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16:00
@JerryCoffin Even more valid in C++ tough
I've seen horrors straight from the Outer Ring written in C++
It's funny that you can even need to satisfy that many protocols with one subclass.
@kbok Okay -- I despise AT&T too.
@DomagojPandža Those are used as listener interfaces
Which is super wrong IMO
user142019
Your design is bad and you should feel bad.
Not mine
Still feeling bad for having to work with that tho
user142019
16:02
AsyncUploadHandlerDelegate oh God use blocks not delegates.
user142019
It's 2013 and we have Objective-C 3.0 already.
Blocks & GCD are actually two things within the whole Apple codebase that I can't piss all over.
Quite nice.
Wait, so what @TonyTheLion was saying, inside the foo function, l would really be an int despite being declared as long? That doesn't seem right.
I hate sleeping. And even more, I hate that my body requires it. And that moment when your code starts to blur because of your eyes. I'm such a puny human.
16:18
Where can you ask general questions on Git?
Which chat room or site?
@Phorce stackoverflow is fine
user142019
On a scale from false to true, zoidberg.hungry() equals true.
not sure if want or not. (new model)
4
A: Making a method available depending on a compile-time argument

hmjdA possible solution would be std::enable_if: template <typename = typename std::enable_if<Dimension >= 3>::type> DataType& z() { return _data[2]; } For the client code: Coord<int, 2> ci2(0,0); ci2.z() = 3; clang emits the following: so1.cpp:64:9: error: no mat...

deadMeat.feed(zoidberg);
16:26
This answer isn't correct, is it?
I didn't think sfinae worked like that
@BartekBanachewicz 3D print your own :p
@melak47 that's not exactly how instruments are made
@BartekBanachewicz it's an electric guitar.
@melak47 I am aware of that, and?
@BartekBanachewicz so, acoustics don't matter that much, right? so you can 3d print the body in a shape you like :p
16:29
@melak47 they do matter
bleh :p
the wood vibrates with strings
every part of the guitar vibrates
this vibrations can resonate with the sound or not.
which impacts the vibrations of strings themselves
thus, the electric signal coming out.
so don't print a body. just the thing with the strings. jeez, you make it sound so complicated :p
Xeo
Xeo
@Xeo: I prefer same identifier as the nested type so that I could write this type<some_traits<T>>; likewise iterator<container>; const_iterator<container>; that way the readability is improved without destroying the flexibility. — Nawaz 7 mins ago
Meh
user142019
The guitar is probably cheaper than the 3D printer and the "ink".
16:31
also this ^
It's a "budget" model
$700.
I'd rather havea 3D printer :p
Same.
meh, your lame.
guitars are cool.
They are
but ... it's a 3D goddamn printer!
16:33
A GODDAMN 3D PRINTER!
I could make shit with that!
All kinds of shit!
you should build one yourself
@ThePhD ...but not a (usable) guitar.
buying one would be lame, you would reuse someone's technology
@JerryCoffin True, I guess. :c
@BartekBanachewicz But I don't know how to make a good 3D printer. D:
@ThePhD you don't know how to make a good game engine either
16:35
@BartekBanachewicz That is a lie. :D
So I don't exactly see a problem here.
@ThePhD prove it is.
@ThePhD Knowing how to make things would the first prerequisite for making real use of a 3D printer.
@JerryCoffin Use a 3D printer... to make a 3D printer!
Hm. Could you print a 3D printer with a 3D printer?
Self-cloning army of 3D printers.
16:36
uh oh
I see this coming...
@ThePhD: The army wouldn't be very intimidating. They would need far too long.
@Zeta I think that's generally considered the sine qua non of a true 3D printer. Unfortunately, I believe most current attempts fail.
Ell
Ell
@Zeta reprap can do most of itsself
@JerryCoffin I've heard of a self-replicating robot a while ago. It wasn't a general purpose printer though.
@melak47 Cell phones that can take crappy pictures like that are already pretty common.
16:39
@melak47: Oh. Well, I had a good time. Not like the Asgard are going to help us this time, are they?
@melak47 what is that?
besides a crappy picture
@TonyTheLion watch stargate. then come back :p
oh
meh
0
Q: C++ 0xC0000094: Integer division by zero

FlashbondThis code is working perfectly until 100000 but if you input 1000000 it is starting to give the error above. I am sure it is something about floating points. I tried all the combinations of (/fp:precise), (/fp:strict), (/fp:except) and (/fp:except-) but had no positive result. Any idea? // Writt...

kill it with fire
bad bad bad formatting
Damnit.
Maybe I should just use Free functions instead.
@ThePhD instead of what :3
16:42
static class members.
I keep running into the issue of "Who was defined first".
Assuming I have two vectors of the same size. One of them filled with doubles the other one with points. Now I know that in the doubles vector there are two doubles in ]0, 1[. How can I fetch these two points in a for loop WITHOUT using a branch?
Hm.
Is it possible
To have a pre-declaration
of a template member?
Er
I'm sorry, I'm phrasing it wrong
template<typename T> T foo(); this?
Like that, except a whole class.
user142019
@TonyTheLion it would be unreadable even with formatting fixed.
16:45
If you know that there is just one value in this interval it is trivial:
Point point;
for (size_t i=0; i<N; i++)
point += (values[i] < 1 && value[i] > 0) * point;
The whole class is templated, but you do the usual declaration / definition separation.
but I have no idea how to do this for two
@Zoidberg true
@Nils I don't know that I get what it is you want to do?
Today, I do not know how to type English. =[
@ThePhD why do you want to separate them?
16:47
@TonyTheLion Because I want to use one within the other.
@ThePhD define one first, the other underneath?
And they can both use each other? :O
0
Q: Contacting Facebook

Jenelle BarbaHow do I contact Facebook for deleting a non-offensive photo and blocking me from my account for 24 hours when I have several other photos just like it? The picture was of my 2 year old daughter in the bathtub-showing no genitalia whatsoever and I have many other photos like this that have not be...

lolwat
o.0
@ThePhD ah no
16:49
@TonyTheLion Given two vectors of the same size: One with Points and one with doubles. Now I know that one entry in the vector of doubles is in a given range (eg ]0, 1[). How can can I fetch the point at the same index w/o using a branch.
That is easy and I showed this above, but now what if two doubles match the given range and I want to extract two points?
@TonyTheLion The first step to contacting facebook is to contact an entirely unrelated website!
@Nils use a std::map<std::pair<double, double>, point> and now you have fast access
@Pubby noobs
Ahhh
Forward-delcaration solves all my problems.
Damnit, why doesn't C++ just take ALL class definitions and automatically forward-declare them for the whole compilation process?
@TonyTheLion nah we deal with ranges here
map.find(..) takes one exact value.
Aaaand no cables
16:52
@Nils write find_all?
@ThePhD forward declare ALL the things everywhere!
For fuck's sake
also why are you so bent on not using branches?
@ThePhD Why can't we have the modul proposal?
@ThePhD And what happens if there are circular dependencies?
16:52
do I smell premature optimisation?
@Pubby Forward-declaration of classes doesn't make circular dependencies.
@ThePhD Because C++ compilation model is retarded
@TonyTheLion Well that would be "use a different algo" which might be faster.
You don't have to define base classes for the forward declarations even.
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Me too!
16:53
@ThePhD FYI I don't think you need forward declarations if you do everything C style. ie class foo* x instead of foo* x
(well, the forward declarations are implicit there)
So any further ideas?
Yeah you can do everything not-C++ style and not use C++ at all
@Nils well, for a range, I don't know it can be done without a branch, but it may be a good idea to post a question to Stack Overflow
Welp, another thing to add to my "what'll make a great language" list.
Forward-declare everything.
My compilation at this point is probably going to be 2-pass.
@CatPlusPlus you could just go stack shelves instead
16:54
Yeah that's far more enjoyable than writing C++
WHAM STACKED 20 SHELVES TODAY
I might do this later, but I thought I already solved at least a similar problem.
Anyways I'm off, cu
Bibi~
@ThePhD Grats!
I would enjoy having a simple job liek shelf-stacking from time to time.
Also:
#pragma region Texture (Sprite) 3D Rendering
This is apparently illegal because of the number. =[
16:58
0
Q: How can I find the longest comment on Bugzilla?

Lightness Races in OrbitWe use Bugzilla for issue tracking and a colleague of mine just reported that his upcoming concluding comment on some bug "is like a paper", and "is going to be the biggest comment on Bugzilla, I think". I'd like to find out what the current record-holder is in our installation, so that we can d...

@LightnessRacesinOrbit oi, no drive by linking! :p
@ThePhD #pragma region SpriteTexture3DRendering?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit why SO and not superuser?
@MooingDuck Ooh, that'd do it
Thanks!
I should really make a repo for the language I want to write.
Keep adding specs upon specs upon specs.
Bad code examples, good code examples.
Keep building it up, 'till it's really nice.
Then once I have a good core, clean it up and try my hand at a parser for it.
I'll probably output C++ code from it, because... why the fuck not? :D
17:16
@Abyx Bugzilla is a programming tool. Sort of.
@BartekBanachewicz How do I prove if my engine is good, again?
s/programming/software development/
also, tbh, these satellite stackexchange sites are too small and obscure to bother with
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Upboat for yet another question and self-answer. :D
SimCity saga continues rockpapershotgun.com/2013/03/18/…
(to be hilarious)
17:19
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, Dead Space 3. Not bad.
I'm gonna get my free game as soon as possible.
user142019
Would OpenGL be fine for 2D games?
@Zoidberg SFML uses OpenGL.
Seems to work pretty well.
ahahahahah
@Zoidberg It might be overkill really
And it makes any font rendering a pain in the ass
user142019
@TonyTheLion ahahahahah
17:21
Just use SFML if you're making a 2D Game.
The performance will be fine.
(I've tested it with hundreds of sprites: you're fine).
You could even use SDL if you're crazy.
(I used SDL for a while during University)
user142019
Can I just use the graphics part of SFML or must I compile the entire thing?
I'd rather just use GDI+
Just compile the whole thing.
@CatPlusPlus SDL uses GDI+ underneath.
And uses its BitBlt()
user142019
@ThePhD Meh.
SDL has also terrible API
17:22
That's one thing that makes its performance supa good.
@CatPlusPlus True that.
It's not the best state-machine API.
user142019
OpenGL and immediate mode. :D
OpenGL immediate mode actually performs really well.
Which is dumb-surprising.
user142019
lol
Probbly because they just set up a dynamic vertex buffer in the background and batch that shit like smart driver makers.
Could just be my graphics card though.
I imagine older ones chug like shit.
Hokay.
Now i need to test PHYSEEEKS.
@ThePhD Really old ones certainly did -- but ones that old don't support many alternatives either...
17:27
@EtiennedeMartel AFAIK DS3 is pretty bad
My current API has support for immediate-mode drawing. :3c
@CatPlusPlus How much do you know?
@EtiennedeMartel s/much/far
Not much but y'know, do some research first
@CatPlusPlus So, you've read reviews?
17:29
I know it exists so I've read something :v:
From what I've heard, DS3 is only good in co-op.
I think the main gripe was that it wasn't very survival horrory
@CatPlusPlus Was that so surprising? DS2 wasn't very survival horrory either.
I guess the old line about "Real programmers can write Fortran in any language" should now refer to Java instead of Fortran.
Maybe I should have done a Monty Python reference though: "And now for something completely different: Code with three buttocks."
17:44
out of curiosity, is there any other virtual method in the STL than std::exception::what?
@zneak What, exactly, do you mean by "in the STL"? If you're referring to the standard library in general, then there are quite a few (e.g., iostreams, locales, and facets have a fair number).
Quick, hide that stuff; the ---cops--- moderators are here.
Errr...I mean, Hi Flexo.
Hmmm....markdown fails again?
mutli line fail?
user142019
Awesome.
@melak47 Oh, of course. My fault...
17:56
@Zoidberg that guy has a great many coke cans
user142019
lolindeed
@Zoidberg that's cool
user142019
403
too lazy to copy/paste the link
18:13
@Mysticial lol
Theres a mario game that you could finish a level really easily by going below the screen (you would wrap back at the top and land next to the boss)
xD
user142019
user142019
lol
@Zoidberg image not found
Hello, World!
18:16
Hi
user142019
@TonyTheLion now?
@Zoidberg yea
lol
I'd run if I saw all that red, too
might mistake it for the fires of hell
user142019
@Code-Guru Uhm, that wouldn't be a mistake.
18:23
@Zoidberg probably not =p
user142019
@Xeo I read that as "Germanic Lambda Proposal". :|
@Xeo So, auto means template for lambdas now?
Since you can't use template with Lambdas, IIRC?
Xeo
Xeo
If the proposal gets accepted, it will be as people guessed [](auto x){ ... } is a polymorphic lambda.
with c++1y auto will be all over the place
Xeo
Xeo
Which is awesome
Type inference. <3
I'm currently reading the proposal to see if they screwed up return type deduction
18:31
Doesn't look like it.
It basically boils down to template arguments.
So as long as your templates don't suck, generic lambdas won't suck either.
Ell
Ell
Has anyone here used Crafty? the JS library?
java java java
php php php
tabs vs spaces
.net .net .net
haskell
brace on its own line
Xeo
Xeo
> In C++11, the variable schrodinger above unambiguously represents a non-generic lambda with an unnamed parameter of type Missiles that returns a value of type Missiles. If auto is allowed to be omitted, an interesting superposition might arise: Is schrodinger a generic lambda, a non-generic lambda, or an error (or all three until actually invoked quantum-physics-humor-alert ;)?
lol
struct Missiles{
  Missiles(int numberToCreate) { /*... */ }
  Missiles& operator()(int numberToLaunch) { /* ... */ }
};
auto schrodinger = [](Missiles){ return Missiles(1); };
// This behavior has changed silently under the proposal.
Firin' mah missiles.
I'll shoot em down with my lazers
18:42
meh... they should remove that { return } in generic lambdas.
hm... parentheses can be removed as well. we just need something to separate arg-list and expression, like [] a, b => a + b
whaaazaaaap
@ThePhD userbase
@Abyx Yes, let's make the grammar even more context sensitive and fucked up!
@CatPlusPlus huh? what's wrong with that grammar?
18:57
I'm wondering if auto couldn't be used also for regular functions, as syntactic sugar for writing function templates. For instance void foo(auto x, auto y) would be equivalent to template<typename T1, typename T2> void foo(T1 x, T2 y)
@BartekBanachewicz The userbase is me. <3
@AndyProwl you always can write auto foo = [] ...
@CatPlusPlus I just scored 57 :/
@ThePhD that means it ain't very good.
All my bugs are features that are so awesome, they overflow and become broken.
@Abyx That wouldn't be the same I guess. What if I wanted to create a member function like that?
18:59
@BartekBanachewicz It's also because it's not released to anyone, duh. :P

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