« first day (569 days earlier)      last day (4606 days later) » 

18:00
One of the TBoost.STM guys did a presentation for them, I believe, but my lib has a much better API IMO :)
@Mysticial x86 is LE, right?
@DeadMG Yes
Anyways, I gotta head to my final - which starts in 30 min.
so the correct value of, say, boxminy, after the transpose, should be { boxes[3]->min.y, boxes[2]->min.y, boxes[1]->min.y, boxes[0]->min.y }?
@Mysticial ooh, have fun
@Mysticial good luck
18:10
Why are there two android rooms, and neither is public?
only two? there used to be like, eight, I think
18:24
well, that was colossally stupid of me
calling code for SSE function didn't propagate the results
sbi
sbi
18:49
And I thought I was already pissed.
@sbi is it yours rep?
sbi
sbi
@Abyx It was. Apparently, someone considered all of the operator overloading FAQ entry upvote-worthy, which was then deemed to be serial upvoting.
@sbi so, you have 62.7k and still care about 45 rep?
sbi
sbi
@Abyx No, I mostly don't care about rep anymore. I rarely ever answer questions, and I keep being handed down the list of the top 20 users in the C++ tag. Rep is not my point. My point is that i consider it legitimate to run into the operator overloading FAQ, consider all of it worth to be upvoted, and upvote it.
uhm... then you're concerned about people who spent their time to upvote it
well... but probably no one cares what happens with upvotes, after they were voted
19:00
@Abyx he's concerned about the morality of the reversion I think. The "rightness" of the action.
so probably it's another "fuck meta/mods/SO AI" stuff
maybe it's just a bug in a script.
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Indeed. A pure morality question. I'm one of those madmen who are still being concerned with those.
@Abyx Of course it's a script. It runs nightly.
I don't see any moral aspect here. We need an anti-cheat script, and it works as it can.
19:19
hmmm
SSE vector type... worth my time?
19:36
@DeadMG it's worth my time for you to do it certainly.
sbi
sbi
@Abyx I do see a problem there, and I started a discussion at the madhouse:
0
Q: Serial upvoting reversed — is this appropriate?

sbiSome time ago, I added am entry to the SO C++ FAQ community effort, which deals with C++ operator overloading. For that piece I had spent half a Sunday I was supposed to spend building something out of LEGO for my kids, plus I butchered an article draft that I had lying around which had accumulat...

hmm, the code here at work has way too many C++ files generated in pre-build events.
sbi
sbi
Hey, which one of you upvoted that before he could have even read it??
if I just use #define debugin a program does that set it to "1" or does it declare as zero and would evaluate as true in an IFDEF?
Sorry thats #define debug
@sbi Sh. :) I always up-vote lengthy answer and questions, based only on the work that goes into it, without reading. (Of course in the rare case it's a long listing of bullshit I'll undo the vote, but it almost never happens.)
19:41
@sbi "I added am entry to the SO C++ FAQ community effort,"
@PeteHerbertPenito IFDEF is true if the symbols is defined as anything, even 0.
@PeteHerbertPenito maybe you meant to ask about "#if debug"?
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck There's always a few, no matter how often you have looked over it. Sigh. Thanks, fixed.
@PeteHerbertPenito: Keep in mind that #define XYZ defines XYZ; it just happens to expand to nothing.
So #ifdef XYZ will be true because it's defined, even if to expand to nothing.
sbi
sbi
@PeteHerbertPenito You can edit postings here for a while. (You might want to read the newbie hints, linked from the right-hand panel.)
@sbi why did you go to the depths of hell, that is called Meta, for 55 rep?
@TonyTheLion as he said in chat and in the question: it's not about the rep.
sbi
sbi
19:47
@PeteHerbertPenito If you say #define X, then X is first and foremost something the preprocessor knows. You can test for it's existence using #if defined(X). X has no value, neither 0 nor 1, and the actual compiler never sees it. In order to give it a value, you need to specify one at definition: #define X y. Now X has the value y (whatever that is), any occurrence of X will by replaced y, and you can test it's actual value: #if X == y.
@TonyTheLion Reading isn't exactly one of your virtues, is it?
> Now please don't get me wrong here. I am not at all concerned with losing <0.1% of my rep while I have done so little for raising it for such a long time. I currently have a rep of 62698, and if I wanted to up it, I'd start to answer questions again, rather than coming to the madhouse to ask to get back a meager 55 rep. — sbi
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, @sbi, how comes you changed your accepted answer on the smart pointer question? :P
sbi
sbi
@Xeo I got an upvote on the question, and looked at it, and saw that I, waiting for a simple algorithm, had never accepted any of the answers. So I looked over them and picked yours, because IMO it was closest to what i was after.
43 mins ago, by sbi
@MooingDuck Indeed. A pure morality question. I'm one of those madmen who are still being concerned with those.
@sbi oh I see
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, I somehow seemed to remember that you already picked one. My bad
sbi
sbi
@Kobobby: I am sure he is well aware of my opinion about meta. I was never shy to speak up what I think about you inmates. :)sbi 2 mins ago
:)
Xeo
Xeo
19:59
Dang it, I hate restarting my PC... brb
hmm, my BBQ chicken is covered in Teriyaki sauce again.
I love subway, but they really need to label the sauce bottles
Hi
In C++11, associative containers have a new erase signature, which returns an iterator.
Strangely, though, erase takes a const_iterator but returns an iterator. Why is that?
I don't know
oh, no, wait, I do know
I guess it's the most flexible way to have a single function
since you can convert on both ends
there's no reason that you can't erase a value you can't modify, right?
and also no reason, if the map is not const, that you cannot modify the next value
20:07
Well, the change of the argument type makes sense
I'm wondering about the return type now
if you're erasing from the container, then it must be mutable
so you must have the right to mutate it's contents
Nah. It's OK to erase a const-iterator
It's the same reasoning that makes it OK to call the destructor of a const object
{ const int a = 1; }
Xeo
Xeo
Yes, but the reasoning to return a non-const iter is that you have non-const access to the map anyways
@KerrekSB The container must be mutable.
Xeo
Xeo
To even call erase, which is a non-const member function
20:09
Yeah
I was thinking about it = c.erase(it), where it is a const_iterator, but that's OK
because of the convertibility
Xeo
Xeo
Also, you could ask the same question about vector<T>::erase etc
@Xeo I think those may have had different semantics in the old C++ all along
But yes, the constness issue is the same
Speaking of, does GCC 4.7 implement std::list::erase incorrectly?
I can only see an iterator signature for erase, contrary to what the standard says.
20:24
afternoon :)
20:40
aftanewn
@sbi I'm on your side btw, about the up vote algorithm. I don't think it did the right thing, Even given the consideration using a bot net to accomplish the same effect is possible.
@Pubby at least someone is alive in here today.
I'm not alive - that was just gas passing
@Pubby if you have gass passing, and the ability to discern yourself as not alive, then by definition you are alive.
My gas is a strange loop
@Pubby a strange loop, or an infinite loop:P
20:45
I dunno
@johnathon could have been a random happenstance that his gas triggered the keys of the keyboard in just the right order to form a grammatically correct sentance.
three times
@MooingDuck hence the infinite loop comment
It's 8:45 in the morning here
You're speaking to someone from the future!
@dreamlax stop being in the past/future
@dreamlax a day ahead of me then, whats the future hold for me?
20:47
It's the morning of the 8th!
@johnathon mental pain and anguish
@dreamlax quick! tell me what stocks to buy!
Nothing much, lotto numbers are 5, 13, 24, 26, 35 and 41
@MooingDuck ah, then nothing to get excited about, that's normal right
@MooingDuck for real :))
Technically I start working at 9am but in practice I don't start until noon
2
@MooingDuck Put all your money in Pubby industries
sbi
sbi
20:49
@dreamlax You're such a mean bastard! Why did you have to slip in that wrong one? (And don't tell me it was an accident, nobody makes mistakes when it comes down to the lotto numbers!)
LOL
Out of total curiosity, Anyone have any idea about the responsiveness of a Qt application vs a regular windows application (WTL) ? Considering today's hardware the question is purely of an academic nature, more to settle a curiosity. I digress though, if someone's rep hungry, I would post a formal question about it.
I should go learn stuff
n/m: stupid
@MooingDuck i take it we are all having issues today?
Learning takes so much effort... we need to progress to the point where we have machines that teach us Kung Fu etc. etc.
Like on the Matrix
20:57
@MooingDuck It's traded on the black market
@dreamlax those machines are the fantasy of every college student on earth. sit back, relax, and pass the exams with flying colors
@Pubby link?
@johnathon why would you have exams?
Costs $10000 to get access
Wire it over to my friend in nigeria
@MooingDuck I don't, but I remember a time when i did:)
There wouldn't be a need for exams, instead you'd just put on your Resume "Learned Computer Science from MIT disks 1 to 3" and that would be enough
sbi
sbi
20:59
@johnathon When was the last time you thought "oh, pressing this button took a whopping 50msecs, while pressing this other one only takes 40msecs!"? Usually, a GUI is much faster than we need it, and it's the underlying business logic that drags it down. I admit that there might be other cases, though.
@dreamlax @MooingDuck ah , but you guys forget 'The Navigator', ya know, star charts, brain leakage
@Sbi noted, and as I stated, purely an academic question to settle courisity
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Because they're fun to have? :)
Such a long time since I've seen that film...
sbi
sbi
Well, bedtime for me, folks. Good night!
night
21:01
g'night
mORNING
What is the POINT of caps lock
@dreamlax autorun key in some games
@dreamlax so you can type macro's out easily
It's for lazy FORTRAN programmers who prefer to shout their code
BEGIN PROCEDURE!!!
I care less about "why does capslock exist" than I do the scroll lock key.
21:02
Any key could toggle autorun though, it doesn't have to be Caps Lock
@dreamlax conveniently available next to the standard keys
All of the keys are next to the standard keys...
They should get rid of all the locks. I don't know anyone who prefers num-lock to be off or caps and scroll lock to be on
I hate it when I'm typing something numeric only to find my cursor has jumped all around my document
@dreamlax unless you run a system that has issues with the mouse your using ahem linux , then those arrow keys become important if you need to manipulate the gui in some way ie moving a window out from infront of the bash shell
@dreamlax , on the numberpad that is ..
@johnathon: So we're keeping num-lock for the 0.0001% of keyboard users that actually have a use for it?
I think more people use that stupid Clippy thing in Office
@dreamlax lmao, you do know you can edit your keyboard mappings right?
21:09
Yes, I could do that, but I shouldn't have to. The BIOS on my computer has an option for "Auto num-lock on" but what it really needs is a "Permanent num-lock on"
why oh why did I strip out my vector for an SSE vector
For speed?
For science?
@johnathon I haven't figured out how to on Windows yet, without a 3rd party program
Xeo
Xeo
For fun?
21:11
@MooingDuck which version of windows?
@johnathon XP
For Allah?
For glory ?
@MooingDuck it's in the control panel, keyboards and mice maby, it's been a few years sense I have touched xp
For sadness?
21:12
possibly I was totally insane
@MooingDuck you can even disable certian keys, such as the numlock
And WHO THE HELL thought that StickyKeys was a good idea?! Sometimes I just want to hold shift for 8 seconds and not be bothered by a dialog and a beeping noise
@dreamlax i agree with you there , hold shift ... think for a second.. and BAM stickey keys
@johnathon Under "Control Panel"->"Keyboard" my only options are "character key repeat" "cursor blink rate" and "hardware device properties" (which says my drivers are installed)
@dreamlax i mean for real, who codes... and uses stickey keys
@MooingDuck ah, i'd have to install xp in the virtual machine to find it man, it's there though you CAN do it, it's just not something easily done.
21:15
@johnathon wait, I think it might be in the "language" stuff
I don't know anyone that uses StickKeys at all. I don't know anyone that has held down shift and stared blankly at the keyboard looking for the letter or punctuation mark that they want, and do this so regularly that they need a way to relax the finger(s) that they use to hold down shift
@MooingDuck ah
@johnathon nope, I see no options in "regional and language options" ->"Text services and input languages" other than changing my keyboard it japanese or something.
@johnathon PEEPS. WAKE UP
@dreamlax all i can say is one of a software giant's more brilliant ideas? at one point in time i almost went on a search to find out a way to disable that crap because it annoyed me so much... but apparently it didn't annoy me enough to motivated to do so
21:17
Did it ever occur to you that the feature is for people with disability?
@johnathon stickykeys is easy to disable
@johnathon: You can disable the shortcuts easily enough
@sehe: yes, I know many disabled people that use computers (I fix laptops for a living) and almost none of them use a keyboard to type
Having accessibility features is a very good idea. It's nice. And the line of reasoning 'I don't know anyone who uses them' jsut plain misses the point by a number of miles
@johnathon "control panel" ->"accessibility options" -> uncheck "use sticky keys" (and everything else on that tab)
@dreamlax @MooingDuck yea, do that whilst your deep in a 4k line project.. yea, im going to stop my train of thought to go disable sticky keys :))
21:19
@dreamlax Think mild disabilities - like, painful to type with more than one finger. Too much tremor to hit the right key.
@dreamlax @MooingDuck it's bad enough that the sticky keys diverted my chain of thought to dismiss it to begin with
@sehe: Actually I had a customer the other day that had incredibly bad arthritis in both of his hands. He says he uses an onscreen keyboard because it's easier to choose letters on that than to type them in
@johnathon Do it once. Don't keep moaning. You're moaning now for more time than it will ever take acumulatively to disable sticky keys on every distinct PC that you'll encounter that 'problem' with for the rest of your life. </rant>
Ranting is a talent!
@dreamlax Good for him. I use mousekeys sometimes, because on many PC's I don't have a mouse or I'm just to lazy to hook one up. Or because it will give me pixel-perfect control.
Ohai
21:21
@sehe Im well aware of what it's there for, and in sometime in the future it could be handy if my keyboard decides to take a crap on me, at point in time i might also have a touch pad issue, and no working usb mouse to plug in, then i'd have the nightmare of not being able to rant in the SO lounge about it if i went and disabled it
I'm trying my hand at this question:
2
Q: Ambiguous metafunction or undefined type

nijansenI am new to metafunctions. I want to write a function that replaces all matches of a certain type in a compound type with some other type. In example: replace<void *, void, int>::type should be int *, replace<void, void, int>::type should be int, etc. I basically failed with two diff...

I've written this.
@johnathon lol
@johnathon vlaurie.com/computers2/Articles/remap-keyboard.htm says either 3rd party programs or registry diving. I'll review it at home, because I have no printscreen key at home :(
But it seems that Foo<A[N]> instantiated with const char[20] deduces A = char and N = 20. What happened to the const?
@MooingDuck Honnestly, every program ive seen that modifies some state of windows does so in a manner that can be achieved without that program, UNLESS it replaces a system dll, or hooks a system dll with it's own dll. ..
21:25
@johnathon yes, but I always hesitate to change the registry because someone on the internet told me to
@johnathon: The only way I can think of disabling num-lock is with a keyboard hook...
@MooingDuck: Amen... the registry is like a house made of toothpicks and sellotape
2
@MooingDuck What are you trying to find? Shall I fire up my VM?
@MooingDuck the point of the program though, is to not have to go and do that drudgery, and at you both, really, your going to trust a programmer to have written a program to do it for you?
@sehe I was trying to see how hard it was to rebind keys in Windows XP, for when I get home later
@MooingDuck Download Auto-Hotkey. Job done.
21:27
@sehe point he was trying to avoid
@sehe: We're trying to figure out how to do it without external apps
@johnathon program is less likely to overlook a detail or typo than I am
@MooingDuck think about that statement the next time you get a compile error
I did have a program for a while, but it had problems. I don't recall what it was, except it was specialized for running Windows on Macbooks.
@johnathon programs get tested.
@dreamlax It's probably gonna entail writing a keyboard mapping. Old windowses used to have the .kbd files in windows/system IIRC
21:29
@MooingDuck just saying, tests + more tests + unit tests != every possible scenario...
@KerrekSB It's like for int&, the top-level const is assumed to apply to the whole type, and array types don't have cv-qualifiers.
@johnathon I'm not saying it's perfect. I'm saying it's better than a novice giving it a shot unchecked one time on his first try.
@MooingDuck There's a sample app in Sysinternals: ctrl2cap
> On Win2K Ctrl2cap is a WDM filter driver that layers in the keyboard class device's stack above the keyboard class device.
@sehe is that something easy (as in can be done within 10 minutes)? I've always wanted to rearrange/disable keys on my keyboard...
And
@dreamlax The screwdriver method works for my colleagues
> the Win2K DDK's kbfiltr example that layers itself between the i8042 port device and the keyboard class device
21:31
@LucDanton I see. I was thinking something like that.... so should I strip of the array extent first?
@KerrekSB Sorry, I just came in media res. I don't know what this is about.
@LucDanton No no, I'm sure you're on the right track
@KerrekSB that's strange
In medias res or medias in res (into the middle of things) is a Latin phrase denoting the literary and artistic narrative technique wherein the relation of a story begins either at the mid-point or at the conclusion, rather than at the beginning (cf. ab ovo, ab initio), establishing setting, character, and conflict via flashback or expository conversations relating the pertinent past. The main advantage of in medias res is to open the story with dramatic action rather than exposition which sets up the characters and situation. Because it is a feature of the style in which a story is stru...
@LucDanton I want to spot a const char [20], tell you "char -> int", and you give me a const int [20]
21:33
Match T[N], recurse on T.
Problem: If T = int[10], then const T == T.
I'm trying that, but it seems that the top-level CV is just lost
i.e. const int[10] never matches anything to const int.
@KerrekSB your demo code just has const void that I see. Can void be const/volatile?
@MooingDuck Sure
@KerrekSB just a thought
Oh yay... another customer brought their laptop in "I need it fixed ASAP, I run my whole business off this laptop"... their hard drive is dead. I ring them and say "I can replace the hard drive and have it ready by this afternoon but you've lost all your data" and they say "I can't lose all my data, I've got all my invoicing and expenses on that laptop"
21:36
OK, simplified question: Write a Foo such that Foo<const int [10]>::type == const int.
I think that's what I'm missing
If Windows really wants to help people, it needs to have a popup that says "you haven't made a backup of your data for more than a week"
@KerrekSB If I have a partial spec with T[N], then const int[10] will be matched and T will be const int.
hi guys, how is every1 here ?
@KerrekSB template<typename T, int N> struct Foo<T[N]> { using type = T; };
When you set up your initial user account in Windows, it should have an option "Let Windows perform your data backups" and "I will do my own data backups"
21:38
@dreamlax they are trying, i mean when you do plug in an external drive these days to a win7 lappy it does ask you if you want to use it to back your data up
@LucDanton I cannot (re)produce that :-(
@Atif via the internet
@MooingDuck lol
Check out this code. It prints int.
@johnathon: Yeah I've noticed that one, it's really good too. The Windows backup tools are pretty good. Also, if the HDD's SMART attributes indicate imminent failure, Windows pops up then and says "HDD failure is imminent, do you want to back up your data now?"
So that's something at least...
Ohh, I got it:
@KerrekSB Have you checked the output of demangle<const int>() separately?
the problem is the underlying `typeid, which appears to discard CV qualifiers
@dreamlax mm hum.. now if they just didn't have the reputation of having stupid dialogs that popped up that people could safely dismiss .....
21:40
@LucDanton I have now :-)
can i ask a question about implementing std::find for vector ?
So the only way to get useful output is to pointerfy everything, since pointer-to-X will print X correctly
@Atif sure. it's already implemented, check out <algorithim>
@KerrekSB In const int the top-level qualifier is ignored for expressions. Might apply depending on how you're using typeid. But it might be the case that your implementation simply don't care that much about const int.
ops .. i mean using find not implementing
21:41
OK, I think I got it
@johnathon: Yes, that seems to be a problem... and usually the reason I get angry customers saying it's my fault they've lost all of their important files. Files that are sooooo important that they only need one copy of them
@LucDanton Even typeid(const int) is the same as typeid(int), it seems
@Atif std::find(vec.begin(),vec.end(),functor);
@dreamlax i understand what you mean bro ...
@KerrekSB That's a property of the implementation then. Obviously they are still two different types.
21:42
@Atif or, if your using c++ 11, std::find(begin(vec), end(vec), functor)
@dreamlax yea i know right, that issue is so well rooted with the history of the platform that there are tools and company's that charge mega bucks to dismantle a hdd and retrieve the info off of it
@KerrekSB I suppose you could try assert( typeid(const int) != typeid(int) ), just for laughs.
@johnathon i know ... but here is what i m trying to do ...
typedef vector<MasterProcess> m_p_vector;
m_p_vector m_proc_vector;
m_p_vector::iterator m_p_pos1;

proc_vector = survey_obj.getSurveyProcesses();
for (int i=0; i<proc_vector.size(); ++i)
{
m_p_pos1 = find (m_proc_vector.begin(),m_proc_vector.end(), (m_p_pos1->getProcessID() == (proc_vector.at(i)).getProcessID());

its giving me error
@LucDanton Will do. In the meantime, here is my final version.
@LucDanton "non-constant condition"
@johnathon: I come across so many customers needed professional data recovery. I've found a local company (in New Zealand) that has a "no data, no fee" policy. It ropes a lot of people in, but they are so good at what they do they almost always get something off it, and when they do, they charge an arm and a leg.
@KerrekSB Does not compute.
21:46
i want to find the element whose ID is same as the ID of another vector object
Last guy was charged about $1,500 to retrieve 1GB of documents...
I don't even think you can buy 1GB USB sticks any more
@LucDanton It's complaining that typeid(int) cannot be used in a static assertion.
@dreamlax dammmmmmmmm that is expensive
bk, @dreamlax mmhum, @Atif and what exactly does std::find return?
@KerrekSB Who said anything about static_assert?
21:49
find returns the current element from the vector which satisfies the given condition (matches the value)
@dreamlax yea, like i said it's an exuberant amount of cash to do it
@LucDanton I thought you did. I must have mis-thought.
damn you spell check
:))
Nowadays I can only think statically, it seems.
I wish my coworker would stop hardcoding his IP into our product. :/
21:49
Cost of 4GB USB stick in NZ, about $5. Cost of recovering 1GB of data, $1,500.

I should put this poster up at the front counter
@Atif the current element as in an index position, or an iterator
But indeed the assertion survives.
@Atif whats the TYPE of the return
It would be nice if we could run most of a program at compile time.
I think we had discussed static_starcraft before. It would be much faster.
0
Q: Simplest Dynamic Programming article

Haris Riazi did a little digging on dynamic programming! am not actually getting the concept of it! i request you people to kindly post the link of any article that would be simplest to explain dynamic programming

@KerrekSB you can run most of a program at compile time! I've been working on a template-based VM interpreter.
21:51
Hmm, I'm watching Battle Royale and they're using the source code of nmap
@johnathon an iterator to the element which satisfies the condition
@stdOrgnlDave A request has been made. I would much prefer a quest. With gold coins.
user406009
@KerrekSB Just think of the badges as oddly shaped gold coins.
Here's a general question. I have a c++ game and I would like to "connect" it to a very simple (think chessboard) graphics in such manner that it would be possible to port it to Android and iOS platforms. Any idea what graphics engine / libraries should I use :) ?
21:53
@EthanSteinberg They somehow lack depth...
I'm not sure if I should make it a template-based VM compiler though
@stdOrgnlDave IO is tricky
@stdOrgnlDave thx for your help yesterday bro ... and sorry I vanished all of a sudden when you posted your help .. my chatting privileges were revoked
@Atif and what does it return if Find fails?
@MooingDuck I'm good enough at crashing compilers now I can probably smash the stack and insert some code for I/O
21:54
@Atif and i think it might be more helpfull, if you posted your error
@Atif no problem, sorry that I was so retarded, hope it was helpful
user406009
@ScarletAmaranth The typical answer would be to write a simple wrapper.
user406009
I guess you could try to wrap the idea of drawing or filling polygons.
@Atif because what you did post, your find did not contain a functor
@Atif nor a lamda
@MooingDuck alternately, I can make template errors that are so obscure and malformed that they end up outputting the interpreted code in Java, just copy and paste into Java compiler and there you go!
21:56
@stdOrgnlDave now that would be amusing
@EthanSteinberg Porting that myself would be a horror i reckon ? No experience in this area.
@ScarletAmaranth cocos2d isn't bad
@johnathon i have not covered that case yet ... yeah let me post the error "In function ‘int main()’ error: expected ‘)’ before ‘;’ token "
@stdOrgnlDave Thanks, gonna take a look at it.
can i not use an expression for find ?
21:57
@Atif yea, that's because your find did not use a functor , nor a lamda. What compiler are you using ?
@Atif from the looks of it a MS one
@stdOrgnlDave yes bro .. it was useful ... gave me an idea and successfully implemented today
gcc 4.6.1
@ScarletAmaranth with that said if you stick to a reasonable subset of OpenGL it's mostly trivial to port to OpenGL ES, especially if you don't use anything outside of the fixed-function pipeline
@Atif make a functor object to pass into your find, are you familiar with functors?
Back from my final... eh... kinda went ok...
@Mysticial you know everything, though
21:59
@stdOrgnlDave No I don't. I know where to look for everything, but I don't know everything.
@stdOrgnlDave no, he just knows HPC. He's lacking in the standard library IIRC

« first day (569 days earlier)      last day (4606 days later) »