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17:00
> I'll repeat that. C is a fantastic high level language. It's not as high level as Java or C#, and certainly no where near as high level as Erlang, Python, or Javascript.
> But it's as high level as C++, and far far simpler. Sure C++ offers more abstraction, but it doesn't present a high level of abstraction away from C. With C++ you still have to know everything you knew in C, plus a bunch of other ridiculous shit.
I hate to be that guy, but that thing was posted here last week :/
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah I know
@R.MartinhoFernandes Go sit in a corner and re-initialize your humour modules
17:00
Old News Friday
I just thought the reply synced well with Xeo's confusion.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So. I cannot talk about it, because someone else already did? I didn't know there was a shared semaphore for this. Tell me more
Xeo
Xeo
How the fuck can one even think like that?!
"High-level" doesn't mean "you don't need to know low-level details", high-level means "you don't have to reinvent every fucking wheel ever invented. Recursively for different types."
Well, Xeo's reaction is consistent. At least, when it was posted before he just laughed a lot.
2
Q: iter_swap() versus swap() -- what's the difference?

Mehrdad Possible Duplicate: What’s the point of iter_swap? MSDN says: swap should be used in preference to iter_swap, which was included in the C++ Standard for backward compatibility. But comp.std.c++ says: Most STL algorithms operate on iterator ranges. It therefore makes sense to ...

I think we should vote to reopen, the second point is very interesting.
Xeo
Xeo
17:02
@ThePhD I read that before?
@Xeo I think so.
..... WAIT nevermind I had posted something about C vs. C++ from the stackechange.gamedev chat.
Along the same vein but not the same article.
My bad. Dx
Xeo
Xeo
Ah, yeah, I remember laughing about them.
Fucking fools.
Whatever, their loss.
Was it the Doom 3 source thing from kotaku
that's been floating around a lot
@Rapptz No, that was the (staged) Holywar between JerryCoffin and NolwennLeGuen (sp?)
WOW 12205 files for vendor. What's in this shit?
it's your hard drive crying
17:05
@sehe C surely was a high-level language back when it was invented :)
....
I should've known.
4
Q: can a variable be declared both static and extern?

arrowsWhy the following doesn't compile? ... extern int i; static int i; ... but if you reverse the order, it compiles fine. ... static int i; extern int i; ... What is going on here?

boost. You're all going to force me to use boost.
@ThePhD gamedev.SE can be funny indeed.
@R.MartinhoFernandes By "funny" you mean "worthless" :P
17:06
@ThePhD OMG don't tell me you are growing up.
@FredOverflow So it is.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ;~;
I-It's for the g-good... of the Kyrostat..... m-mission....
@DeadMG Once I accept that, I cannot help but laugh at things.
;~~~~~~; ALL MY TEARS BOOST, WHY BOOST?
TIL you can't escape boost.
Ell
Ell
what's up with boost? o.O
17:07
@Ell He did not write it.
Aka, NIH.
Well, to date, I haven't reinvented anything boost has invented thus far.
I have.
Except maybe Unicode support, but I like my Unicode implementation. It is very shiny.
Unicode != UTF encodings.
Ell
Ell
who needs unicode when you have UTF
17:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes I suspect you have a sugar low. Time for weekend!
Nice.
Even after all that vendor stuff, it still won't build.
THe system cannot find the specified file.
Well, fuck you too, scons.
I think it's saying that
scones! nom nom nom
build/boost/libs/filesystem/v2/src/vs_operations.os doesn't exist.
17:13
@FredOverflow Not really. Direct from the Introduction to K&R 1: "C is a relatively 'low level' language."
And it's right, it doesn't exist.
I guess I need to get that file somehow.
... But it says my repo is already checkout-complete.
@sehe Probably just a side-effect of these last two exhausting weeks. :( Sorry if I come across as a woman with PMS.
That's surprisingly close to what I was thinking. But then I realized you're a robot. Period. :)
No problems of course
@ThePhD Have you built boost binaries? Filesystem package requires it.
> I've written a byte code VM in C++ that's been deployed on 100 million+ desktops and 100's of thousands of servers. I used C++ inheritance, templates, exceptions, custom memory allocation and a bunch of other features I thought were very cool at the time. Now I feel bad for the people who have to maintain it.
^ Damien Katz in followup
user142019
17:15
// How would a data structure of a polygon mesh look?
class Mesh {
    std::vector<Point> vertices;
    std::vector<std::vector<std::size_t>> faces;
    //                      ^ indices of vertices in vertices member
};
// ?
@Zoidberg Uh. That's... kind of weird.
@Zoidberg What is that for?
It's more like
Why aren't faces triangles?
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh of course.
17:17
> My view of C has changed over the years, and I used to think the older guys who loved C were just behind the times. Now I see why many of them felt that way, they saw what is traded away when you stray from the simple and effective.
^ resonates with me somehow
user142019
class Mesh {
    using Face = std::array<std::size_t, 3>;
    std::vector<Vertex> vertices;
    std::vector<Face> faces;
};
@R.MartinhoFernandes faces could be quads
struct MyVertexType {
    Vector3 Position; // And whatever else you desire
};

class Mesh {
    std::vector<MyVertexType> Vertices;
    std::vector<int /* or short */> Indices;

};
I still think I'm super ineffective in C, but I know a few guys that ... demonstrate the effect mentioned by D.Katz
@Zoidberg Just make the indices flat.
user142019
17:18
Ah okay.
@Zoidberg You're trying to hard with std::array<std::size_t, 3>
@sehe Meaningless if you can't see the source code.
Just straight std::size_t
@DeadMG Cough. Wide? It's largely meaningless, though a minimum can be assumed.
@sehe What about it?
I checked the link and it links back to a rewrite of some thing from 2005. My money is that his "C++" is from 1990 or so.
17:19
I assumed a minimum
user142019
@ThePhD @R.MartinhoFernandes thanks.
Why do I care about Damien Katz's opinion
@Zoidberg Basically, make all the storage flat. You can lay whatever interface you want on top, but it makes for easier uploading to the GPU.
user142019
Uhu.
@sehe Hmm, so he used those features because they were cool, not because they helped fix whatever problem he was facing there.
17:20
-26
Q: Down-vote Override?

Devon BernardI was recently answering some questions and came up with a pretty decent idea. What if when you know your correct answer is un-rightfully down-voted you request a moderator to reset your score to 0? I assume most users at times have had submitted answered that they know are correct and have even...

ahahaha
@Rapptz I don't. It's just that he recaps it in some (strong) wordings that oddly do resonate. I love C++, and I'm always 'lost' in C code bases (feeling like I cannot start to change anything because everything would require too much effort)
@sehe There is a big difference -- writing C well requires a completely different mind-set from writing C++ well. I used to write C pretty well (I thought anyway) but have a really hard time doing so any more. It requires a completely different way of looking at/thinking about most problems.
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah. And his point is: austere language prevent that from happening. I think
@sehe If you want handcuffs you can always try Java.
@JerryCoffin Yeah. I never learned C until ... well later on. So that switch is really hard for me to make
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nah. Java has too many features :)
17:22
@R.MartinhoFernandes He said "austere", not "shitty".
@sehe I don't think it's an effective way to do things.
Unrelated: I fully don't get how D.Katz is raving about tool support for C. I've yet to see a decent symbol browser, compilation model sucks, like C++, no refactoring tool seems feasible even after ... 40-some years
@ThePhD More like...
struct MyVertexType {
    Vector3 Position; // And whatever else you desire
};
class Mesh {
    std::vector<MyVertexType> Vertices;
    static_assert(std::is_standard_layout<MyVertexType>::value, "Vertices must have standard layout");
    std::vector<int /* or short */> Indices;

};
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ooh, that static_assert helps.
@sehe Hmmm. You might be on to something.
17:23
(Also, thanks, this made me realize something I have been doing wrong all this time)
variables at the global namespace are also in namespace scope, right?
@JerryCoffin Also, I learned a lot doing Java for a good few years. No need to "try" it :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes What's that?
@LuchianGrigore ::globalVar?
Xeo
Xeo
@LuchianGrigore Yes
@Rapptz think of it as a pedantic question.
@Xeo thx, I thought so, just wanted to be sure.
Xeo
Xeo
17:24
As the name suggests, the global namespace is also a namespace. :)
@Rapptz I should put the static assert where it matters, not next to the types, even if that means it gets repeated. Yes, it's a soft kind of "wrong".
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm actually using C#. :P
@sehe Allow me to extend my condolences in your time of...oh, you're not using Java any more. Allow me to congratulate you on your triumphant return to the world of the living! :-)
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's a compiled comment :)
Is this output well-defined? – assuming the type is big enough
17:25
@sehe Yeah, that was exactly the realisation I had.
I give up on Scons. I'm going to set up a VC++ project and say Fuck That Shit
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD noooooh
@R.MartinhoFernandes If my class can only be a specific type, I put the static_assert in the first line of the public field. :|
Seems like we're using GLLoad for our dependencies in the OpenGL project.
I'm not sure why we're not just using GLEW.
@ThePhD you gave up scons ? I was starting to move to it ! What's the problem that annoyed you the most ?
17:28
@StephaneRolland Shut up and use Scons.
@Rapptz Not sure if I get what you mean. What I meant was that I should put that static assert everywhere I use MyVertexType that requires it to be SL, not next to MyVertexType.
we don't use GLEW because
@KonradRudolph Looks well-defined to me -- and I don't think there's even a caveat about the type either. All signed types must be large enough to hold -1, and conversion of -1 to an unsigned type gives defined results as well (results in the largest value for that type).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Something like this.
template <typename T>
struct Vector3D {
    static_assert(std::is_arithmetic<T>::value, "Euclidean Vectors must be integral or floating types.");
    T x;
    T y;
    T z;
    Vector3D(): x{0}, y{0}, z{0} {}
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah I'm putting it on all my GraphicsDevice functions and everything right now.
17:29
10
Q: Is it safe to cast arbitrary values of the underlying type to a strongly-typed enum type?

R. Martinho FernandesIf I have a strongly-typed enum, with say, underlying type int, is it ok to cast an int value that does not match any enumerator to the enum type? enum e1 : int { x = 0, y = 1 }; enum class e2 : int { x = 0, y = 1 }; int main() { e1 foo = static_cast<e1>(42); // is this UB? ...

Does this answer your question?
Dang, somewhere there was a link to a draft for the container chapters from TC++PL 4th Edition. Anybody know where I can find it?
@Rapptz Ah that looks fine.
@Rapptz who said Vector3 was euclidean? maybe I want vector<complex<float>> :p
I've never used std::complex
@Rapptz Or Vector3D<Q<14, 2>>
17:31
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, thanks
@Rapptz it's not simple
@ThePhD I am never going to adopt your silly Q thing.
wtf with the Q
what is that Q thing?
Q is a fixed point number format where the number of fractional bits (and optionally the number of integer bits) is specified. For example, a Q15 number has 15 fractional bits; a Q1.14 number has 1 integer bit and 14 fractional bits. Q format is often used in hardware that does not have a floating-point unit and in applications that require constant resolution. Characteristics Q format numbers are (notionally) fixed point numbers (but not actually a number itself); that is, they are stored and operated upon as regular binary numbers (i.e. signed integers), thus allowing standard integer h...
17:32
Quick, help me suck less?
@DeadMG Get that...well, whatever that is out of your mouth!
@sehe lol, a pun huh
Anyone looked at this: codeproject.com/Articles/528872/… ? A tester for strong exception guarantee in C++11
@Rapptz it's not silly. :c
Didn't get it until now
17:33
In fact is was how games on the SNES and NES and other places did their numbers.
@Rapptz stealth puns fly under the radar
Wow, SO chat is freakin' out on me.
@ThePhD The feeling's mutual
@ThePhD I don't have a use for it.
@sehe If it makes you feel any better, I've been noticing all of them (I think) so far. :D
17:34
@ThePhD I know
std::complex seems cool.
> Is it always possible to write a strong exception safe method? Yes.
no! moron
... Wow
Kyrostat is so empty.
Time to bump this shit up.
What did you expect?
I dunno. SOmething more than a window.cpp ?
17:36
lol
They don't even know the genre last I checked
@ThePhD What do you think I have been joking about all this time?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought that we'd at least have something more! But it's okay
I will chock-full this entire thing.
It's all I'm going to spend my day on today, really.
But oh god, have to use glm.
Wasn't it supposed to be a 3D RTS space game or something
yes
@DeadMG why not? how is struct X { void foo() { throw "bla"; } }; not exception safe?
17:37
that's very different to "Don't know the genre", though.
@ThePhD if you can sneak in DirectXMath under the radar, I'm sure it's fine :3
@sehe It is. That doesn't mean it's always possible to make every method strongly exception safe.
@melak47 Not if you're compiling for Mac.
@melak47 Probably not possible to use with GLM. GLM most likely orders its matrices column-major. If I don't transpose, I'm sure I will fuck openGL in its butt.
@DeadMG Oh damn. I missed "always". I feel silly now
@melak47 I don't think that works outside windows.
17:37
@DeadMG I remember someone asking and the answer was "I don't know", other times it was the 3D RTS.
@R.MartinhoFernandes it might work on Xbox :D
@DeadMG Clearly, that's a ridiculous claim, indeed
@Rapptz Yeah, and "I don't know" changed to "I know and the answer is 3D RTS".
lol
and that was a very long time ago.
17:38
@melak47 We can always do #ifdef KYROSTAT_WINDOWZSZSZ
> Windowz
@ThePhD Wasn't that discussion had here recently?
@ThePhD But why bother
@R.MartinhoFernandes I knoow, but I meant. Everyone else will use GLM. If I suddenly try to sneak DirectXMath in, and start mixing matrices, I'm sure something will explode.
why write two code paths, when one will suffice?
17:39
@DeadMG I'm not going to actually do it, however nice DirectXMath is.
Hm, on page 104, Bjarne inherits from std::vector and uses int as in index type...
@FredOverflow I always wanted to use signed types at the sizes and indices for std::vector
it's a draft
@FredOverflow Bjarne has always been careful as heck in his stuff.
@ThePhD Why?
@R.MartinhoFernandes So?
17:42
what's wrong with using int as an index type (unless you imply that he should be using a size_t or something similar)?
@FredOverflow It always felt natural to check for a -1 index or less. That, and some time ago - not anymore, but before - I used to take -1 as going from "the end of the vector".
@FredOverflow Sarcasm.
@FredOverflow for me: using unsigned breaks up as soon you do arithmetics (idx1 - idx2 might be negative) and mixed signed/unsigned arithmetic in C++ is fraught with danger
@sehe C/C++ KILL HIM
When I wrote my own array stuff I liked having -1 as going from the end of the vector.
17:43
@R.MartinhoFernandes thanks for the clarification
@ThePhD Python does that
@DeadMG Whom? I don't see what you are referring to
@ThePhD You mean, like, end() - 1?
35 mins ago, by ThePhD
Well, to date, I haven't reinvented anything boost has invented thus far.
@DeadMG No, I think he means container[-1]
17:44
@R.MartinhoFernandes HEY, I'm not using my container stuff! D:
@ThePhd you just don't know it ^
"my own array stuff"
user142019
@KonradRudolph note that char may be signed or unsigned depending on the implementation.
I'm going to reinvent Boost::Multidimensional :(
Pouts. That's not fair, it was for learning. ;~;
17:44
@Zoidberg Makes no difference: -1 is fine in both.
because I wanted to do it before it was in boost.. bastards.
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes Huh? How can an unsigned char be -1?
@Zoidberg -1 for unsigned types means "zigamorph".
2
@Zoidberg I know that, doesn’t matter in my case (unsigned char x = -1; is valid)
user142019
Ah okay. :P
17:46
inb4 repost:
@sehe I suppose that soon the US can replace gasoline with fat.
@Rapptz Yeah, all I'm saying is that his proposed semantics for it are identical to end() - 1
Huh, actually that's interesting.
@R.MartinhoFernandes china might consider it too, as they are quickly running out of burial ground
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
17:49
@sehe So what if might be negative? If delta = idx1 - idx2 gives you a huge unsigned number instead of a negative one, idx2 + delta will still give you idx1. Why would you care about negative differences?
0
Q: Why does my program crash if I don't give command line arguments to it?

Tiivi TaaviI made a simple test program to play around with C++11 threads. #include <iostream> #include <stdlib.h> #include <thread> using namespace std; void tee(int civ) { for(int loop=0; loop<19; loop++, civ++) { civ = civ%19; cout << loop << "\t...

...
What a terrible, terrible question.
@FredOverflow because, well, you know, you might have been interested in the actual difference? Also, you'd have to keep extreme care that no widening/narrowing ever occur, or you'll pay on relying on unintuitive invariants
I like how all 3 comments say the same thing in a short time span.
@ThePhD With unsigned indexes, you only have to check index < size, which I find nice.
@FredOverflow This is also true.
17:50
@sehe In some sense, the huge unsigned numbers is the actual difference ;)
@FredOverflow I love that, and I use that, in loops. However, loop variables are hardly ever indices with me
Nice. I hope it works out for you :)
In some sense
Looping with indices is silly. Did I mention that before?
The one problem though is that 37218937129 unsigned is harder to catch a bad index.
If you do idx2 - idx1, and you get a negative result, you can check it to see if its below -1.
@sehe I prefer iterators to indexes, and subtracting two iterators gives a signed number. Are you happy now? ;)
Xeo
Xeo
Graah, screw this.
17:52
@ThePhD Only if you have such big arrays.
That means the math is wrong, ro something messed up and you cna quit early.
When I see 37218937129 in the debugger as an index I know immediately it is wrong.
An 11 digit number? Wow. What data type do you use for indexes?
> This is, after all, the promise of Java: write once, exploit anywhere.
lol
@FredOverflow size_t? (i.e. probably unsigned long, i.e. probably unsigned 64-bit integer)
Xeo
Xeo
This is getting nowhere today, I'm calling it quits. See you guys on monday.
17:53
@FredOverflow I just mashed my keyboard. I'm just saying that in looping it can sometimes get tricky if you do subtraction. -1 doesn't become -1 with an unsigned type. It just becomes If that results is cast to unsigned, instead of -1 you get 0xFFFFFFFF, which is technically > 0.
10^11 uses 44 bits in BCD, so it fits in 64 bits just fine.
0xFFFFFFFFUUUUUUUU
user142019
lol MonoDevelop's automatic documentation.
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Looping with indices is silly. Did I mention that before?
user142019
/// <summary>
/// Vertexs the data.
/// </summary>
/// <returns>
/// The data.
/// </returns>
public float[] VertexData();
Xeo
Xeo
17:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes unsigned long long on MSVC. IIRC.
@Xeo Yeah, whatever it takes to be 64-bits.
user142019
Yes, MonoDevelop. I'm "vertexing the data."
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes yes, but we're not all as sophisticated as your fancy for (auto& toocool : forschool ) { }
Xeo
Xeo
@Zoidberg "Vertexs the data"?
size_t is 32-bits on my machine
17:55
@Rapptz Same.
used to be 64 though.. :(
user142019
@Xeo :P
Xeo
Xeo
Anyways, see ya.
For me its 32 bits because I'm compiling Win32 instead fo Win64.
17:56
@FredOverflow depends on the iterator, obviously. I'm happy, regardless
if there's one thing I like,
it's C#'s comment style.
Despite being XML-y, it's very clear and concise.
@ThePhD Yours is the fancy one. Range-based for loop is the simpleton one.
really? I hate comment style, in general
@R.MartinhoFernandes True, I guess....
I prefer doxygen to that, looks bloated to me
17:57
@bamboon Doxygen is a monster.
I never want to deal with Doxygen ever. =[
Friendly monster.
Ell
Ell
what's up with doxygen?
@ThePhD why?
It's comments are soooo ugglyyyy ;~;
Thanks! Apparently I needed this: if(argc < 2) return 1; — Tiivi Taavi 6 mins ago
user142019
17:58
I think my Mesh class is complete so-far.
And I've read too much API documentation auto-generated stuff to feel happy about doxygen. =[

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