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19:00
Smart pointers in a linked list? What?
What language is that using [] that way?
Obj-C
Objective-C, the inbred step-brother of C++
oh of course, iOS. x)
@Pubby Sure.
19:03
@EtiennedeMartel And it's better than normal pointers, how?
@Pubby Because you don't have to manually delete the fucking nodes.
@EtiennedeMartel You still have to manually adjust the pointers though
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel Err... it doesn't make sense, I think we had that discussion once.
(Keep in mind that I'm talking about unique_ptrs, not shared_ptrs).
It seems like a pointless jerking off to me
19:05
@Pubby What would you lose by using smart pointers then?
Now, for doubly linked lists, it's a bit weird, but for singly linked ones, well, sure. unique_ptrs and shit.
@EtiennedeMartel Clarity and simplicitly
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel You remove the first element. The whole list dies.
@Xeo Yeah, you might need to release it first.
fuck
@EtiennedeMartel doubly linked list would have unique_ptrs one way, and non-owning pointers the other
19:06
how can the non-smart-pointer guy be at +3 and the smart pointer guy be at -2?:
fucking travesty
no, not age, headphones on keyboard
@MooingDuck A bit confusing.
@EtiennedeMartel a bit
@DeadMG Wattt where?
The point is to end up with RAII classes, not overuse smart pointers and avoid writing destructors
19:07
@DeadMG because although smart pointers may be good advice, that doesn't make the answer mentioning it a good answer.
if the question is "How do I fix my function that deletes shit"
Hi peeps. I don't wanna delve into what is clearly a deep conversation, but I have a quick question about the C++11 tag. Is it officially dated for deprecation? I ask because of this comment chain and the ensuing downvotes for not reccommending smart pointers.
-3
A: I don't understand what I'm doing wrong with my de-allocation of memory

DeadMGYou're manually deallocating it, that's what you're doing wrong. Use a smart pointer like a wise man, have a program that works like a man who wants to get paid for his craft.

@DeadMG You didn't tell him how to fix it though
@DeadMG Well, the real answer is, don't write your own linked list, but something tells me that's not the point of his exersize.
Xeo
Xeo
19:08
@WhozCraig The tag? No.
It's not like smart pointers automagically give you correct code
@Pubby If he used smart pointers, he would not have a problem.
@WhozCraig I would say that questions about C++11 specifically should use the tag. General C++ questions should have only the C++ tag. (but C++11 is now implicitly implied by the C++ tag)
@Pubby They pretty much do, unless you colossally cock them up.
@Pubby I'm still wondering what you would gain by handling the memory management yourself?
Xeo
Xeo
19:09
2 days ago, by Xeo
@Pubby If the subject of the question is a specific C++11 feature, add the tag. If it just uses C++11 for convenience in the example or the use of C++11 features is unrelated to the problem, leave it out. That's my rule, anyways.
@DeadMG Using unique_ptr in a linked list requires understand of how pointers and unique_ptr works
If he can't write it without smart pointers he's going to have an even harder time with smart ones
@Pubby And using raw pointers require... what?
and has jack shit to do with manually deleting things yourself
So questions should. What about answers to non tagged C++11 questions that are only drivable by C++11 features? It is on the onus of the answerer to qualify then?
@Pubby What makes you say that?
using unique_ptr has nothing to do with writing it without using unique_ptr
19:10
@Pubby Wait, is that the old "you have to understand how it's implemented before you can use it" argument? Because I thought we nuked that one several times already.
except that writing it without using unique_ptr will waste your time massively.
Xeo
Xeo
@WhozCraig For those, I just stick a "with C++11" up front to avoid any confusion, but yeah, being tagged implies C++11 availability now. If it's not available, add
@WhozCraig it's tagged C++, and the answer is C++. There's no issue here. There would only be an issue if the question were tagged C++03.
@DeadMG Show me how you pointers would make it easier?
Xeo
Xeo
A lot of it has already been untagged. — DeadMG 8 mins ago
Wat.
19:11
give me a sec, I'm playing Starcraft 2 on my other screen
@Pubby don't have to delete stuff everywhere, don't have to write a destructor..
and my PC is lagging like a shit for some reason
@EtiennedeMartel If you have to use release everytime you want to delete a node then unique_ptr stops becoming advantageous
@DeadMG the reason why your answer is downvoted is because of your tone and lack of any useful advice on how to use smart pointers for his situation.
5
right now I am calling BaseT::save(arc, version); to serialize base class with boost serialize. is that wrong ? as now I see boost::serialization::base_object is the correct way. But its working with ``BaseT::save(arc, version)` as well so should I change ?
19:12
Ok. Thanks everyone. I've seen the general pattern that people usually say "With C++ 11 you can ..." and it seems to work for now. It was just the first time I can recall I was ever downvoted for not specifying a solution with C++11 features to a question that was not tagged as C++11. Thanks everyone.
@MooingDuck You have to release stuff everywhere, that's much better?
@Pubby Why would you have to release anything?
@WhozCraig your answer is good to me, you actually answer the question and explain why/how. :) Of course it might be better with smart pointers.
release is so rare, it's practically questionable as to whether it's even needed in the API
7 mins ago, by Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel You remove the first element. The whole list dies.
19:14
@nixeagle The use of smart pointers is easy. You use them to point at things.
@WhozCraig most people won't downvote for a C++03 answer. C++03 answers are fine. Answers that have both are best.
@DeadMG to erase the first node
@DeadMG so help out and show an example in your answer on how he might solve his problem using them. Beats insulting the question asker. IMHO.
@nixeagle he did: don't write a destructor.
head = std::move(head->next) is how I'd erase the first node. (that said, I am not happy with linked list nodes with unique_ptr)
@R.MartinhoFernandes is that guaranteed to be safe?
19:15
@MooingDuck ok I'l try and remember to do both. My work is still 3 years behind the times on toolchains so I'm not using it regularly (C++11), but I sure want to.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That works?
@MooingDuck What the robot said. I'm doing two things at once here.
@MooingDuck Unless the destructor throws, I don't see how it could not be.
@R.MartinhoFernandes if it doesn't do a self-check nor copy-and-swap, first thing it would do is delete all the nodes.
.... Hm. I have no idea what to do with myself anymore. o-o
After making the engine work for most things, I've completely forgotten what I should be doing next.
19:17
@ThePhD go write a paper and get it published.
@nixeagle ... Uh. I haven't done anything revolutionary, though.
@ThePhD And this is why you should concentrate on making game first, then refactor an engine out of it if the game works and you want to make another one with the same engine.
@MooingDuck It's as safe as using release (it's defined in terms of it).
Making an engine for the sake of making an engine means you're gonna hit a wall pretty quickly.
@Pubby If you didn't even know that works, then how can you be criticising unique_ptr usage? You don't appear to know much about it.
19:18
Welp, time to go make dat game!
@DeadMG So you're saying I need to think about the internal semantics to use it?
Ell
Ell
I've only just started my game, and am hitting a motivation wall already :P
.... Oh god I realized why I stopped making my game. Collision Detection.
@R.MartinhoFernandes in that case, then yes, deleting a node is safe and trivial
That bastard. That THree-Dimensional hit-the-platform bastard.
19:19
@Pubby No, I'm saying "The very basics of move semantics" are required knowledge for a class based on move semantics.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD use an existing library!
@ThePhD It's really not that hard. Man up. ^^ I wrote my own.
@ThePhD This is why you make your game with Unity :P or UDK, or use something like Bullet Physics
@ThePhD 2D or 3D?
@EtiennedeMartel 3D, unfortunately.
2D, I can do. I've done 2D ez-pz.
19:20
Yeah, I figured as much. 2D is a non issue.
Or, canadian style, ezed pzed.
@DeadMG Well, I'm always a fan of writing my own stuff. So I guess it's time to Vagina Up and write a collision detection library that works.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG wide will have a physics lib built in? o.O
what? it's part of the partially-constructed engine I've written
that code, specifically, is fairly heavily optimized too
Ell
Ell
right
I assumed it was for the language
19:24
naw
everything goes in namespace Wide, language or not.
Ell
Ell
why did you choose wide?
who cares?
@DeadMG I noticed. Cached nodes all using _m128 structs, which are SIMD aligned...
Ell
Ell
because you have a chode?
I could also use namespace fuckshitballs if I wanted to
Ell
Ell
19:25
loljks
@DeadMG namespace fuckshitstack is better
@ThePhD And the use of out parameters too.
which I very rarely use
Hmmm
but was quite necessary
@CatPlusPlus
19:26
anyway
Alright. MANNING UP.
lol, britruby conference cancelled because "all speakers are white males"
the Octree<T> can perform frustum culling, ray intersection, sphere intersection, bounding box intersection... :P
@DeadMG Be honest, you could not make up a new name, so you just threw everything into the same pot.
@Cicada What.
19:26
@ThePhD You're joining the army?
@Cicada What? God's no. I'm not suicidal.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Actually, the very first version of the Wide language was a scripting language for the ... Wide engine.
@ThePhD It was a pun on "manning".
.... Oh.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG will this engine have 3d st00f? or just physics? also opengl/directx?
19:27
I just did that 'kill the joke' thing, didn't I? D:
There was not much of a joke to start with
that was when you could do 2 = 3 print(2) and get 3 out.
@Ell Well, I sure as fuck didn't write a 3D collision system for 2D. And it's in DX.
@DeadMG what is this horror
@DeadMG That's a pretty badass scripting language.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG why DX? :o
19:28
@Cicada That could have been a Mann Co. reference.
Ell
Ell
opengl is cross platform! isn't the rest of your library? I'm guessing not :L
@Ell Because the raw OGL API sucks a serious amount of cock.
Ell
Ell
that's not a good enough reason to make it not cross platform though :O
@Cicada Presumably based on early Fortran, but it didn't work quite that way.
and my experience of wrappers is that they tend to simply suck the Singleton cock instead of the integers-as-pointers macros-everywhere cock.
19:29
@DeadMG On this game thing I'm working on, we're using C# as the scripting language. It works, although we're not doing enough stuff with it to really hit the perf snags.
@Ell No, the reason to not make it cross-platform is that I don't give a shit about cross-platform.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG why not?
I play on Windows along with 90% of the market.
why code a game for non-Windows?
19:30
@Ell anyone who wants to play PC games has a windows machine for gaming
Basically the conf was cancelled because some people on twitter noted that "all speakers are white males" and cried for discrimination
I mean, I've done some abstractions so it could be re-implemented in OGL if I want to without too much hassle
Ell
Ell
so you can reach a *wide*r audience? (get it? ;) )
but the reality is, there's little reason to
@Ell i don't get it
19:30
I feel kind've bad, but lately I've been leaving OpenGL in the dirt.
Ell
Ell
@DeadMG but what engine will linux users use!
@Cicada lulz
dafuq do I care
> linux
> users
srsly
3
Ell
Ell
@MooingDuck 3d isn't just games, mind
19:31
anyway
Nobody seriously uses a Mac to 3D model.
Maybe they'd use a Linux to do Physics Simulations. Maybe.
that project's been on hold ever since I came up against the prospect of Unicode UI.
Ell
Ell
I just think there's no reason to not just do it in opengl from the start >.<
@DeadMG Have you heard about steam supporting linux?
@Ell OpenGL's API sucks far worse than DX's, the wrappers probably also suck tremendously, and why would I ever want to go there
19:32
@Cicada Mostly servers.
@nixeagle Do I give a shit?
@nixeagle Count the number of Steam Users on Linux vs. the Number of Steam Users on Windows.
@EtiennedeMartel you realize this was a (bad) troll
@ThePhD that's an invalid counterargument
@DeadMG I've been spending a lot of time reading about text layout and composition at work, and boy...
19:33
@ThePhD well obviously windows has more, just saying the mere idea that steam is even supporting linux at all...
Squints. What... game is that?
@Cicada You're bad.
@nixeagle Is all about Valve wanting to win themselves some geek creds back after they utterly fucked up L4D2 and utterly failed to deliver Half-Life 2 Ep 3.
@EtiennedeMartel your sarcasm detector sucks
19:34
|genre = Action-adventure |modes = Single-player |ratings = |platforms = PlayStation 3 |media = Blu-ray Disc |requirements = |input = Gamepad }} is a 2009 action-adventure video game developed by Silicon Studio and published by From Software in Japan, Atlus in North America and by SouthPeak Games in Europe. The game uses a unique style, presenting 2D retro-style graphics in a 3D environment using voxels. The game was released in Japan on November 5, 2009, in North America on May 11, 2010 and in Europe on May 14, 2010, exclusively for the PlayStation 3. Gameplay The gameplay strongly res...
@nixeagle I have said it many times before: I don't care about the Steam client. I only use it to launch games. If I am going to play games on Linux, I need games on Linux. Not the damn Steam client.
I mean, look
Steam came to Mac, but the Mac share of Steam is less than 3-4%.
@ThePhD The joke is that he's trying to shove a PS3 game in a SNES.
the Linux share is going to be so much lower than that, even.
@DeadMG And those are mostly Valve games.
19:34
@Cicada Does anybody know if any black women (or whatever) even sent in proposals? It would be one thing if they were actively rejecting papers on such a basis. Given the proportions among the programmers I know and the percentage likely to send in proposals, I'd have to guess that even one minority speaker every couple of years would border on over-representation.
@EtiennedeMartel Which is hilarious, since you can't fucking see the SNES under the caption text.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have not seen you say that before, but thanks for the heads up. :)
@Cicada I know that because it comes straight from this video.
@JerryCoffin Exactly, this is why the whole thing is completely ridiculous. I mean, from now on, I know exactly how I'm going to troll conference organizers: "oh, your conference looks nice, but I won't attends cause only white males"
so
I've been thinking that I should just not support half the relevant functionality of a textbox.
19:36
@nixeagle The point is, Steam going to Linux is just a small step. The hard part is still ahead.
then I won't have to deal with Unicode.
@JerryCoffin if you read the article, it wasn't canceled due to having all white speakers, it was canceled because lots of people got mad that it had all white speakers. Slight difference.
@DeadMG Cheater!
@MooingDuck People be crazy.
People sucks.
@R.MartinhoFernandes right I get it. I am just noting there is some (small) movement to supporting some games on linux.
19:38
stacked-crooked.com is still croaked!
@R.MartinhoFernandes kekeke
@DeadMG Wait, if you have a textbox, don't you just need to display characters on a per-language-character basis?
@ThePhD Protip: if Unicode is involved, there is no "just".
@ThePhD And text highlighting, for example, and clicking to move the caret
And proper Backspace vs Delete and a zillion other issues.
19:40
rendering text isn't the (too hard) part, it's dealing with the user's interactions with it
y u so complicated unicode :c
@ThePhD It's not Unicode's fault.
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@MooingDuck People be crazy.
Welp, thankfully I'm not doing text-based UI yet.
@DeadMG You say that because you're just going to ask DirectWrite to do it for you.
You lazy fuck.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not exactly.
19:42
... Oh shit that's right. I have to make a Font System so I can actually display text in my game.
DirectWrite provides a lot but not everything, IIRC, and secondly, I'd have to replace my renderer with one based on DX11, I think.
Fuck Me. :c
@MooingDuck Yes, I realize that. My question was whether they had anything that might border on a real reason to be angry. I never really thought about it 'til now, but I in the conferences I've been two, essentially the only exceptions to "white males" I can recall were (or at least seemed to be) of Indian instead of western European descent (but still all male, that I can recall).
@ThePhD Not my type.
@DeadMG There's an older text rendering API on Windows. Uniscribe, I think.
19:43
@JerryCoffin mixing politics with anything gives you results like this.
Mmm... anyone here ever parse a TrueType file?
I don't think I'll support OpenType...
Just TrueType.
I could probably cheat and use GDI.
@ThePhD No, but I've looked at code to do it. Exceptionally ugly, to put it mildly.
TrueType sucks.
OpenType is da bomb (relatively, I mean).
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't even know how to create a font from a file for that.
Is there any advantage to using either? The only reason I want to use TrueType is because 90% of the files I come across are .ttf
19:45
@ThePhD OpenType has moar features.
Seriously, use DirectWrite/Uniscribe/Pango/FreeType/whatever.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How jaded must we be so that any good thing we see, we consider it to be the "least bad" instead of "best"?
yeah
FreeType has parsers and readers for TrueType (and OpenType?) but I heard its api is composed of the smelliest chodes alive.
Today's applications must support high-quality text rendering, resolution-independent outline fonts, and full Unicode text and layout support.
Who the hell writes codes with an h?
19:48
Why is there a sales pitch in the documentation?
Xeo
Xeo
0
Q: Why does the standard differentiate between direct-list-initialization and copy-list-initialization?

XeoWe know that T v(x); is called direct-initialization, while T v = x; is called copy-initialization, meaning that it will construct a temporary T from x that will get copied / moved into v (which is most likely elided). For list-initialization, the standard differentiates between two forms, depen...

@Praetorian @MooingDuck ^
@EtiennedeMartel I didn't mean to say that it's the least bad. I meant to say that it is miles better than the other, but not necessarily the pinacle of things.
The other reason I'm actually reluctant to actually dive into TrueType is because the documentation for it sucks as far as programming goes. =l
@R.MartinhoFernandes So, least bad. Like democracy.
@EtiennedeMartel lol, no.
19:50
I'll use OpenType first, maybe they'll have better programmer documentation.
It's good, but not perfect.
@ThePhD Sigh.
I could use an owner drawn rich edit control.
@R.MartinhoFernandes :c What?
Ell
Ell
I'm confused about std::unique_ptr, how does it know what deleter to call if you only pass the type? if you want to use a function pointer for the deleter
@Ell It'll default-construct the Deleter argument.
19:52
@Ell then pass a function pointer for the deleter.
@Ell Constructors (and various functions) take a deleter as argument.
@Ell std::unique_ptr<T, void(*)(T*)> ptr(my_t, my_deleter); //or make_unique or whatever.
You should probably wrap my_deleter in a function object
Is DirectWrite any good? I'm wondering if we should look at it our game project.
Xeo
Xeo
19:54
And if you don't pass any argument when you have a function pointer deleter, some implementations static_assert.
@EtiennedeMartel It's the least bad. (I have no idea, I'm joking)
@EtiennedeMartel It's pretty comprehensive. It can also get kiiinda obfuscating when you want to do something simple like just load a font from a file.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Me + You = <3
it's really intended for the hardcore text renderer
Would it be advantageous to generate outlines of the fonts you want to use yourself?
Or just make bitmaps early like everybody else.
19:56
@DeadMG But in the context of a 3D game? We're already using D3D11 for rendering.
One does not simply load a font from a file.
@ThePhD The outlines are in the font file...
@EtiennedeMartel Well I personally have just decided to try using an owner-drawn rich edit control, rather than DWrite. But then I'm not already using D3D11.
what you should be aware of is that D3D11 doesn't automatically play well with DWrite.
@DeadMG Yeah, I figured as much.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's what I mean. Use the outlines in the file (and scale them to the size you need), or just use the millions (not really... millions. You get the idea) of bitmap-from-font programs out there or generate static bitmaps of the characters you need.
genius Microsoft only coded D2D and DWrite to play with D3D10.
they fixed it in Windows 8 but I dunno if the fix was backported to Windows 7/Vista.
plus, of course, it's a crappy COM interface ^^
19:58
Wow, I suck at typing. :c
@DeadMG Same old issue, I see.
well
I'm about to grow some far-too-massive-balls and attempt to owner draw a RichEdit control, see how that works out.
Good luck.
I'm gonna parse me some OTF files and get Vertices for font data!

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