@CatPlusPlus Well, they center around manipulating state, like simulation state and render state, and impure side effects like rendering to the screen.
there's no point in using a garbage-collected functional language when you really need deterministic destruction of highly-controlled memory based around mutating a shitbunch of state
In Haskell you can have both deterministic destruction and high-level functional code, and if you can't see the benefit then there's nothing to talk about.
@EtiennedeMartel I know right. I read that this morning and I just laughed. Insulting me instead of refuting the post I made is equivalent to admitting I'm right.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Yeah, we changed topics since the cat has been made angry for whichever reason. I'm now talking about that recent reddit drama dude.
@sehe Yes. I have some experience with that in the form of the variant constructor. My preferred approach so far is 'try exact matches, and if this fails, try with conversions and blame the caller if that fails'.
I suppose putting derived-to-base higher than other kind of conversions would be a feature... Doesn't seem nice to implement.
@sehe Mmh this is elegant for permutations (i.e. exact matches) but doesn't really extend, since conversions aren't two-way in the general case. I'll think a lot about that before starting any kind of code.
SimCity 4 (SC4) is a city-building/urban planning simulation computer game developed by Maxis, a subsidiary of Electronic Arts. It was released on January 14, 2003. It is the fourth installment in the SimCity series. SimCity 4 has a single expansion pack called Rush Hour which adds features to the game. SimCity 4: Deluxe Edition contained the original game and Rush Hour combined as a single product.
The game allows players to create a region of land by terraforming, and then to design and build a settlement which can grow into a city. Players can zone different areas of land as commercia...
SimTower: The Vertical Empire (known as The Tower in Japan) is a construction and management simulation video game developed by OPeNBooK Co., Ltd. and published by Maxis for the Microsoft Windows and Mac OS 7 operating systems in November 1994. In Japan, it was published by OPeNBooK that same year and was later released for the Sega Saturn and Sony PlayStation in 1996. The game allows players to build and manage a tower and decide what facilities to place in it, in order to ultimately build a five-star tower. Random events take place during play, such as terrorist acts that the player mus...
@kbok Here at my school man X takes about 10 seconds to load up the man page for X. I'm not sure what it actually does (recompile a kernel? download a movie? idk)
> Of the 125 major European wars fought since 1495, the French have participated in 50 – more than Austria (47) and England (43). Out of 168 battles fought since 387BC, they have won 109, lost 49 and drawn 10, giving France the most successful military power in European history."[1]
Imagine an imperative rendering engine that blits sprites to a bitmap that later gets displayed. This heavily relies on the ability to efficiently mutate individual pixels in said bitmap. How would I do such a thing an a language without side effects? I guess a completely different data structure...
I am a 20 years old female student and i have a 5 year old son who is real sexually active. For instance, he kisses girl by force, he forces them to lick his penis, he figures them, he speaks about sex openly with everyone except me, his father and my family.
There is a whole lot more that he do...
sweet, I wrote a question about Dinkum's allocators, and the first answer was the guy who wrote the allocators! :D Unfortunately my question was so poorly written that he misunderstood the question the first time :(
I spended a lot of time debugging a program, and found that (still not 100% sure), it was because I was allocating 2 big arrays on stack. Making them global (apparently) solved the problem. Has anyone experienced this?
@VinayakGarg No, but may I ask why you allocated those big arrays on stack instead of using std::vector which gets memory from the heap (at least with the default new[]-based allocator)?
@VinayakGarg std::vector is cheap. There can be some costs if you dynamically change its size, so there may be reallocations, etc. But if you construct the vector with the initial required size, and then you access its elements with an index (it's just O(1)), and then let the vector die with its destructor, it's very cheap.