What reference book would you recommend most? I find it annoying to have to flip through my massive textbook just find a small description and example.
user behavior is interesting, I think I'd like more formal study of it
6 upvotes and the question has 60 views, but only 4 people clicked through the "belongs elsewhere" link (at least according to the site, which isn't so accurate at times)
I think there's one maybe two professors that know what a standard is, let alone follow it.
Granted, they're serious about the games aspect; most of the teachers worked int he games industry for some time, real producers and real tech directors and real programmers.
But that's the problem, the games industry is notorious for being god-awful at programming well.
Every teacher is a C-with-classes programmer, and while they know they're stuff, their stuff is far outdated.
Yeah; but probably justified. Profit rarely gives a hoot about academia. I was literally told this year to not take the route I was taking with our game engine because "that's more of a research project then practical." Really? Discourage improving the state of the average (student) game engine? Granted I was (and will do) pretty heavy stuff, but it bothers me they'd actually do that.
Almost every game engine is just thrown together copy-paste crap. :/ Most of the students don't know C++, or say "C/C++".
Right. No, to them they know C/C++ (as in the same language, one just has classes.) Not their fault, I don't blame them, but it's a sad reflection on how well the school knows anything outside of just getting by with profit in the field.
Oh well. I'll just tough out this year and the last one and get it over with.
Yeah, indeed. Companies running through there all the time, president "our school is so great yadda yadda, I was one of the best programmers in the field, started to teach it, yadda yadda, our students our great programmers". I always laugh inside. :S I wanna grab him and say "Hey what's wrong with this? template <typename T> struct foo { typename T::value_type type; } and he wouldn't even know.
That sucks. That's pretty cool she's doing that. I think I'll go back to get degrees in things I actually like, I really like computer-science and concurrent stuff, it clicks for me. And I''ve always been fond of logic and philosophy. Lately I've been into political science.
Researchers have shown it takes about ten years to develop expertise in any of a wide variety of areas... The key is deliberative practice: not just doing it again and again, but challenging yourself...
— Peter Norvig [emphasis mine]
Experts are made, not born.
&...
Yeah. I've learned more on SO these two years than all my private studying prior. (Granted I was younger and dumb.) 15 years on IRC is awesome. When I was in there a bit, there was tons of knowledgeable people and I was like "ahh, there's more litb's".
Can someone please help me. I understand the equation of a line and how to solve for the zero intercept on paper, but I have trouble converting it to code. More specifically, I need to calculate the point at which a line intercepts any given X or Y coordinate with two different functions...
doub...
Hey,
I'm not even sure where to begin with this question...
I want to be able to send mouse-click events to another machine, as if the user had clicked on that machine.
I can do it on the same machine via:
CGEventSourceRef source = CGEventSourceCreate(NULL);
CGEventType eventType = kCGEventLe...
Um, well, it might be a good idea to tell users when you promote them. Or they go and break something because they think it's just their private setting.
the whole thing with switching rooms was because the owner was mia, so hopefully we will avoid that with enough owners that someone is around 2-3 times a week in case something should be done, etc.
I'm still trying to find my way around here in chat, finding something new everyday. Having found a feature I didn't have access to before didn't seem conspicuous to me
microsoft chat came out with window 95? I think. it was an extension to the irc protocol focused on graphics and ease of use, but ended up just being comical
just quickly, you only need to define a copy constructor when you have a class that has pointers to data, and you want the new copy to not just point to the same data (as is default) but rather has its OWN copy of the data that is being pointed to, so it can change it with out affecting the data of the original
it doesnt concern its architecture. i just want to know is there a good directory selection component(similar to CFileDialog, but for directories only)
@James sadly mfc interface is not my task itself, and writing a class will take some time i need to work on my main functionality. i hoped there's a ready industrial class :)
One more question, guys, have you ever used libraries written in c++ with some .NET languages, like C#? I have several classes implemented in C++ but now im not sure i want to implement interface with mfc, winforms would be much more easier.
@Anton Windows Forms has been superseded by WPF; if you do want to interop C++ with .NET, you'll want either to use P/Invoke to marshal calls between the two or use C++/CLI.
When it needs to copy, it calls the clone() function. (Your base class should have a virtual clone() function, and derived classes define that is return new Derived(*this);
@James oh damn im so out of this whole windows programming thing. i've been a web developer, after that i worked with c/c++ in linux now im programming for windows with UIs and feel so stupid ><
@James right.. but the department that gave me this task want me to keep up with everything :D So what actually do people use(nowadays) when they need to write a windows application with UI using C++ without .NET?
strange thing here... I want to make an array of objects, but at compile time I don't know what this object will actually look like... but there is a finite number of objects that I might want to make array of
at run time, I want to make an array of structs, but its not untill run time, I know what data I want my struct to hold I think this is the same thing, just reading it now stackoverflow.com/questions/777689/…
for example, I might want my array to be of struct {flaot a,b,c} or of struct j{unsignd long d}
but I do know that this 'struct' I want an array of will be made of certain components, and in a certain order
hmm... what about multiple inheritance... can I declare at run time to inherit a b and c, and ensure that the data in this composite type will be in a fixed order?
making a Model Class, it needs to store an array of its vertex data, but its vertex data may not always be in the same formate. Some times I want to just have x y and z, others I might want to add in a rgb colour as well. But the order these elements are in, is fixed, they may not all be in there though. I also need to be able to extract an array that is the one contiguis block of memory, so values I am not using being null will not work
One trick is to press the pause button in your debugger and look at the call stack. Nine times out of ten the code will have stopped in your slowest function.
@Anton: they removed the profiler from the "lesser" editions of msvc a long time ago; I don't know if the "higher" editions still have it or what other options exist for msvc
The last version that had the profiler built into the Pro edition was VS 6. Now, only the very top versions ($10,000 and up) include a profiler (for native code). I don't think the Express Edition has ever included a profiler.
Bad. May be some utility not from microsoft? im sure msvc includes debug information into exe file, so some program can extract it, set breakpoints... or am i too naive? :D
typically (and the only method I'm aware of for deterministic profiling) special code is injected to (quickly) manipulate the profile info
and that needs to be done by the compiler
now this is fun: ~150 answers and I've been carefully watching for duplicates (because some people don't see the handy link in the question text to search), then see comments
(Doesn't involve a programmer, but was first given to me in the context of writing bug reports, where the point certainly stands.)
An astronomer, a physicist, and a mathematician were traveling to Scotland. Glancing from a train window, they observed a black sheep in the middle of a field.
"Ho...
ack, I'm confusing questions; his duplicate was on the quotes question