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03:16
@fog Starting a programming company is easy. Generate a large net cash inflow through it, however it's not so easy.
 
8 hours later…
11:38
Is there a modern-day fix to this that anyone knows about?
nwp
nwp
Use MsPaint
lol
I said modern
nwp
nwp
Paint.NET
I come here for the comedy gold
Have you thought about flipping your monitor instead?
11:45
No, it's actually a lot easier to just flip myself
Just your head, to make it easier for you ...
Although I do lose a lot of coffee doing that
nwp
nwp
Try a mirror. Though I guess nobody has those anymore. Use a smartphone, they have an option to flip the image and you can view your monitor through the smartphone camera.
Who said CSS isn't an advanced language? It incorporated AR from the start.
I can't do the smartphone thing :,(
I have no arms
nwp
nwp
Sometimes I wonder how you get anything done. Then I wonder why I'd think you did.
11:52
pulleys, lots of pulleys
Maybe if I put the image in a xamarin.form and then abandon the project eventually it will fix its self
nwp
nwp
Abandoning the project is most definitely the right call.
I need to find a new project. I'm tired of getting all my motivation drained by the Unity editor being garbage.
Unity? What are you making a Voodoo.io game?
nwp
nwp
No, itchio.io of course.
I mean I didn't think about distribution at all. I just wanted to make something.
it's always neat to see some random old forum post you made be useful to someone else. Just saw someone else used the reverse-engineered custom compression format I found in 2013 some PSP game to decompress some data from a Wii game last year
same publisher/developer for each game?
nwp
nwp
12:00
HaXx0r
I made a game about clicking a cookie that I think is really going to take off
didn't look like it, one was from a subdivision of Kadokawa games and the other was from Sega
probably the same people working on it, maybe same subcontractor
ah
My game development is so good that whenever I'm in a relationship my partner is always playing them
The first edit was too close for comfort
12:23
You made me curious and tried to find the common denominator in those games, and it seems like SHADE Inc. was involved in both games
nwp
nwp
@CupOfJava Let me date you 😳
2
I'll drink from you and everything.
way to shoot your shot in a chat room
Not many people want to date me, I'm only A cup XD
nwp
nwp
Don't worry, me too.
Nothing wrong with A cups.
4
I couldn't resist the pun, you really lined me up for that
nwp
nwp
Maybe I'll stretch you out into a mug how about you just give me the link?
13:06
The layers of hack are giving me headaches
I got a workaround involving some house of cards including mesa,meson,llvm,cmake and conan
out of those I hate meson the most, it's only ever came up just to give me trouble
nwp
nwp
It's difficult to believe you found something worse than cmake.
It's not worse if you just use linux. But it's doing the whole "we're very opinionated" thing. So if you got a use-case that they don't like, then you have to do cartwheel and backflips
I'm leaving the typos
 
6 hours later…
19:19
Is the fact that C++ allows the combination of rvalue references and move semantics a proof that C++ can inherently be faster than C?
afaik rvalue refs + move semantics together are, amongst other things, used for high performance libraries
Pretty sure there are many other tricks, that only exist in cpp, which are eg used in high frequency trading that allow much "faster" execution
 
1 hour later…
20:33
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn No. C++ is not inherently faster than C. The performance is entirely dependent on the skill of the programmer.
AFAIK the move semantics stuff I mentionned is non existant in C.
So in that case you d be faster in C++
Move semantics are a solution to a problem that only existed in C++ in the first place.
One argument in favor of C++ is that it has a stronger type system. This can result in faster code in some situations.
@StackedCrooked example?
For example, std::sort vs qsort.
78
Q: Performance of qsort vs std::sort?

ChanAccording to Scott Meyers, in his Effective STL book - item 46. He claimed that std::sort is about 670% faster than std::qsort due to the fact of inline. I tested myself, and I saw that qsort is faster :( ! Could anyone help me to explain this strange behavior? #include <iostream> #include <vector>...

^ Actually, that's probably a bad example
However, the point is that std::sort accepts a template argument that needs to implement operator<. This can all be inlined, so calling std::sort generates custom code optimized for the type of data. While qsort requires a function pointer for the comparison.
Also I think C++ has stricter aliasing rules than C. (Correct me if I'm wrong @JerryCoffin, @Morwenn, ...?)
20:58
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn C style code arena allocates and rarely hits the allocator, with C++ you're always worrying about constantly allocating/deallocating data. As StackedCroked said, these C++ mechanism solve problems C++ created...
@StackedCrooked no that's the entire point
Huh, what do you mean "no"?
The entire point of C++ and templates is that it can generate highly optimized code to solve that issue. Inlining etc.
Yeah, that was also my point.
qsort can't be optimized out
21:32
That's not entirely true. C allows things like a function that returns a struct, and when you do, it (at least officially) always copies the struct.

But you get kind of a chicken and egg situation, that nobody does it much, because compilers generally produce lousy code for it. And compilers don't optimize it, because nobody does it. So, it often produces crappy code, but nobody cares enough to fix it (and it can be fixed purely as a compiler optimization, without changing the language definition).
21:53
@JerryCoffin I wouldn't be surprised if some have basically implemented C++ guaranteed copy elision for C
22:05
AFAIK, RVO was invented by Walter Bright (from D). The concept of move semantics came much later.
But RVO is not the same as move semantics.
Move semantics are a semantic, lol. They allow you to express the intention to move an object.
And this introduces "move-from state" etc...
You don't have any of that in C.
22:24
Is RVO even observable in C? I'd expect it to fall under the as-if rule
I don't think it's observable.
I mean, without looking at the generated machine code lol
The abstract machine doesn't care about machine code :')
How could it ever be observable in C? I mean in C++ you can implement the copy constructor, and you can observe whether it's called or not (e.g using a simple print statement). But in C there's nothing like that AFAIK.
@nwp flat is bustice

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