take it away from me :(
You can feel optimistic, just don't be optimistic about things that aren't a thing in the real world. Be optimistic about being able to write code and create things. :)
Plus use case diagrams are garbage
Write down user stories and forget about this nonsense
Can't
User story "trader needs this to work last week"
All those fancy stick figures and lines add literally nothing
20:02
It's just an excuse not to face the real problem, delaying the inevitable.
the real problem is being sober
Time to bread
@Shoe how many more years at Uni do you have left?
Time to breed
@TonyTheLion As long as it takes brotha
As long as it takes
@Shoe I don't think that use case diagrams are really a part of it.
you need to gather requirements and you need to understand requirements, but that does not necessarily involve writing down the requirements in any specific format.
@Puppy According to my professor they are part of the requirements specifications which include use cases, use cases diagrams and requirements tables.
All in a nice and neat document that the client has to approve.
20:05
> According to my professor
found your problem right here
@Shoe Does that secretly imply you're not quite ready to move on from Uni?
@TonyTheLion That secretly implies that if everything goes right, I'm done this year being 2 years late.
Woops....
Shoe, you could prolly make it in the real world, I don't know why you're still wasting time there :P
Aww
Wait
That doesn't sound like a compliment
Yeah, just noticed
20:07
lol
lol
I would say probably the only places with extensive requirements documents are the ones where the software in question has lives depending on it. I'm thinking about aircraft, NASA rockets, stuff like that.
It's all about unit tests, bby
Our professor keeps telling us that the "real world" does it like this
@TonyTheLion Nope.
20:08
@Shoe Chances are he has never had a job as a software developer
lives depend on our software and we don't have extensive requirements documents.
@TonyTheLion Or maybe he did, back in the 1980 when people believed in this thing
@Puppy I was being hopeful. I also worked on software for the medical industry, and it didn't have any requirements docs either.
to be fair
I don't know. It all kind of makes sense.
20:09
our software is not typically used on the front line.
Maybe a little too verbose, but it makes sense
it's explicitly required that our output is checked in various life-threatening situations
Having a clear idea of what you are going to write before you do is very helpful
it's not always possible
Agreeing on what the user wants before hand seems very very helpful
20:10
the user often doesn't nkow
@Shoe Yes it makes sense, but I think in the real world there is just no time and money to spend on requirements docs on top of actually making the software itself, testing it, etc
Especially when demonstrating what requirement each piece of your software satisfies
user406009
The users don't know what they want until they see it.
Real world is about money and time, and everything else is just about secondary. Sadly
Users are usually dumb as bricks. You need to tell them what they want. That's why they're users.
20:11
@Lalaland And sometimes not even then
@Shoe The user generally only has a vague notion and doesn't really know
@TonyTheLion Well, people used to make the same argument for unit testing (takes too much time, costs too much, etc...)
Turns out not going completely random might actually cost less
@ElimGarak how should they know what they want before you show them what you can do :D
unit testing can have all of those effects.
and even when the user has a good idea, they'll likely change their minds at least 5 times before you have made a testable piece of software
20:11
we have a new dev at work
who wrote some unit tests
assert(constant) == 2
@Shoe Oh, there's still a shitload of people who completely ignore even unit testing, let alone requirements analysis and fancy diagrams.
Unit testing isn't a thing where I work
@TonyTheLion Well, their fault, they agreed and signed a document stating a set of requirements, and if your software satisfies those, the'll have to pay
@Puppy Soon to be former dev. :P
@Shoe heh, if only it was that simple.
20:12
I know
user406009
@ElimGarak maybe he/she should look into botony :)
@ElimGarak I don't often write unit tests, but when I do, I actually test shit.
@Shoe, any plans on picking up a job while at uni, you know, to get your feet wet and stuff?
catch(exception) {} I see a lot in our code
:(
Ie just an empty catch clause
I guess it wouldn't do you much good if the situation is similar to the one in Croatia. If you're still in Italy.
20:14
well
we have a couple of empty catch clauses, but they're not naked like that
@ElimGarak I'm excited to the idea, but if I really want to finish this year there's simply no time
I'm not naked either
it's like,` catch(exception) { /* can't possibly recover in any meaningful way because XYZ */ }`
at the very least log it
Not to mention that I have to work 2 months, 8 hours a day, 5 days a week for 2 months mandatory anyway
20:15
wtf faildown
@Puppy ah yes useful comment is nice
@milleniumbug Logged automatically.
In order to graduate
For free
Elim googles video games made in Italy
@Shoe :/
20:16
Leisure Suit Berlusconi
@Puppy sure, that works even better
It's called stage, feels like forced labor
Assassin's Creed?
time to nuke it from orbit
Yeah, one of Ubisoft's satellite studios is there, Ubisoft Montreal was the primary there. Usually they strain about 7 satellite studios to feed the asset pipeline.
20:17
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six 3: Raven Shield
Woah
Didn't know
@Shoe Also satellite work, asset generation :D
user406009
@ElimGarak don't tripple A games consume a huge amount of high quality assets nowadays?
Ubisoft Milan deals with porting efforts to the consoles, even though sounds a bit dumb, as their engines are primarily developed for consoles and PC is an afterthought.
@sehe thanks, I didn't read your nice rewrite until now. In the mean time, I had followed a similar path, only the mutable_wrapper eluded me. Great idea!
user406009
HD textures. Large maps.
20:20
@Lalaland Yup, rendering tech requires a lot of data to chew to not look like shit. It's very easy for assets to look like shit with advanced BRDFs which are fed subpar data.
user1804599
cat north_korea | sed 's/Kim Il-sung/Allah/g' > saudi_arabia
Ubisoft easily strains 5000+ people to deliver assets to satisfy their, uhm, annual release windows.
user1804599
yummy, salt.
Addendum: Ubisoft Montreal has 2600 people. I think they repurposed an old bigass factory to accomodate everyone. Sounds like a soul-sucking company.
@ElimGarak Woah thats a lot of people
20:23
@sehe Adding an operator T() and T& get() to that wrapper will make it more compatible to the rest of Spirit, and then you can drop the .value everywhere. I didn't like the magic -1 value. Why not rely on the fact that alternatives naturally synthesize to boost::optional, and simply test for non-null? Finally, I renamed coerce to attribute_cast. Here's my latest attempt, as a fusion of all the different tidbits.
Yeah, there's no individual... Just 2600 grunts with a few "game directors" hogging the credit.
user406009
@ElimGarak I wonder if the movie industry or the game industry hires more 3d and texture artists.
@ElimGarak for a few seconds i was wondering wtf was bigass and how it was manufactured.
whatup all
@sehe anyway, I'd be happy to post the original and orchestrate a Q&A after the fact :)
20:25
@Lalaland It used to be the movie industry, but open world games require generating a shitton of assets. Movies have preproduction where the camera motion and extent are strictly defined. And everything outside the traced camera frustum literally doesn't exist / doesn't have to be made.
user406009
@Prismatic Pondering the purpose of life and memorizing random anatomy facts for the MCAT.
mmm
the knee bone's connected to the something
the something's connected to the something
user1804599
@TonyTheLion bukkake
user406009
@ElimGarak Yeah, the Fallout games are pretty much only assets.
user406009
They clearly don't care about advancing rendering techniques or game engines that much.
20:26
-47
Q: A New Code License: The MIT, this time with Attribution Required

samthebrand TLDR: This is a follow-up to our initial proposal for transitioning to a more user-friendly code license. The purpose of this post is to address the concern expressed most frequently in response to the initial proposal: no attribution requirement. Also, we want to make sure everyone has ample ...

lol
@Lalaland And very cheap, too. They create modular, regular grid aligned packs of geometry and have like 5-6 packs which are just assembled in different ways by the level designers.
user406009
@ElimGarak Still, their game world maps are hella big.
I actually know the names of the packs used and how many pieces are in them (poked around). Still pretty cool, massive world.
user406009
You have to at least be impressed by that.
@MadameElyse poon smashers
20:28
It takes time to construct and they do navmesh generation by hand mostly, poor souls.
@ElimGarak So basically its built like Diablo3 levels (minus procedurally generated layouts)? :P
user406009
Actually Elim, can I ask you for some help with pathfinding.
@ElimGarak ewwwwwwwww wtf. Cryengine has navmesh updates on the fly... (i saw a video where the guy was moving objects around and the navesh was updating with every change)
user406009
I totally understand how to do pathfinding on a grid with one actor and static objects.
20:29
@Borgleader Yeah, Ubisoft Forge stuff, too
@Lalaland Yeah?
user406009
How do you deal with multiple moving objects of different sizes?
I actually kind of do what they want for attribution already; that is add a reference to the corresponding SO URL. No one's going to really respect this imo
@Shoe lol nipples
user406009
Do you constantly recreate the navmeshes?
user1804599
did somebody mention boob parts
user406009
20:30
Local techniques like flocking seem to give sorta OK results, but they can easily get stuck.
user406009
Even just pathfinding on a static grid, with no moving objects, with a variably sized thing is causing some issues for me.
@Lalaland In our engine, it's all generated on the fly and only for entities which need it, with a little bit of caching. But we do a precompute step which does a coarse basis for the on-the-fly generation, red zones, which are considered during generation.
What a great idea... wish I'd thought of it
Basically, terrain is non-deformable, so it's an acceptable tradeoff.
user406009
@ElimGarak So constantly recreating navmeshes in response to moving obstacles?
20:34
@Lalaland Yup, local recreation all the time. We have the compute power to do it and a lot of interesting things can be done with it.
CryEngine does it, Ubisoft's Forge or whatever does it, everyone :D
And can be fast if you can make some guarantees towards static objects. Open worlds obviously buildings are mostly static entities, so is the terrain. This allows you to precompute a coarse approximation to define the local navmesh a lot faster.
user406009
@ElimGarak Do you have any ideas for dealing with rotatable non-square objects?
user406009
Like trying to path a rectangle through a maze.
user406009
Circular/square objects are much easier to deal with.
@Shoe score 7916
user1804599
Circular objects? Don't tell @sehe.
20:41
@Lalaland Well, isn't most everything in games lacking in simplifying symmetry (radial or otherwise)? :D
user406009
@ElimGarak Dealing with non-circular obstacles is easy.
@Lalaland slap a sphere volume on top of that shit and do your thing ;)
user406009
It's trying to do pathfinding with a rectangle that's the issue.
Tight capsules are how we do it
user406009
For one thing, the reachable coordinates depends on the orientation.
user406009
20:43
And the orientation is continuous.
user406009
Don't even get started with "impossible" turns.
impossible turns?
@AlexM. Damnit
I won 2048 for the first time
user406009
@melak47 Turns in certain positions are impossible as it would cause a collision. Think like a rectangle in a corner.
user406009
@ElimGarak So just do pathfinding on circles (on the x-z plane).
20:45
@Lalaland You accept the error in video gaems. :D
Just let it clip through the wall and act stupid if someone asks :D
You try to minimize it, but not so far that it becomes cumbersome.
opinions?
user406009
Yeah, I think I'm just going to draw a circle around our rectangles. Make that circle the collision radius for path finding and say screw rectangles.
Dark Souls uses a single tight capsule, so do many other games to cheapen computations, hands and everything else is free to clip during animation in weird spots. Ragdolls on the other hand are composed of multiple tight capsules for the purposes of physical simulation.
@Puppy doesn't work for me :p
user406009
@ElimGarak Ragdolls don't have to path find though.
20:49
@Lalaland If you drop a ragdoll into an irregular chasm, bouncing off the extruded walls via physics is "path finding". :D
And the solution is the state of lowest possible energy :D
what would you like to see?
user406009
@ElimGarak Theoretically, there is the possibility of local minima.
user406009
20:50
You have to add some "shaking" to get the true global minima.
Practically, the engine will hiccup and the head will get stuck in the wall :D
user406009
Ala simulated annealing.
user406009
Where you slowly lower the amount of shaking.
Does World of Warcraft still have the "unstuck" button?
no
user1804599
20:52
It also has the uncuck button. It's labeled "delete account".
user406009
@MadameElyse And I guess the "celibacy" button is labeled "log in"?
Is there a studio that does pathfinding worse than BGS?
Well, we should really blame Gamebryo LLC or whatever, but still.
user406009
@ElimGarak BGS? What company is that?

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