@angryInsomniac say you want to post some code on SO to ask for help with it. The fewer libraries it depends on, the easier it is for us to compile, and the easier we can look at it and help you
@thecoshman You missed the point entirely. You recommended that site because (presumably) you're familiar with it. I don't because I'm not. I can recommend the Boost documentation for Boost features because I am familiar with both. I do not know of any worthwhile resources for the Standard library; so I won't recommend any.
@thecoshman In my case its the inane tasks that they ask me to do :D and supposed superiors who count up from 11 by starting at 0 and using an if num > 10 condition in a for loop :P
Ogre and Irrlicht and all the others have been in development for what, a decade or something, and still no one actually uses them to make anything resembling a game
They're the perfect example of what I said the other day about @thecoshman's engine: you spend ages developing something reusable, but because you're trying to make an engine rather than a game, it's "reusable" without the "usable"
I'm just saying that if you continued on that route for another decade or two, then you'd end up in the position Irrlicht is in today: a shit-ton of functionality that isn't really usable because it was never designed for a game
@thecoshman but don't think of that as "engine" functionality. It's part of your game, not the engine
fill a vertex buffer with 4 hardcoded triangles forming a pyramid or something. Then write a simple render function to draw it without fancy shaders or anything
@jalf I say 'engine' to mean, the parts that are not what make the game MY game. loading a model and rendering it is generic thing that every game does
@jalf there are quite a few , I'm at office so I cant really search around a lot :P and then there are two of my projects , very simple games , one is a top down shooter like Naac and one is a 3D soccer free kick simulator
@thecoshman yeah, but my point is that the terminology matters. It takes on a very different flavor when it's a part of your game, rather than some separate monolithic blob of technology
If it's part of your game, then you can easily define clear goals, and you can immediately evaluate whether it's good enough. when it's part of an "engine", what requirements does it need to satisfy? How do you determine when it's good enough? How powerful it needs to be?
though I think I am perfectly just (so probably a fool to do this) in trying to place sections of code in neat areas, such as 'graphics' and then 'graphics.shaders' etc.
@jalf perhaps, but I need to put it some where, and it make sense to me, it is a graphical component. oh look, there are a few shader related classes, letts package them together
but afaik, UDK is much more geared for big commercial AAA games than for hobbyist stuff. Steeper learning curve, more complexity and requires much more effort to get going
@thecoshman sure, I'm just suggesting things that might make it easier to get started
@jalf In any case , using things like udk at the outset will shield you from the details of things like directx which is I guess a no no if one is to really delve into game development
@thecoshman the problem is , working in any game dev studio , if you go high enough up the food chain at some point you would want to design a new engine, thats when knowledge of the underlying architecture will be essential
but that is one big questions. do you give some one a powerful tool, and slowly teach them how it works or instead teach them the individual components and slowly tie them together.
@thecoshman I would argue that bottom up would allow for a better grasp and appreciation for the work being done, as long as you dont set the bottom at the microchip level :P
@thecoshman The problem is not re-inventing the wheel , the problem is designing better versions of the cart and woodwork is an essential skill to do either :D
with something as a complex and multifaceted as games, you will have to look at small areas to improve at a time. so take physics, you would look at that and think "it can't handle that many points, lets look at sorting it out" and then you look at how it currently works, and how other people have done it and what not
of course, there is always going to be a blurring betweens levels of abstraction
@thecoshman I have developed an issue with how Nokia does things and I remember Qt used to be lightweight and easy to use , then they bought it and added all kinds of shit like support for symbian ! and then proceeded to promptly give up on symbian and adopt windows mobile
@thecoshman I did sign up for Google+ in beta. It did not take long for them to come up with annoying games (like Facebook) and worse, force-fed "what's new on google+" news. It can't be turned off, so I generally report each such bunch of articles as nudity or spam. It's not like the old Google. But then, coming from Usenet, I know that Google has never been completely Google-like in all departments.
I do like G+ though. Sure it has games, but they seem to keep out of my way for the most part. to be honest though, I am not a huge social network user
my use of facebook is more or less just having my tweets auto posted to my 'wall'
or looking at links people INSIST on sending me through facebook
Although I think dlopen (and the loader) are supposed to deal with that, to an extent anyway. And I don't think you'd end up with 'no such file or directory'.
though, now thinking, I can get away with seriously colourful er.. phrases etc. If I write them in Urdu. I doubt there's a Pakistani / Iranian / Indian mod on SO.
I'm trying to explain a complex problem, so bear with me.
Say I have these files
/path/build/
/path/build/liba.so
/path/build/liba.so.3 -> liba.so
/path/build/libtest.so
I even have set PATH=/path/build:... (where ... is my normal $PATH).
At some point libtest.so will load liba.so.3 at ru...
I don't care about social search or the number of games or anything else. I use it to talk to people I know, and I can't do that if the people aren't there
Re G+, found it, there's a non-descript little slider bar at the top when you go to a particular circle that controls how many stories from that circle show up in your stream
I think my main problem is I only know Ruby from RoR, and the book I used was so happy to tell me how easy it was to make websites they forgot to explain what was going on
@daknok_t I prefer to stay away from 'fashion books' - the agile buzz word is usually a good indicator that good ideas are going to be over-emphasized :)
question concerning initializer_lists: assume I have a vector of ints, can I now create a vector which consists of that old vector + some new elements? something like std::vector<ing> new = { oldvec, 23, 234, 32434} ?
Assuming I have 2 STL vectors:
vector<int> a;
vector<int> b;
Let's also say the both have around 30 elements.
How do I add the vector b to the end of vector a?
The dirty way would be iterating through b and adding each element via push_back, though I wouldn't like to do that!