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.
You'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.
@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 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.
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 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.
@WhozCraig For those, I just stick a "with C++11" up front to avoid any confusion, but yeah, being tagged c++ implies C++11 availability now. If it's not available, add c++03
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 ?
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 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.
@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.
@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.
@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.
|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.
@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.
@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"
@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.
@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).
We 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...
@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.
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
@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.
@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.
@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.