@sehe Uh, yeah I had to use declspec(dllexport/dllimport) to get rid of it. I would have thought the mutex would be available without the need for an export, but... Shrug. Maybe it's got some base class of itself that is templated? I dunno.
[22:43:31] <xarticspartanx> hey so can someone help me keylog this kid [22:43:37] <xarticspartanx> or just do it for me [22:44:32] <xarticspartanx> (*some ip*) theres ip
I read a lot of conflicting news article about this. At first it seemed like they were invited, and then I read that they weren't... not sure if they're covering their asses or if the second version is truth
@Rapptz No, I'm reading the book to get a grasp of the Windows API first. I have an idea of what I want to make but I have no idea how. I've tried to wrap the window creation process in a class before but it never turned out right because I had no fucking clue what I was doing.
I am reading a book on Game Development in which they show you how to make scripts for your game in Lua. They program Lua and use it from C++, but I was wondering if there is a library or API to use Lua from C#: specifically from XNA to develop games for PC and XBox 360?
The time to send a packet to a remote host is half the time reported by ping, which measures a round trip time.
The display I was measuring was a Sony HMZ-T1 head mounted display connected to a PC.
To measure display latency, I have a small program that sits in a spin loop polling a game contro...
Transmission running hidden with web server enabled. Connect with the transmission-remote-gui which is a front-end that happens to resembles the uTorrent interface which I preferred. (I stopped using uTorrent because of high CPU usage when idle.)
@few people here: hey! :D could some one explain why a parameter can't be static? (mycode)[http://pastebin.com/wfv5GpG2] :) darn i mix up markdown [], () every time! :( !! what the!!!
@Pubby It would. init is called in the construction. At that time the shared_ptr that owns the pointer is fully created. So if init throws then the shared_ptr's destructor will be called.
I'm pretty sure that someone has already thought about it and researched it extensively, but I'm having trouble finding any materials or even keywords to look for, for the idea that I was thinking about recently.
I thought about this concept, where in distributed systems, actual computation and ...
i.e. "I'm seeing a router that has instructions that would be faster on a vector processor. I don't support that and it would take me 200ms to complete this operation, but if I would route it to X, it would take 30ms to get there and 20ms to process
other than ISPs have to upgrade every single router, adding a lot of complexity to them, in order to shave of 0.01 millisecond off your local computer's processing time
@KarimAgha so you just added an enormous amount of complexity to every router on the internet, in order for a packet to have, roughly 100 instructions computed in transit?
you can't afford to add latency to the network traffic, because if you do that, that affects the client's experience adversely. You also can't afford to add significant load to the routers, because they are really f'ing busy already, what with basically running the internet. So they won't be able to do much more than those ~3 instructions
You are moving the load from the place where we can afford to do it (say, the client CPU) to the one place where we absolutely cannot (the network routers)
@KarimAgha and now, for every packet, the client CPU has to go "ok, so how many instructions were executed before it got here? Right, so I should jump to.... here before starting execution"
Set up a simulated network and work out your idea. And after you've seen that it works, then come try to convince us. (With a demonstration, of course.)
It would work better if the routers did encoding. For example if you send a text stream that is supposed to arrive as a zip stream at the destination. But you can't make it faster than the client CPU.
Before you go too much further with this idea of yours, try taking a look at the rough numbers. Look at how many packets internet routers typically process per second. Look at how complex and expensive these routers already are. Look at how many gigaflops a CPU on the router would have to be able to carry out in order to execute even one extra instruction for every packet. Then look at how many gigaflops your desktop CPU can do. Or your GPU.
@KarimAgha Changing the name of something doesn't really affect its performance
You still get data in from the network card, it ends up in RAM, and from there, both instructions and data have to be read by the CPU in order to be executed
for that to work, the packet has to be routed via those computers, instead of being discarded. So your NAT router sends a packet out onto your LAN where computers A, B, C and D see it, and because it was addressed to D, A, B and C discard it and A processes the one it sees
now, with your scheme, the router would have to send it to A, which does some processing and sends it to B, which does some processing and sends it to C, which does some processing and sends it to D
I can receive up to 3.5MB/s on my twister-pair Internet line. And my computer can handle that easily since it has a 100 Mbps connection. I don't need no router helping me.
I'm doing C++ after a long time and there are some things troubling my mind. I found similar questions here but none of them solves my problem. So, what's the deal?
I have
SomeClass*** world;
which presents matrix of pointers to SomeClass objects.
Latter, in constructor, when I try to initia...
You know why CPUs are so small? It's because if they were any bigger, it would be impossible for data to traverse them fast enough. Larger distances end up slowing you down
if you'd measure the distance a light signal has to go through in a processor to perform the simplest instruction, I think that it would be a couple of blocks :)
At 3ghz, a CPU can execute three instructions in a nanosecond. In that video, Grace Hopper is holding a nanosecond. Cut that in three, and you have the length of an instruction
Why does this work:
template <typename A>
struct S {
A a;
template <typename B>
auto f(B b) ->
decltype(a.f(b))
{
}
};
But this does not (a and f swapped places):
template <typename A>
struct S {
template <typename B>
auto f(B b) ...
i downvoted the accepted answer because it just contains an irrelevant spec quote and a "you are doing something illegal... oh o you dont!". however an answer is not given
Why does this work:
template <typename A>
struct S {
A a;
template <typename B>
auto f(B b) ->
decltype(a.f(b))
{
}
};
But this does not (a and f swapped places):
template <typename A>
struct S {
template <typename B>
auto f(B b) ...
Because the other thing you described was that the packet should be routed linearly through every machine on your network, instead of going directly to its destination
they would normally discard the packet because it wasn't for them, but instead, they should add a few computations, and pass it along
If I cd to a certain path in my shell I can press the TAB button to get path completions. Sometimes programs also react to the TAB nudge. How do they implement this?