@nwp it means "In all honesty with ye fine gentry, I am currently experiencing a certain level of despair at the lack of new episodes of my favourite television series that has arisen over the past week or two, and which shall continue for several more months."
I learned a lot from that episode. Like how in a computer program all subroutines always generate the same random numbers and can send e-mails to outside the simulation.
Talking about bad code, I once worked in a place to find out someone was throwing exceptions to return "peacefully" from a method to return some data instead of using the return statements... All of that after refactoring the code to make it no throw an index out of bound exception
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Think about it for a moment. Once you have String ToInt(T), it hardly matters what it returns. Nothing (that fits the signature) can possibly be right.
So, my code has a lot of ` std::map<SettingEnum, int>` where there are maybe 4 or 5 settings, is there some more computationally efficient way to handle this stuff?
@Mikhail Given only 4 or 5 items, it's almost certainly faster to use a std::vector<std::pair<SettingEnum, int>>, and probably just use a linear search to find the right spot.
@JerryCoffin Yeah a more optimal solution would be to us a small vector class, but ideally the enum, because they are sequential, would be the index avoiding a search. But not sure how to do this in a C++ style.
@Mikhail If they're contiguous and start at 0, I'd just wrap an array into a small "settings" template with the enum as a template parameter (and possibly the int as another template parameter). If they're contiguous by don't start at 0, you can typically just subtract the smallest from each to get values starting from 0.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, then I'd have to label those bastards, they might accidentally convert to ints, which is undesired because I got some constructors that take a few ints + enums and I need type safety. Time to scour the internet for somebody elses code.
@JerryCoffin There's no limit on revisiting stars and I also see no constraint that you must visit every star in the input, only 20 stars where the input may be more stars, and you don't need to return to base.
in fact I reckon this could be solved fairly easily with A*
@Mikhail Oh, you'd wrap the array in a class that defines operator[], and only converts from the enum class to an integer type internally (but doesn't use any virtual functions, or anything like that, so it retains the same memory footprint as the std::array.
I swear some guy wrote this kind of performance efficient mapping as well as a version of SmallVector and even benchmarked his implementation for a quasi-rearch paper, but I can't find the link.
@jaggedSpire Sounds cleaner than what I'm doing right now... skipping a version for a migration for something written custom by the client to something how it should be
I think I can clearly say I hate migrating stuff now
I think there is nothing more depressing to see the migration fail at 21% then fail at 21.03% for 2 different problems
@Mikhail not code migration, database migration sort of
schema changed and relations are differents
my biggest issue is that the client allowed to have multiple attributes with the same name, but it's not possible with the standard way.. There is no point to have multiple attributes with the same category/name
I was able to mostly solve a GPU memory fragmentation issue by limiting memory allocation to 75% of the GPU. How fucked am I? Code is "shipping" to Georgia Tech on Wednesday.
@JerryCoffin That stuff felt so out of date when I read it after learning C++11 (which was the ratified standard when I learned programming, so anyway)