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08:04
aaargh
3D graphics lecturer, y u call cross product "vector product" and give it the boolean AND symbol from formal logic notation?
hahaha… gotta put something esoteric on the slides…
and whyyyy u needlessly list matrix formulae
I don't care how rotation matrices are implemented :(
08:28
> I have studied c++ before a few years back but it's useless to know c++ on its own unless you only want to make singleplayer console text games.
Kids say the darndest things.
lol
Oh wait, he means you need to learn additional libraries for graphics and stuff. Which isn't wrong.
man
@DeadMG You don't? I spent several days understanding rotation matrices and implementing matrix multiplication with fixed point arithmetic in x86 assembly back in the days.
08:32
these lecture notes refer to a "plotter". I had to go look it up. It's a pre-1980s printer variant.
Plotters use real pens instead of spitting ink ;)
@FredOverflow Of course I don't. D3DXMATRIX rot; D3DXMatrixRotationZ(arg, &rot); done.
There was no such thing as Direct3D in the mid 90s. (And if there was, I had no C++ compiler to use it.)
true
but this is not the mid 90s, it's the early 2010s, and no 3D API exists which does not define such things for you
and even if it did, you could simply copy the formula from Wikipedia
0
Q: Overloading an operator function

keerthiSuppose I need to overload an operator function which performs 2 functions. For example, the first function handles prefix increment and the second function handles postfix. Is there any different syntax for this?

Closed as duplicate without a link to the duplicate? WTF?
@DeadMG Of course, but I wanted to understand it back then.
08:35
I have never seen that happen.
@FredOverflow True. But here's the thing- 1. I have no desire to understand it. 2. I have no need to understand it. So I object to being forced to waste my time on it.
especially as everybody uses Quaternions for spatial rotations these days
You have a lecture on 3D graphics, of course it's gonna get technical.
preferably, it would be technical about the things you need to know to do 3D graphics
not "technical about the utterly random things the lecturer half-remembered were important 20 years ago"
I could also cover the technical issues about lithography and how circuits are printed; but it won't help me produce a 3D engine
What do you need a 3D engine for? And why not just use an existing one?
I need one to render my game, and I'm not going to use an existing one because I wish to learn about it's construction
08:59
^ Silly-badge, I didn't even vote, as I recall.
But I now got two such badges!
@CheersandhthAlf You just have to visit.
@RadekSlupik or like silly visual studio designers. it's like they're advertising: "we're dumb".
Shog9 on June 08, 2012

The 2012 Stack Overflow moderator election is off to a good start, with 15 candidates and just under three days left for nominations. Elections are a fairly mature feature of Stack Exchange at this point (Role-playing Games has one in progress now as well), but Stack Overflow remains the largest and I dare say most interesting: with so many members involved (and so many more potentially affected by the outcome) every part of the system is put through the wringer… Including the candidates and voters themselves! …

@sbi Norwegian public (government) web sites are required to use HTML 4.1 or XHTML 1.0. Silly (but just the attempt to require some standards is praiseworthy). Most new sites are HTML 5.0.
maybe I should write a book called "That's silly, silly!"
@CheersandhthAlf Chinese government sites are coded to IE 6. Unknown whether there was a central directive.
09:04
oh
You can avoid much silly-work by defining the functions before main, instead of declaring them there and then defining them. The general principle of not doing meaningless redundant things is as of 2012 known as DRY: Don't Repeat Yourself. Just apply it to most everything. ;-) — Cheers and hth. - Alf 1 min ago
^ I wondered if comment-links work. It seems they do.
0
A: big integer addition without carry flag

Maziar Bouali<html> <head><title>title</title></head> <body> <form action="" method="get"> Name: <input type="text" name="name"/><br/> Pwd: <input type="password" name="password"/><br/> <div class="yourCustomDiv"/> <input typ...

lol?
dafuq
you almost took an arrow to the knee there :P
@FredOverflow I answered the Q. I don't think the lol-factor of joking answer was very high.
do you need code also?
(i didn't think so but then, this is SO?)
I'm not sure I understand your answer
oh dang
then maybe i should add code.
09:15
@CheersandhthAlf lol no
would be nice :)
@FredOverflow oh you ruined it :P
if (a + b < a) overflow_has_occurred
right?
oh simple enough
ohai @sehe
09:18
max result is 2*(2^n-1) = 2^(n+1)-2, which means highest bit that can be set is bit n, which means max carry is 1
i'll add that also
@FredOverflow Not if signed- UB.
@DeadMG Right, but I only need this for unsigned.
huh, why did paxdiablo get upvote and not i when my answer is more complete and more concise and earlier
so
SO
@FredOverflow Then I'm pretty sure that's true.
@CheersandhthAlf because he got more rep than you
09:24
freaking idiots
well
i don't care about the rep but i do care about people, it's painful to see them in action
2
@CheersandhthAlf I explained the upvote, because of the lulz in implementing bignum in Python.
@CheersandhthAlf I liked the short version better ;)
i can move the analysis to comment, yes?
You can never please everybody. Do what you think is right.
@FredOverflow So, what are you really doing? You can't use GMP?
09:41
@Potatoswatter As always, I am just curious. I want to have implemented at least the basic bigint operations myself before using something like GMP.
Also, I don't need anything else besides addition ATM, so I think GMP would be overkill.
Why does all the commentary on the Flame virus talk about "the nation-state" that wrote it? Didn't the US already admit as much when they went public about Stuxnet just days after the Flame story broke?
Am I a conspiracy theorist for saying that's not a coincidence?
Am I a conspiracy theorist for saying you are a conspiracy theorist?
@FredOverflow as i remember, the way to get division up and going just for testing out things, is to use newton-raphson. then implement for real
@bamboon No, you are a conspiracy theorist theorist.
@Potatoswatter as i recall, Flame attacks in middle east states including israel. so there is some room for doubt.
09:47
@Potatoswatter It's pretty much accepted that it must be a state behind viruses like Flame and Stuxnet.
stuxnet was more oriented towards Siemens equipment located in, Iran.
@CheersandhthAlf Flame sows seeds everywhere. So did Stuxnet. It's a virus.
what I find most awesome is that it was written in fkin Lua
@Fred: that's what the "+ 1" in the analysis is. — Cheers and hth. - Alf 4 mins ago
@Potatoswatter No, Stuxnet was specifically designed to be quiet and not leak onto the wider Internet. As soon as a glitch resulted in that happening, it was discovered.
09:48
@FredOverflow: no, think for example a=1, b=max, carry=1. you'll end up with 1 (+ a new carry of course), but 1 is not smaller than a. However, you could split it up in two additions. You can then simply add the carries of those additions for further processing safely, they'll be at most 2 in your higher-order byte. — KillianDS 2 mins ago
Okay so who is right, Alf or Killian? :)
as i understand it, (s)he says the same as i
@DeadMG Yeah, but it did happen. And it used USB keys for vectors.
@Potatoswatter Yeah, I know. But it doesn't spread randomly as far as possible like a normal virus.
the infected USBs were specifically targetted at Natanz employees, IIRC, not just vectors from one infected machine to another
Dunno. I read that the antivirus company claimed to have detected infections outside Iran resulting from USB keys.
look, i'll give you rundown of final analysis step, 2*(2^n-1) + 1 = 2^(n+1)-1
2^n-1 is FFFF....
2*that is adding of two max operands
+ 1 is max carry from first add
yielding 2^(n+1)-1, which is 1FFFFF....
which is max carry 1
it's simple
09:52
Maybe you don't understand my concern. Adding s = a + b + c and then asking if s < a will not detect all overflows, for example 1 = 0xffffffff + 1 + 1 but 1 < 1 does not hold.
unless like the tortoise you want to prove also the idea of proof by induction
Oh wait, you mean the 0xffffffff case cannot happen? No, that can't be it, of course a can be 0xffffffff.
you check for overflow before adding the carry
Yes, you can't have both carry bits be one. The total carry-in is at most one.
and then check again
09:53
Aha, so I need two checks per addition. That wasn't clear to me.
@Potatoswatter Yes, but it wasn't supposed to do that. It was supposed to detect and ignore machines which weren't on the target list.
wait
if there is overflow from the first addition, then adding carry can't overflow
if there is no overflow from first addition, then adding carry can overflow
@DeadMG Well… the claim is that Flame doesn't appear to be an American creation because it infected sites in Israel and US and Israel are allies. But given that Stuxnet, being much more highly targeted, couldn't be effectively controlled, it doesn't seem a convincing argument when applied to Flame.
the problem from efficiency point of view is that making decisions can play havoc with instruction cache in processor
so maybe just measure
@Potatoswatter Absolutely agreed.
09:56
i mean the test (a < b) is not necessary a decision: it generates 0 or 1 value
Yes, the whole problem is that the compiler would have to detect all this crazy math and say "ooh, the carry flag does that."
However, assuming it won't be optimized as such, you're best off performing both tests.
what's wrong with the normal a + b < a test?
Nah, gawd I'm being an idiot today.
And this deadline is already right on me. Eek.
@DeadMG Because it's a + b + c, where c is only 0 or 1.
@Potatoswatter Ah.
well that can be simplified considerably
you can compute the carry from all the bits simultaneously, and then run another addition later
that is begging to be SSE or parallelized
Uh, there's a CPU instruction for that part.
10:08
which part?
adding numbers.
right
I don't think it can carry between an arbitrary number of integers, though.
Either I misunderstand the intent or you're on the path to reinventing the carry-lookahead adder.
@Potatoswatter not really
10:12
Lol according to Wikipedia it was invented by Babbage and he called it "anticipating the carriage" :D
I'm fairly sure it can be faster than manually testing for overflow on every 32bit integer
steeling that... :-)
yes, computing sum and carry again is two ops instead of one, but you can use SSE intrinsics to do it for four 32bit ints at once, and there's way less branches
Using the regular registers, you only need to check once per 64 bits…
his original code was 32bit, not 64bit
although I get your point
of course, if you have a modern Intel processor, you can do 256bit SSE intrinsics
or you can parallelize this algorithm more easily, IMO
10:18
Parallelization wins. Especially when you run on 32/64 elements.
Move EVERYTHING to the GPU. Well, not everything.
Parallelization wins on large datasets. If you're adding lots of numbers ~100 bits, then there's not enough to parallelize. And if the numbers are large, then it will become memory bound, not CPU bound.
So there's a limited sweet spot where SSE or carry-lookahead would be a win vs naive ripple carry.
Yup, the shear between memory and CPU performance is a painful cross to bear.
@DomagojPandža GPUs are flat like Mila Kunis, move everything to them and you might as well compute everything on a a piece of paper and then type in the values "in real time" :)
can I switch on typeids?
10:21
@bamboon Good question! I believe not, because the relevant value isn't constexpr.
ok thanks guys
@bamboon but you can look them up in O(1) time by putting wrapped type ids in hash table
Yep. typeid::hash_code is const, not constexpr. There is std::type_index which allows you to create a std::map, though.
And then MS decided to give away their C++ compilers for free in Express editions anyways (read: under community pressure... or something): blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/06/08/…
@rubenvb Yeah, there's already a starred message about it on the starboard.
@Potatoswatter Well, I also guess that the worst-case running time is O(n) in the number of bits, which is pretty bad.
10:25
@DeadMG well, I got a half-screen firefox which gives me 2 starred messages currently.
@rubenvb u can click on "show all 9604"
and even with a full screen firefox and 10 starred messages it elides me.
@CheersandhthAlf why on earth would I do that?
@rubenvb At the bottom.
@ScarletAmaranth The GPUs win. If you consider your intensive application properly, there will be ample place to push for SSE intrinsics on your standard 4-6 core processor, there will be a lot of time even for serial, RA stuff. But there will also be beautiful data that begs to be warped/wavefronted. And when you have a device with a theoretical maxima of 5.1 TFLOPS, shit gets real.
I'm not checking the extended star board before saying something.
sheesh.
10:27
the star board can be extended?
And then writing back into main memory is a small price to pay for the large amount of data your GPU crushed.
I hope they give the Windows 8 SDK for Desktop the commandline tools as well.
Windows 8 is still the new Vista.
But at least they're cracking under pressure. +1
@DomagojPandža Agree
Pressure all the MS devs!
10:31
the important thing is that my Wide library and language specifications are coming together
if I keep cracking on, the spec might be done soon
I just installed the Windows SDK v7.0 because it doesn't include any of the .Net crap and offers nothing significantly less than v7.1 or the 2012 RC's.
Bah, Beyond: Two Souls is just a big quick time event. ._.
@DomagojPandža Max Payne 3 has like, one (fortunately) slow time event
where you can take like, five seconds to respond and it'll still work out
I spent ~$70 for Max Payne 3 on Steam, in around 45 minutes, I'll also get the chance to tell my life story to Rockstar.
eh
turns out that if you're on Steam, they can just take that instead of most of your life story
10:39
Nobody seems to know how to optimize their data anymore. 26 GB, shameful.
Also, video and multilanguage data sucks dick. Should be rendered inengine and download only the required stuff.
But, to my favorite outlandish cop whose family got butchered, I'm ready to forgive.
@DomagojPandža Wait till you see the opening cutscene. They make you watch it before you can change the resolution, and they don't set the default to desktop resolution. I had to watch it in like, 800x600 or something, and my desktop resolution is 1080p.
btw
I recommend playing it on the easiest difficulty
I started out on the hardest you can start on, because I'm a hardcore pro, and whilst I haven't found it particularly difficult, it is irritating
How does one manage to actually enforce a subnominal resolution. Just copy the desktop settings, for crying out loud.
one of the ways they made it harder is by lowering the amount of bullet time you get
which IMO is a dumb decision
Bullet time is happy fun time.
I want that.
cut back on your principle gameplay mechanic? nice job
10:42
Precisely.
instead they should, like, give you twice as much bullet time but give all the enemies bulletproof helmets
stuck right now on a scene where the enemy has a bulletproof helmet and it's fucking hard
I can't wait to start shooting.
When you're stuck, the best thing is to go code away for a few hours and then give it a try. Sleeping works even better.
trust me, I did that
when I said "the guy is bulletproof" I mean "You can literally unload an entire 30bullet clip into his head and nothing happens".
also he wields a minigun
Is there some visual feedback, the helmet cracking (progress report)?
@DomagojPandža "happy fun time" is what we called rainbow six after one of my friends mum's totally misunderstood the rainbow bit of the name
10:48
@DomagojPandža Not that I could tell.
there's probably some trick to beating him that I just don't know
happened to his predecessor
tried him fifteen times in a row, got absolutely owned, and the sixteenth time, he went down after about two bullets
must be some magic weak spot
Yeah, the problem with obvious weak spots is that they're too obvious. :D
And then you do the smart thing, die 15 times before you actually do the obvious thing. :D
nah
Stupidity factor: Copy equations from a 12-year old paper without qualification. Because deriving your own equations is too mainstream. Result: 77.8ms for one frame.
10:51
I tried just shooting him in general after the head appears to be made out of Chobham armour
I can't wait to see the animation engine in action, seems really fluid.
it's actually very nice
especially where you can see him in cutscenes carrying around the guns you had and things like that
Consistency is the single best thing that can happen ingame. Prop consistency, story consistency, choice decision consistency. Hell, animation consistency.
Fortunately, I don't expect much from the story, the good old days are over. Bullet time is enough for me.
I've been playing around with the UDK while I wait, the performance sucks and it doesn't have a right do so because even the showcase scenes are pre-2007.
Also, I've heard multiple times their codebase isn't really worth the tagged $350k.
eh
there's a reason I write my own engin
11:06
Yeah, it entertains me that people think writing your own engine is a lot of effort if you want good results. It involves effort, but it's not really inhumane if you know what the hell you're doing.
more relevantly, I just couldn't get over some of the stuff in UDK
like Kismet
sorry, buddy, I'm a programmer, give me a real fuckin' language
But their reference frame is the amount of effort it takes the publisher to dish out $350k.
Kismet takes so much damn effort to make even the simplest scenes.
Just write the damn code.
A solid scripting language is worth 1000 Kismets.
hell, just give me C++
I mean, I can't expect people to give me Wide, so it may as well be C++ :P
Or that, yeah. And you actually get to respect yourself for making a game if you're just an engine licensee.
eh
there's a lot more that goes into a game than licencing an engine
11:09
@DeadMG I wrote an inline assembly version in the meantime, it's so much less code than what the compiler produced for tricky C code.
I guess I'll just go with that, even though I really didn't want inline assembly when I started... :)
it's hard to pin down "fun".
I mean, when you consider BS like D3's AH, it really doesn't matter how it was coded- it's BS either way.
I had posted a question yesterday and later edited it to reduce its scope. But I found people just closing it.
Concept art, formulating 3D geometry out of it, optimizing, rigging, animating. And the game design itself, the most important thing. A lot of work, indeed. But for those involved with the actual game design, they should code, not connect little boxes with lines.
@msiyer Ask on Meta if you're confused.
@DeadMG Does AVX support 256 bit integer arithmetic?
11:11
@FredOverflow pretty sure.
@FredOverflow Yes, it does. Don't worrry.
oh no, not integers in the current state
> Suitable for floating point-intensive calculations in multimedia, scientific and financial applications (integer operations are expected in later extensions).
So AVX uses 4 doubles per register or what?
still
Oh, integer operations. Didn't see that. Still not available?
11:13
or 8 float
I think AMD are right- when DX11 or better class GPUs become more common, SSE will go the way of the dodo
if only they had waited for that to actually happen before nerfing the shit out of Bulldozer's single-threaded capabilities
Well, you have to go with the times. I'm glad the alignment issues are a thing of the past (mostly).
lol
Looks like it will all arrive about on time for Christmas.
But it is always entertaining how every new generation of SIMD functionality first starts out without integer support and then adds them later. I would've thought they learned by now.
void add(struct bigint * a, const struct bigint * b)
{
    __asm__ __volatile__ (
        "mov 0(%1), %%eax \n\t"
        "add %%eax, 0(%0) \n\t"
        "mov 4(%1), %%eax \n\t"
        "adc %%eax, 4(%0) \n\t"
        "mov 8(%1), %%eax \n\t"
        "adc %%eax, 8(%0) \n\t"
        "mov 12(%1), %%eax \n\t"
        "adc %%eax, 12(%0) \n\t"
        "mov 16(%1), %%eax \n\t"
        "adc %%eax, 16(%0) \n\t"
    : "=D"(a) : "S"(b) : "%eax", "cc", "memory");
}
That must be the most horrible inline assembly syntax I have ever seen. It took forever to have the compiler accept the code.
11:17
@DomagojPandža That's only the case if not having it was because they thought nobody would use it or someshit like that.
@FredOverflow The tabs go at the end of the line? You're not missing a tab at the beginning?
@Potatoswatter looks just fine the way it is with gcc -S. The first tab is apparently implicit.
why do you even need tab and newline spam?
GCC is really not designed for that.
You either need a newline or a semicolon, and if you use a newline, the output looks sucky without the tab :)
11:20
lol
@Potatoswatter Well, at least it works. Now I never have to touch that code again :)
@FredOverflow Yeah, last time I wrote any asm that way, I thought I had it working and then turned out I hadn't properly allocated a register or whatever.
It would be nice if they had a human-usable assembler to go along with gas.
If you leave out the __volatile__ part, gcc optimizes the code away starting at -O1. That problem was not particularly fun to solve.
2013. for AVX2
crap
And then a few years for damn adoption.
Do you need AXV2? What for?
11:25
Well, they main thing is that you have to have a fallback path if you wish to utilize any of the SIMD functionality. And then you have to consider whether or not someone will have a processor which supports everything. Gathering would be nice, integer support would be nice, hell... I try to make the best out of everything.
1. Solve exercise in standard C.
2. Solve exercise in assembly for machine that won't exist for a few years.
Luckily, for the mathematical backend of games, the usual fp stuff is sufficient.
But there are times when something that's not available is a big pain in the ass, for example, the fallback to SSE2 for integers.
@DeadMG Thanks
@DomagojPandža SSE3 is 7 or 8 years old. I think it's safe to assume that everybody has it by now.
yeah, SSE4 is only a couple years old in production CPU terms, but SSE3 shipped with Pentium 4, IIRC, which is way below the target of my game engines.
11:30
I don't worry about SSE, it was just an example because that's when integers were introduced. I was hoping things would be a bit more accelerated this time around. Every time you half the advancement, we will eventually suffer for it.
Even my crappy Core2Duo 4300 has SSE3 :)
@DomagojPandža All I'm saying is that there might be real hardware reasons to introduce it in two stages, and if FP is more common, then FP goes first.
There's SSE4.1 and SSE4.2, don't forget…
I think the hardware reason is mainly a matter of implementing and verifying the logic. Each instruction is a burden on the circuit engineers.
AltiVec was specced and implemented all at once, though. (int & fp)
I don't know when I got so addicted to parallelization. It's just so fun, the notion of dispatching crap across the board instead of waiting for independent data to be processed in series.
Now that I have finally implemented addition for my big integers, I realize what I actually need is multiplication :)
11:36
Big integers. I like.
"Dispatching crap across the board" sounds quite primal. Must be your inner monkey.
Inner monkeys be praised, for they will bring the new era of blessed performance!
After finishing addition in untyped lambda calculus, I decided I didn't want multiplication. (But I would like a decent signed number system.)
eh
I don't understand why lambda calculus is even remotely interesting or useful
could you possibly name a non-esoteric system that has less relevance to actual programs?
It's minimalist, within the concession of a notion of abstraction, unlike Brainfuck.
11:44
which is quite equivalent to useless
Heh, for a screed manifesto, that blogpost remains pretty sane.
More down to earth than that, though, I think that binary lambda calculus or a derivative has potential as a very compact program encoding.
I think that we all learned from those guys who did #define F for that compact is not valuable as a program property.
Anyone here knows about Windows Filtering Platform
there's a difference between wasting bytes (looking at you, C++) and cutting down information the human programmer actually needs to comprehend the code at hand
11:50
@DeadMG I said encoding, not language.
the encoding of all my source programs is probably UTF-8 or UTF-16
Now you're just being dense.
I have never, ever seen "encoding" used to programs except as an encoding for either in-program or source text.
Ever heard of "bytecode"?
Any Windows programmer in c++ ??
11:53
yes, but I've never heard it called an encoding
always just seen it called IL or bytecode
Well, I just combined words in a new and exciting way.
Can anybody confirm that 10^48 = 0xaf298d05eab0644d4c1d228e7f41000000000000?
Binary lambda calculus could not be described as a bytecode because it's defined as a stream of bits.
bitcode, bytecode, whatever
but you'd still end up with the same problem- the output would be huge and take forever to run
it's just problematic for the CPU instead of the human
python >>> hex( pow(10,48) )
'0xaf298d050e4395d69670b12b7f41000000000000L'
plus, you'd still need a source text language to be converted to bitcode
Huh? Translating between formats is the mathematically easy part. Languages are all the same.
and fundamentally pointless
why would I translate from C++ into binary lambda calculus?
11:58
If you want a compact representation (for example if storage/transmission is expensive), and the source is C++…
@Potatoswatter looks similar, but not identical :(
Yeah, you have a 644 but no 696.
@Potatoswatter I'm pretty sure that even the C++ source code representation would be more compact than the lambda calculus representation.
not to mention bye bye types and type safety
@DeadMG Did you read the first paragraph of my blog post?
@DeadMG Which typical machine language has in spades.

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