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15:05
@BartekBanachewicz Wut.
Games don't use the Architecture Review Board, I'm sure.
At least not yet.
I meant ARB extensions
So?
The quote clearly talks about committees.
I'm done with that discussion already
It was a little heated.
> So instead of looking at what NVIDIA was doing and then copying it after the fact, they took the astonishing position of going to them and talking to them. And then they fell in love and had a little console together.
What a great line.
user1182183
15:19
#ifdef DEBUG
#define dbg(a) ((logprintf) a)
#else
#define dbg(a)
#endif
Will this also work in C? :P (it works in C++..) I got some compilation errors
user1182183
extern void logprintf(char* format, ...);
#define DEBUG 1
user1182183
at top
user1182183
and that crash is fixed, vaargs somehow doesn't like std::string so I did .c_str()
@GamErix We've already told you what you should do with this code
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz should.. it works and I'm happy because I'm not so pro like you guys :P you do it for a living so you have to be the best :) I'm doing something other for a living than programmig :)
15:23
@GamErix Okey, but does it mean you should write crappy code?
I don't play guitar for a living, but when I play, I try to keep good technique.
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz hey if you look at my code from a year ago it was more crappy :P
Everyone writes crappy code at the beginning
user1182183
you would be dead if you looked at it XD
See? You've already improved. So push it further
user1182183
ofcourse I know how you feel when someone writes crappy code :< yes I am a prof at pawn ;X
15:24
pawn is one, &this-> and other stuff is other
user1182183
no, pawn is not obiect oriented
Without writing some crappy code you won't write better code. You don't just write better code out of nothing
user1182183
it's typeless too.
user1182183
new array[size]; can hold a string, numbers or floats etc..
@GamErix "you would be dead if you looked at it XD"? I should never show anyone my old PHP code. This could end in a massacre.
user1182183
15:26
@Zeta :P
@GamErix but your C++ code that's using it is
user1182183
main()
{
    new string[32] = "Hello World";
    printf("string: %s, %d, %f",string,string[2]*string[5],float(string[0])*float(string[5]));
}
user1182183
simple pawn script
user1182183
ofcourse you can do that in C etc but that's not the point xd
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz true, but it's a implementation which I did not make/create. Just implement it into my dll.
15:29
@GamErix ... what. What is tis... I don't... even.
@GamErix I wouldn't use something that's implemented that way
Also, pawn syntax looks terrible
OH
that's Pawn
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz C-Like.
Holy god I thought that was real C++ for a second
@GamErix that's what I said
15:30
I was going to flip a table or something.
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz you don't like C? :x
@GamErix Of course I don't. It's crappy as fuck
And has little to no advantages over C++
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz okay. I respect that. but please respect my choices too :P
user1182183
and yes I agree C looks not even close to C++
It hs some advantages in embedded systems
user1182183
15:31
@yetihehe yep, pawn is used for microcontrollers with even 2kb of ram
@yetihehe Which, funny enough, are also being programmed in C++ nowadays
2kb of ram? that's plenty ;) I'm more used to having 256B of ram.
user1182183
@yetihehe lemme lookup xd
640kb ought to be enough for anybody
user1182183
>pawn is small. It has been fitted on an Atmel ATmega128 microcontroller, Philips LPC2138 and LPC2106 microcontrollers (ARM7TDMI core with 32 KiB RAM), as well as on a Texas Instrument's MSP430F1611 (MSP430 core with 10 KiB RAM and 48 KiB Flash ROM). Using code overlays that are loaded on demand, pawn is able to run large scripts in little memory.
I've used atmega48.
4kb of program memory, 256B ram
user1182183
I didn't ever in my life program a microcontroller or chips
user1182183
anyway this is also on the site:
user1182183
> Why pawn now that there is Java, Lua, REXX, and countless others? Well, when I needed a language toolkit whose executable code can be embedded in resource files or animation file formats, that had a good interface to native functions, that added little overhead to the main application and could run on platforms and microcontrollers with (very) little RAM, and that was pretty fast, I could not really find an existing toolkit that fitted my needs. See also a list of language features.

Unlike many languages, pawn is not intended to write complete full-scale applications in. pawn's purpose i
I've made one project with attiny2313: youtube.com/watch?v=jIyBgzxoyuw (it's more colorfull now)
15:36
@GamErix All of these reqs are also met by Lua
no popacz, dżewo.
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz please convince sa-mp.com community to switch to lua :F then I can hapily implement lua and drop pawn
It has 2kb of program space and 128B ram
@GamErix Implementing mods to GTA is somewhere betwen staring at the blank wall and shooting myself in the foot in my lists of interests.
user1182183
;]
Anyway, if you expect help here, post good code. Or code you want to be good.
Because why on earth would we be interested in bad code?
user1182183
15:43
Well I don't want bad code but I can assume you understand not everyone has all the knowledge he has to have to do something :)
user142019
Vim is great.
Ell
Ell
has anyone returned stuff on amazon before?
@Ell hmm, nope.
Ell
Ell
I accidentally bought an ATA hdd :/
user142019
@Ell lol?
Ell
Ell
15:55
@Zoidberg'-- yeah :L I meant to buy a SATA one but just totally forgot to check :P
It was only £16.99 :o
@Zoidberg'-- How's your ideone clone going?
user142019
@StackedCrooked haven't worked much on it.
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz cheap? :L
user142019
I'm already working on a logging project. :P
15:59
@Ell whatever, it's ATA
@Zoidberg'-- Chopping trees?
Ell
Ell
Yeah :/
The motherboard only has vga too :O
user142019
@StackedCrooked no error logging
I recently had to design a new logger at my workplace. It was loosely based on ideas from this article.
Hmm, no fuel, hull critical. I guess I lost again.
Ell
Ell
16:00
space games le suxorz
user142019
@StackedCrooked this is what I currently have for the pastebin. bitbucket.org/daknok/plaksel :P
Hm.....
I need some help determining what's the best iterator guarantee to enforce with a static_assert
The idea is that the input iterator should spit out a given type ( in this case, a codepoint or a int32 / uint32 ).
@Zoidberg'-- coffeescript, cool.
So far, I've been using std::is_convertible on the iterator's value_type. I'm not sure if that's a strong enough gauruntee.
@ThePhD lolwut
user142019
16:02
@StackedCrooked only the web app is in CoffeeScript. The build-and-run supervisor will be in Erlang.
@ThePhD it would be cool if it spit out turkeys.
@StackedCrooked While delicious, I'm not sure it would be helpful. D:
Hm.. Turkey.
In either case, this is the static_assert I'm making on the iterator's value type so far:
	static_assert( std::is_convertible<std::iterator_traits<TIterator>::value_type, charcodepoint>::value , "Iterator must have a value_type that is convertible to a charcodepoint" );
@Ell Someone passed by and offered to dock and refuel. Then they approached and started firing :/
Ell
Ell
16:05
@R.MartinhoFernandes well that was dishonest of them :/ what game is this? eve?
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's quite dirty of them.
You should get them back.
That's what pirates do. Get used to it.
@ThePhD He should firmly reprimand them.
And tell their parents.
"Mothership, you need to talk to your sonship."
Ell
Ell
16:08
hehe
Lulz.
Dem edits.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- you always have to be so alternate don't you? ;)
user142019
@Ell huh?
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- you often use more of the alternate languages, like coffee script and erlang
user142019
Oh. I like them.
Ell
Ell
16:12
as opposed to the more mainstream languages like python/java/c++
user142019
I could use more mainstream languages such as PHP and Java but I'm not an idiot.
user142019
I like CoffeeScript and Erlang. :P
Ell
Ell
I've never tried erlang
Is erlang very old?
or is that eifell?
user142019
Erlang is old, yes.
user142019
Doesn't mean it's bad.
16:18
Most languages that are actually used are old
Hi all
today is bug-report day
16:35
I should stop breaking rule #1.
Most are old, because it takes a long time to design a language and then bring implementations to production quality
Certainly.
C++ is old and I think it's a great language.
user142019
lol
C++ is old and shows it by having really huge tumorous syntax.
But it's still an amicable old man who will talk with you at length.
I think Lisp is one of the oldest languages. Funny thing is that the parentheses were intended as a temporary fix until a better notation was devised.
16:41
I've seen layout-based syntax for Lisp, but for some inexplicable reason Lisp users prefer the stupid parens
C++ is not that great
As far as syntax goes, I think C# is a pretty huge step in the right direction.
Naw
It's very syntax-heavy
I guess I should work full time for a two years in Haskel, D, Go and then come back to C++ and reevaluate.
user142019
s/C#/Haskell/
user142019
D is bad.
16:42
D is een bad?
user142019
D is C++--.
@CatPlusPlus True, the one thing that annoyed me about it the most was the 'out' prameters.
And 'ref'.
user142019
If you need to return multiple values, return a tuple.
That's not really syntax
user142019
16:43
99% of the cases, out parameters are bad and if you use them you should feel bad.
user142019
@StackedCrooked C++ != C
@Zoidberg'-- boost serialization uses them
@Zoidberg'-- .... Quietly sweeps code under the rug.
user142019
@StackedCrooked is that operator>>?
@ThePhD I'd like to see what's under your rug.
user142019
16:45
Because that's one of the 1% of the cases in which it may be OK.
@Zoidberg'-- They actually use operator&.
user142019
But for example std::getline is ridiculous.
user142019
@StackedCrooked wat. I hope the binary operator&, not the unary one.
I tend to use out parameters a lot when I want to return a boolean or code that determines success...
archive & a & b & c means archive >> a >> b >> c or archive << a << b << c depending on whether your are serializing or deserializing. It's a clever technique actually. For one it ensures that you are using the same order.
user142019
16:46
@ThePhD uh
user142019
Just return the value you want to return.
Like for all my bool Load<T>( /* ... */, T*& out );
user142019
And if unsuccessful, throw an exception.
@Zoidberg'-- I don't want to crash my application. =[ Or write try {} catch {} but that's besides the point.
user142019
@ThePhD uhm
user142019
16:47
Did you know you can catch exceptions?
user142019
Error = exception.
@StackedCrooked They use both
user142019
And no shit like "exceptions are for exceptional cases". Errors are always exceptional cases.
Also you should split save/load anyway, so it doesn't matter that much
I've just always felt non-throwing code is good. I mean, if you write a non-throwing, error-code returning version,
16:48
@CatPlusPlus I mean the archive type implements operator& which delegates to operator>> or operator<< depending on the context.
@ThePhD optional<T> Load<T>(whatever)
all you have to do is wrap it up and then throw with the error code later on.
@StackedCrooked Yeah, but you can use << and >> too
Also you should throw by default
Ah, yeah I vaguely remember that's possible.
user142019
Error codes are bad.
16:49
And then downgrade it to optionals/error-codes/whatever in those few cases where it actually makes sense
@CatPlusPlus std::optional ? That's a thing?
@Zoidberg'-- Yeah, they nearly always indicate an error.
user142019
boost::optional
GOD I hate plugging in std::optional to firefox's address bar.
Or std:: anything
or even booost::
Tries to parse it as an address
user142019
16:50
Boost.Optional
user142019
std string
user142019
Googling ain't rocket science.
@Zoidberg'-- Somebody needs to write Boost.Mandatory to make it even.
Use search engine prefixes
g std::string
user142019
Also Firefox sucks since since when do URLs start with something::.
16:51
Chrome custom search engines rock.
Chrome does weird stuff with address/search term detection too
user142019
@StackedCrooked namespace boost { template<typename T> using mandatory = T; }
Firefox has prefixes too
user142019
DuckDuckGo ftw
user1182183
hmm why does a copy assignment operator get executed very many times after a DLL gets unloaded while there are only 2 entries in the vector?
user142019
16:53
!hoogle a -> IO ()
I'm using Firefox for this chat. So that I can quit chrome without closing this window. I often quit chrome because it's a quick way to close all tabs and windows.
user142019
I'm using Chrome because there is no Safari for Linux.
user1182183
I don't think I'd want Safari on Linux...
user142019
@StackedCrooked is there no "close all but this tab" option?
16:54
@Zoidberg'-- Cmd-Q is quicker than any mouse action :)
I mean, as far as speed goes, Safari is the slowest thing on my Windows.
user142019
Chrome has "close all other tabs".
Chrome opens fastest.
Firefox is 2nd place.
user142019
@StackedCrooked oh heh :P
Opera I think is 3rd, but I never use it.
I've just stopped installing Safari altogether.
user142019
16:55
Safari opens fastest.
Opera is for outcasts.
user142019
Safari opens fastest IME. You click its icon and it's open.
@Zoidberg'-- On a Mac, maybe.
My mouse cursor is broken
On my Windows it was like Hurrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgggggggggggggggggggggh
user142019
16:55
Let me try Chrome in my Linux VM.
When I had a Mac I used Safari all the time because it was fast.
user142019
Chrome takes about one second in Arch Linux with xmonad.
On mac you typically have programs open all the time, but they don't have active windows
Safari is also shit
@CatPlusPlus You should give MacBook Air an honest try.
16:56
Firefox was the slowest piece of shit.
@StackedCrooked No
Unless you buy me one
I could use a headless OSX build machine
I bought one for my mom.
It's rather expensive.
user142019
The only computer my mom uses is an iPad.
user142019
iPads are boring.
@CatPlusPlus Mac mini is better for that.
16:57
I'm as sure as hell not buying a Mac to actually use it
user142019
@StackedCrooked or like, a Hackintosh.
@Zoidberg'-- I might consider that.
OSX is horrible
user142019
OS X is not horrible.
user142019
OS X is awesome.
16:57
@Zoidberg'-- Do you know of any store that sells compatible configurations?
I'll take FreeDOS over OSX any day
user142019
@StackedCrooked there was PsyStar which selled pcs with OS X preinstalled. But it doesn't exist anymore IIRC.
@Zoidberg'-- Got nuked by Apple.
Along with the rest of their operation.
Sad story.
That's a long time ago.
user142019
@StackedCrooked OS X should run if you have an 64-bit Intel CPU. AMD won't work; I've tried that.
16:59
is this a appropriate solution? stackoverflow.com/questions/13814167/…
Intel CPU, ATI Graphics Card
er
AMD*
My mouse cursor is now a straight dotted line
I believe they changed their name to that.
user142019
AMD doesn't run OS X.
I have no idea how this happens but it doesn't want to go away
:<
user142019
17:00
My mouse cursor is a cross in Linux.
@Zoidberg'-- AMD Graphics Card.
user142019
Oh GPU.
Last I checked, that's all Macs were shipping with. They don't seem too NVidia-friendly.
@jhonraymos Hint: nobody cares
Don't link C questions or PHP questions or C++ questions or any questions tia
... tia?
17:01
Don't tell me I have to reboot aaargh
user142019
You have to reboot.
Ahahahaha IT WORKS
It was Steam's fault
aaargh?
It's fixed
user142019
I'm going to a fireworks show. Bye.
17:01
IT'S FIXED
@Zoidberg'-- Have fun.
@Zoidberg'-- Spoiler: everyone blows up
@CatPlusPlus what is aaargh?
@Zoidberg'-- Have fun!
@CatPlusPlus That's called AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!!
Aaargh! is a fighting video game released in 1987 in which the player controls a giant monster, either an ogre or a lizard, with the goal of crushing and destroying everything in its path across different lands and periods of history. Plot The goal is to find five Roc's eggs hidden among the destroyed scenery. Once an egg is discovered, the two monsters fight for possession of the egg in a one-on-one battle. When five eggs are found, the monsters make their way to the volcano, working their way around the lava flows to reach the top and claim the Golden Egg for the ultimate victory. De...
Woops.
@CatPlusPlus what about the solution?
17:09
@TonyTheLion Sounds like something straight out of a bullshit English paper.
Now it just needs MLA citation.
lol
it was funny
oh, there's a steam group now?
yep
we're steaming along
cool
ermagherd it's raining
17:43
Is it Endianess or Endianness, with double 'n' ?
@ThePhD It's "byte order", with no 'n's.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's actually a good idea. I can use ByteOrder for runtime-endianness, and Endianness for compile-time Endianness.
Or RuntimeByteOrder vs CompiletimeByteOrder
17:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes Don't think about that one too hard
@jalf But... all those letters. :c
Seriously, don't go around naming things with synonyms if they are not the same.
@ThePhD Oh, you run on 640k too?
typedef CompileTimeByteOrder ctbo
Dude, I only have 320K. Shit be dense.
@jalf ctbo makes me think of Tbone. .... Just a random note.
17:54
oh wow, I've spent 90 hours playing Dark Souls. That is a lot
Forest Covenent? :O
That is more than I spent on Skyrim.
spread over 2 months, admittedly, but still
I've played Skyrim for half hour
and then never touched it again
17:55
I played Oblivion, and then decided never to touch Skyrim :)
I'm not sure why people got so excited about Skyrim.
It's.... not that fantastic of a game.
cause rimming the sky
... What?
You can't put a rim on the sky.
This isn't A Rapper's Wet Dream
17:56
WTF is going on.
<---- The Lion, that's what's going on.
FFS iTunes takes forever to install
Apple you suck.

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