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12:00
oh also is it that hard to google "RS232 C++ Windows/Linux"?
@Paze boost has good stuff
RS232? i googled for serial
RS232 is the most commonly used serial port
google for it and verify
"serial" is too unspecific
okayi will, thanks
do u hapen to know if the arduino is using RS232 ?
sigh
In telecommunications, RS-232 is the traditional name for a series of standards for serial binary single-ended data and control signals connecting between a DTE (Data Terminal Equipment) and a DCE (Data Circuit-terminating Equipment). It is commonly used in computer serial ports. The standard defines the electrical characteristics and timing of signals, the meaning of signals, and the physical size and pinout of connectors. The current version of the standard is TIA-232-F Interface Between Data Terminal Equipment and Data Circuit-Terminating Equipment Employing Serial Binary Data Interch...
you tell me.
also, relevant
In computing, a serial port is a serial communication physical interface through which information transfers in or out one bit at a time (in contrast to a parallel port). Throughout most of the history of personal computers, data transfer through serial ports connected the computer to devices such as terminals and various peripherals. While such interfaces as Ethernet, FireWire, and USB all send data as a serial stream, the term "serial port" usually identifies hardware more or less compliant to the RS-232 standard, intended to interface with a modem or with a similar communication ...
Also use USB.
Eventually you'll want it anyway
12:11
hi pedants!
What's new?
Ell
Ell
Yay fixed it!
Ell
Ell
But now I have to into town
you a word
Ell
Ell
oh wait no. Now my tty's are black :(
12:19
tty?
terminals
I cleaned up my apartment, let's look at that range again
I need to clean up
but meh
DeadMG said that he doesn't see UB @Ell
so that's weird
well, since you never showed me the body of istreambuf_range, or explained what it does, it's difficult to make an assessment, no?
I've shown you, but you forgot
template<class Elem> inline
        boost::iterator_range<std::istreambuf_iterator<Elem> >
        istreambuf_range(std::basic_istream<Elem>& in)
        {
            return boost::iterator_range<std::istreambuf_iterator<Elem> >(
                std::istreambuf_iterator<Elem>(in),
                std::istreambuf_iterator<Elem>());
        }
that's hell simple. Still, boost istream_range pays attention to traits, and I don't know how they important they are
12:27
there's no reason why istreambuf_iterator<unsigned char> should fail.
I imagine
Ell
Ell
Meh I need to rebase my commits :3
I think anyway. I need to move my 2 commits before one of yours
so fetch&rebase, yeah
Ell
Ell
I think your code is fine
well fuck is wrong then?
Ell
Ell
12:29
just change basic_ifstream<unsigned char> -> ifstream and unsigned char -> char
in the istreambuf_range
but why the fuck ain't it working
Ell
Ell
it is if you change that
but now there is the context creation problem
Ell
Ell
the thing is, that issue was for an old commit
I think
what.
The context creation happens at the beginning for me
At the window initialization.
Ell
Ell
12:32
Meh I think I've messed up my repo a bit
glewinfo shows correct support for 4.0, but SFML somehow fucks Xrandr usage
Ell
Ell
but basically, to fix the bad_cast issue with the streambufs you just change the unsigned char thing
and then it's fixed
okay.
still, I am not even getting to this point
because the window won't initialize
Ell
Ell
but after fixing that, i think there is some other issue
right
damn fucking linux debugging
On windows I'd be able to step into and find the exact LoC in SFML
Ell
Ell
12:34
It's okay, I just think there is a bit of confusion/misunderstanding
I can on linux, gimme a sec :P
but I have to go very soo
I can't reproduce your istream error
because i won't even get to this point
Ell
Ell
agh fuck I'm sorry
but I;ll be on later!
I have to go
@BartekBanachewicz This runs perfectly well in VS2012
that's the point
VS is a lot more permissive
a lot
12:38
it occurs because the iostream is trying to skip whitespace
but obviously GCC's implementation does not have a traits for unsigned char that tells it what whitespace is.
@DeadMG on binary stream? :/
that's why unsetting the whitespace flag (which you should have done anyway) fixes the issue.
Ell
Ell
Because it doesn't Have the facets
@BartekBanachewicz Not entirely sure.
this is a good half of why iostream sucks.
that's fucked up
12:39
Until I get exact code @Ell is using I can't do shit
so fuck linux for now, I'll move on with functionality
might plain be a bug in GCC's implementation
ask on isocpp std-discussion or so
not before I can reproduce...
Also, verify on Clang.
this is hell of a task. I'd need proper SSCCE
I am too low in C++ to fix compiler bugs dammit it's you who are supposed to do it
me?
12:42
2
Q: Should move semantics be used in constructors?

Mihai BiÅŸogSuppose I have the following two classes: class Person { public: Person(string name, string surname) : _name(move(name)), _surname(move(surname)) { } ... private: string _name; string _surname; }; class Student : public Person { public: ...

or some other 40k+ freak :P
Remember, anyone who has less rep than me is a newb, anyone who has more is a freak and has no life
@TonyTheLion exact dupe of my question
@BartekBanachewicz mark it as dupe then
@TonyTheLion just did it
me too :)
user142019
@ThePhD You mean Vim?
user142019
12:53
And by accident, also Xcode and Visual Studio.
user784668
@Zoidberg emacs
user142019
Ewwmacs.
yay! Wide always performs some copy ellision.
hmm
alternatively, I think I might have just broken, well, not everything, but some things.
Ell
Ell
@bartek you just do all the features and ill fix bugs on linux :P
Cool with me. ^ that's 2D simplex noise.
user784668
13:03
y u uze crypto rng?
what.
ah, you mean random_device
because why not?
dude
is that VS2010?
you suck
2012
with Blue skin
13:04
I realized, of course, that VC10 didn't have <random>.
user784668
@DeadMG ur momma uses VS 6.0.
let's commit this shit and implement block orientation.
she doesn't use any version of VS.
Morning, @BartekBanachewicz, @DeadMG
mawning nubbery
user784668
13:06
Crap, compile time regression.
hmm
Inthe pictures, are the brown spots hills?
@Pawnguy7 more or less.
what
I suck and didn't do even diffuse lighting
user784668
13:07
GCC used to need 40 mins to do a full bootstrap, now it's 44 mins.
and now it shows.
Are they sideways or something?
textures are borked atm
fixing now.
Do you know how the water works? I have never quite understood how to do recursion like that.
yea
simple BFS algorithm
on regular grids it's quite easy to implement
at least that bugged minecraft vanilla water
13:11
The current version or the earlier one?
I dunno really. The current one still seems buggy
Only bug I am aware of is, water does not flow without an update, and occasionally, this can be seen. What bugs are you thinking of?
exactly this
also large lakes/seas behave strangely
Strangely in what way?
hmm
you can't make a full-blown river, for one
anyway, I think I don't need to pass textures per-instance
I can just use a bit more GPU memory #ohnoes
it should now fit in about 100MB so whatever.
13:19
That would be pretty neat, now that I think of it, but I don't know how one could make both cases work. (say, this, and just a still moat, or something)
As per the other, I am not sure how you can trigger the block updates without lag. Sand in desert lakes has a similar problem. Perhaps if you were to, somehow, trigger a recursive block update at lake spawn?
Something is wrong. All my source compiles and links with no errors or warnings. This is just weird.
The more I see C++ like this, the more I want to use other languages instead. What a nightmare! And I say this as a long-time C++ (and even C++11) user. — John Zwinck 26 mins ago
heh
@MartinJames very suspicious
@Pawnguy7 I can do everything.
It just takes time <cheese> :3
user784668
@MartinJames Same here.
@TonyTheLion Yeah - now I'm afraid to test it in case it spoils my day.
13:24
@BartekBanachewicz It takes me a long time, and I can do nothing. Trade?
user784668
But that's because I always make the compiler as much pedantic as possible. And -Werror.
@Pawnguy7 meh, you can
just don't give up.
Good advice, I think. Although linker errors can be a strong opponent. Nothing so strikes such frustration :D
-pedantic-errors ftw!
13:29
@rubenvb What does that do? Apparently pedantic means "like of of a pendant", but it didn't help me.
@Pawnguy7 "pedant"!
@DeadMG: Could you please explain why the code of the answer you downvoted is wrong?
@Pawnguy7 it's a flag it enables "nag-mode" in GCC, which complains about all the tiddly little details that might not be fully Standard or bad in general.
And it makes all these nags into errors, instead of the warnings you get with plain -pedantic
@AndyProwl Could you give me two minutes to finish writing up the answer that I'm obviously going to post with the correct content?
@BartekBanachewicz No, it was accurate. All linkers should swing at the end of a rope.
13:31
@DeadMG Sure, go ahead
@rubenvb But this in different from -WALL in that is.. crops up extra warnings, sort of?
@DeadMG I think I've reached the reasonable limit of instancing. Now I either go forward and use tesselator, or backward and store the whole scene in a VBO
@Pawnguy7 yes, it enables even more. Just like there's also -Wextra. Check the docs: gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Warning-Options.html
@BartekBanachewicz What makes you say that?
@DeadMG the need to have each face textured accurately.
13:33
what does that have to do with instancing?
Right now I pass offset in global texture per-instance, and the instance has each face normalized
But since the particular textures might be scattered across the global texture, there's no simple way to pass it.
derp.
that's because, firstly, megatextures are an epic fail.
seriously.
megatextures is an epic fail
13:34
there is no reason whatsoever to pack your textures together.
Do you know what causes that odd effect at long distances? Say, you are looking at a bedrock wall, oh, 50-100 blocks away. It looks... bad. What is it?
do you suggest 500 16x16 textures instead?
yep.
@Pawnguy7 lack of mipmapping
why not?
13:35
how the fuck I am going to sample then then?
Rebind every quad?
that hardly makes sense
every implementation of megatextures is less effective/beautiful than most other implementations of other methods
And only NVidia has NV_BINDLESS_TEXTURE ATM AFAIK
@BartekBanachewicz What do you mean?
@rubenvb suggest alternative
@DeadMG each cube wall can be different. So how should I choose the appropriate one?
I can't just do one drawcall as now
At best, it would be as many drawcalls as textures.
actually, 1 drawcall per texture is really quite reasonable.
13:37
@BartekBanachewicz see non-megatexture games.
@rubenvb no, I mean concrete idea instead of some esoteric stuff.
the point to limiting draw calls isn't to have OH MY GOD MORE THAN ONE DRAWCALL11111ONENE!!
@BartekBanachewicz After reading on that, makes sense. Although, I don't usually notice it, because my cpu cannot handle well such render distances. (normally tiny)
it's to not have 1 draw call per vertex or someshit like that.
using 400 of them hardly makes sense too imo
13:38
@BartekBanachewicz 400 is nothing.
because that's the approx number of block textures.
@BartekBanachewicz dude, standard methods. I'm not a 3D game programmer, I only see the results and base my opinion on that.
@rubenvb I don't want to be rude, but right now you aren't adding anything to the discussion.
seriously.
well, you might be right.
13:39
for more graphically advanced games, which do lots of passes and shit, they issue tens of thousands per frame, I believe.
Good evening!
I thought the goal is to limit drawcalls, that's all.
@DeadMG : Added anything new to codepuppy?
not currently
@DeadMG That is a lot of draw calls...
13:39
@BartekBanachewicz It is, but you need perspective.
@BartekBanachewicz : Hows the game coming along?
as with any other optimization technique, limiting drawcalls is only useful when you A) have a performance problem, and B) know that too many drawcalls is the cause.
@DeadMG Well I don't suspect the number of distinct block texture types to ever exceed 500-1000
so, as I said, you might be right.
also
I will implement it then and measure.
also?
13:41
you could, I expect, probably write it so that you could issue one draw call to render the faces for some N textures, where N is the amount you could be bothered to code in
lol.
that's microoptimization
well, this is it
it's about what's really going to get you results in terms of performance, and what's needless arsing about
right.
back to code. I'll be back with results.
@GamesBrainiac well.
I saw a screen shot of a bunch of 3D blocks yesterday
Thats why! :)
@GamesBrainiac scroll up
13:44
Btw, what exactly are you trying to make?
What kind of 3D software?
std::vector<std::string> words = {"word"}; - seems to be a compile error. Does VC not support this?
nope.
@Pawnguy7 Which version are you using?
@GamesBrainiac there is no version that can compile that.
@rubenvb Wait, let me just check.
13:47
@Pawnguy7 remove "="
@GamesBrainiac minecraft clone
@BartekBanachewicz Sounds good, funnily enough, minecraft was made in java
@GamesBrainiac There is no version of the compiler+lib that can compile that code.
@GamesBrainiac 11, I beleive. Bundled with VS 2012 downloaded three days ago, should be recent.
@Pawnguy7 Yea, you're right, you cant do it
But you can do it with GCC
@BartekBanachewicz I don't know what you mean.
13:50
@Pawnguy7 std::vector<std::string> words {"word"};
@GamesBrainiac Including minGW? On Windows.
@Pawnguy7 : Its a different one
`Error 1 error C2470: 'words' : looks like a function definition, but there is no parameter list; skipping apparent body c:\users\kids\documents\visual studio 2012\projects\practice text exercise\practice text exercise\practice text exercise.cpp 14 1 Practice text exercise
`
@GamesBrainiac as in, GCC is different than minGW?
@Pawnguy7 VS 2012 standard library doesn't have it yet. Compiler supports the syntax, though.
@Pawnguy7 Yes, but still on windows.
13:53
wait what?
GCC on Windows is pretty much MinGW.
@BartekBanachewicz The compiler seemed to reject the syntax... are you saying there is, or is not, a way to do this? Otherwise, I believe you can do it with an array.
I don't remember std::vector<std::string> words = {"cheese" , "cake" }; working with MinGW
but it works with the compiler I've given in that link. I might be wrong though, MinGW has released newer versions
@GamesBrainiac I'm quite sure it does.
I'm 110% sure it does
You should use my MinGW-w64 builds anyways.
Instead of freaky equation.com stuff.
13:55
Hey, I installed this a few months ago
4.6.3 will support that.
At that time, MinGW did not have that.
MinGW is stupid. Use MinGW-w64.
what even is the difference
13:56
well that's gcc not mingw but :(
we'll pretend it's mingw
mingw is gcc on Windows
I know
@DeadMG 64-bit support, loads of new API, loads of DirectX API, DDK API, etc...
@Rapptz Thats GCC, its not MinGW
but he's going to say that ^
13:57
@GamesBrainiac MinGW is also GCC. Confused yet?
@rubenvb MinGW makes a version of GCC that is compatible with Windows OS
Thats what I know.
I would think minGW would... "lag", behind GCC, but I don't know if this is true.
@GamesBrainiac I know that GCC is compatible with Windows. THere's no patches or anything. MinGW is just a set of headers and libraries (the CRT). Nothing more.
@Pawnguy7 No that's untrue.
They are both very different things.
@rubenvb Why so?As I understood it, MinGW is essentially a continuous porting project of GCC to windows.

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