@ThePhD An edge detector is really a gradient detector. It looks like the gradient you've selected is simply too steep for the first picture. If memory serves, there are adaptive algorithms that look at something like the second derivative to pick out what gradients to use for different parts of the picture. Don't remember much in the way of details though.
The Sobel operator is used in image processing, particularly within edge detection algorithms. Technically, it is a discrete differentiation operator, computing an approximation of the gradient of the image intensity function. At each point in the image, the result of the Sobel operator is either the corresponding gradient vector or the norm of this vector. The Sobel operator is based on convolving the image with a small, separable, and integer valued filter in horizontal and vertical direction and is therefore relatively inexpensive in terms of computations. On the other hand, the g...
I don't think Fuck or Shit could be prepositions or anything, haha.
... Wow.
My development track is so whack.
Shaders -> I need a lexer to parse HLSL -> I need readers to read in characters from different text encodings -> Oh, well now that I've written all my readers, what about all those binary formats I need -> PNG PCX PPM DDS BMP CUR ICO
I have to go backwards now, actually finish 'Parsing HLSL' @___@
Once that's done, it's.... model files, and that's it.
for "Look In" though I think you will have to specify the folder of your solution, as I think that Entire Solution doesn't list the "content" of the vcproj
Some links for your consideration. Don McCrady published Introducing Shevlin Park–A Proof of Concept C++ AMP Implementation on OpenCL over on the Parallel Programming in Native Code blog. Check out the links to videos, getting started material, and samples. The Reactive Extensions (Rx) is a library for composing asynchronous and event-based programs using observable sequences and LINQ-s…
@EtiennedeMartel This summer while I was at Eidos they gave people tickets to go see Batman on like the day of it's release. But I didn't go I wanted to get as much work done as possible. Still nice of them to offer, I didn't expect that.
user1804599
@JerryCoffin C is case-insensitive, so it doesn't matter!
@Borgleader last team meeting for Th4 was @Paramount and we got to see Skyfall right after :D
user1804599
@Mysticial indeed; it's bullschildt.
user1804599
7:07 PM
> -3 for verbosity and for hardcoding ASCII (read: unportable) and for returning an error code instead of throwing an exception. Unfortunately, I can only downvote once.
I would use atoi(char *) if you can't use atoi create your own atoi. Here's the basic on how to do it. Take your int which holds the ASCII value of the input. Pass that into a function int myAtoI(int ascii)
In the function write a switch statement;
switch (ascii)
{
case 48 : r...
It is possible to use the type of a lambda as a template argument, like
template<typename InArg, typename Function>
class selfCompose {
Function f;
public:
selfCompose(Function f): f(f) {}
auto operator() (InArg x) -> decltype(f(f(x))) {
return f(f(x)); ...
@Borgleader well, isn't it only the MP aspect of the game that's done in Montreal? I guess it wouldn't look too good for Crystal if it was more "publicized"
Hello SO... I only just dabble in programming, and the only thing I'm even semi-good at is C#. But, I am currently interested in old-school C. And I also already have Visual Studio 2010 and 2012. Is VS any good for writing C?
@RyanRies VS is good for C++, and does good with pre-1998 C, but some of the newer C stuff is still lacking. But it's C, so you aren't missing much.
Also I wonder why our code at work compiles so much slower than everyone else describes. I think it's the absurd header include usage.
Also VS 2008 is absurdly slow at closing files/projects/solutions. period.
I can open VS 2008 and all my files in ~ 60 seconds. If I click the close buttons, it closes in about 7 minutes. Shouldn't those be the other way around?
@MooingDuck How big are your projects/solutions? It seems to me that it must have something like an O(N^2) algorithm somewhere in its solution/project handling code, so when they're small it's fine, but when they're too big it just gets insanely slow.
@MooingDuck I'm not at all sure, but it may depend more on the sizes of the individual projects than the number of projects in the solution. For the most part, a solution isn't much more than a list of projects.
@MooingDuck nice! I remember when we started Assassin's Creed, the "current gen" version (Xbox 1 and PS2) was reusing the old engine used for old Ubi games... some headers contained performance "benchmarks" as cycles on an athlon
Fuck, I just tried to clean the bananas my parrot threw at the bottom of her cage and she bit me pretty hard, she was thinking I was stealing her bananas :(
struct A
{
private:
int a, b, c;
};
int main()
{
A a1{};
A a2 = {};
return 0;
}
The code was compiled by VC++ 2012 (with the latest update "Nov 2012 CTP").
I expect a1 and a2 are zero-initialized, but not. a1 and a2 are not initialized.
Why?
I have an application which multicasts certain packed POD structs and a listener service which runs in other binaries. The listener service knows what the structs look like so when it receives them it casts it back into that struck with a reinterpret_cast and performs a callback.
The problem dow...
@Xeo not so very strange. It is a action-agains-an-existing vote. I'd have implemented it the same (by the way - I notice this all the time since I'm always quick with edits and rewrites etc.)
@Xeo Why do you know it's wrong? In all honesty, if you can explain that, you'd have the REAL ANSWER. I don't see how your answer is wrong. In fact, I just upvoted it, because I think it is correct
while viewing contacts, my phone started going really slow, then the contacts app closed itself. The phone was registering high CPU load, so I checked, and the "Android System" was using 70% of my CPU, and the calendar was using 60%, and youtube was using 15%. I hate my phone sometimes.
I don't think I've watched a youtube video in days.
I have a problem with variadic template templates:
template <typename T> class A { };
template< template <typename> class T> class B { };
template <template <typename> class T, typename parm> class C { typedef T<parm> type; ...
@Crowz Install a virtual machine. Install a compiler in that. Take a snapshot. Do development there. When/if something gets too badly messed up, roll back to the snapshot.
@Griwes It's like a step in the 4chan sentence game, where you replace one word with another. On 4chan, at the end everything is "nigger". In C++, it's "template". :D
Is there a container adapter that would reverse the direction of iterators so I can iterate over a container in reverse with range-based for-loop?
With explicit iterators I would convert this:
for (auto i = c.begin(); i != c.end(); ++i) { ...
into this:
for (auto i = c.rbegin(); i != c.rend(...
Suppose I have a 2 element vector defines as follows (using the GCC syntax for packed vectors)
// packed vector of 2-elements
typedef double v2d __attribute__((vector_size(sizeof(double)*2)));
v2d x = ...;
double y = ...;
x[0] = pow(x[0], y)
x[1] = pow(x[1], y)
I'd like to know if there's a ...
@Xeo Not that I'm aware of. As a matter of fact, I finally took bcp out for a spin myself, because I had never ever seen a proper example of it's usage before
@Xeo Nope. I just answered. If it gets a whole lot of upvotes, perhaps I might expand it. Feel free to tag c++-faq if you think this is enough information
@MooingDuck Then i'm afraid the chances are pretty slim. Lemme google for a sec though
I'd suggest you just create a new style using Courier New (or something else monospace), no spellcheck, etc. If you check the "Add to Quick Styles List" checkbox when you create it, it will end up in the Ribbon list, so it's only a click away.
Hm. Looking at badges reminds me that I never offered a bounty on someone else's question.
Tenacious × 11052 Zero score accepted answers: more than 5 and 20% of total
Tumbleweed × 186951 Asked a question with no votes, no answers, no comments, and low views for a week
Unsung Hero × 3666 Zero score accepted answers: more than 10 and 25% of total