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21:00
@Mike this is C++ room
@Mike also check out atoi
@Borgleader I already got mine, so lalalalala I can't hear you.
Of course we don't care
ty
@Mike please check Stack Overflow first, k?
21:01
atoi is terrible
@CatPlusPlus no shit.
@EtiennedeMartel im tlking about the concept in general
I hope you like not being able to tell invalid and valid input apart
@EtiennedeMartel You seem to have recurring hearing issues. You should see a doctor, man.
Stupid primitive Java generics
21:03
Is it possible to create a variadic call in runtime?
21:04
No
then I am screwed.
10
Q: HTML <strong> tag

StarCubIs using more than one <strong> tag actually make the word stronger? i.e. is <strong><strong>abc</strong></strong> stronger than <strong>abc</strong> ? I'm asking this because if you view the HTML source of the official website of North Korea...

> I'm asking this because if you view the HTML source of the official website of North Korea,
@DogPlusPlus: Can a network module be "bolted on" afterwards or must it be part of the engines original design?
Image macros
21:07
So if I want to use any C++ function from Lua, it has to support some variadic parameter
say, vector<variant>
Decompile WoW and see how they did it :P
I'll leave that as TBD and make parameterless functions for now.
@Borgleader they used fixed interface from C++
1 min ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
say, vector<variant>
user142019
Is there a decent SSL library?
@Zoidberg OpenSSL
Yes. No. Maybe.
user142019
21:09
> decent
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is all I need to hear from you.
I was reading the HOTS credits (yeah i checked the credits) so many libraries lol
@Borgleader It can always be bolted/plugged in if your design is modular. But usually, this is wishful thinking, when you don't consider it from the beginning, there'll be a bunch of refactoring and pain involved. :D
Apparently you can have abstract interfaces in java
21:11
Yeah, changing your design midway is fucking messy.
Especially in C++.
@CatPlusPlus What?
Well I know from "experience" that such systems usually need network unique IDs on top of the regular unique ids, is that the kind of refactoring you were talking about?
user142019
@CatPlusPlus but can you have non-abstract interfaces?
@R.MartinhoFernandes ideone.com/BC4N2Q
Is there a difference?
Obviously it's more abstract
(No)
21:14
I got a MLP song stuck in my head. I guess that's my punishment.
@Borgleader Among other things, yes. It's mostly the little things that propagate all over your design and make you wish to start over. It's really nothing specific, this is not just common to networking, every change or addition, no matter how carefully planned to be implemented in the future, will bite you in the ass at least once. :D
Yeah >.> I see what you mean
@DogPlusPlus I feel you man. I am going through those annoyances in ogonek right now.
Luckily I have no users so I can just turn everything inside out and no one bitches.
TIL about Boost.Proto
it might be a nice workaround
21:18
The networking layers of Windows can't just drop UDP packets can they? One of our tests appears to have failed because of too many dropped packets from one process to another on the same virtual machine.
Also, you know what? Fuck initializer_list<char32_t>. Who the heck would use that?
@R.MartinhoFernandes You have sort of one user. Me ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I saw a GCC fork at one point where strings in template parameters would be expanded to a series of characters. Vaguely similar concept.
Which keyboard shortcut should I use to trigger compilation in Coliru?
I've currently set it to Ctrl-E (Cmd-E on mac) as an experiment.
:make
Oh, wait.
21:20
@StackedCrooked my first reflex was CTRL+S but that's stupid and taken. I was about to suggest F5 because that's what I use in VS, but then realized that's taken too.
F5 has been replaced by Ctrl-R I think.
btw, I can't tell you how often I have to close that stupid save-as dialog box when typing in online code editors :/
Ctrl-B perhaps.
Ctrl + B is good
"Build"
F7?
I like F7.
21:21
CTRL+Q+Z
#include <Furrovine++/Furrovine++.h>
Derpstorm, y u put ++ in names :(
F5 is now Alt-F4
Maybe there's a Furrovine engine that's in C.
Don't tell me you have a computer from the 60s that can't handle + signs.
21:22
Yay, it fails to compile again.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think it's the ++ followed by the .h that's confusing.
It's not a problem, but it feels weird. :D
The Robot is just reaffirming his weird style.
But, mostly, the engine is called "Furrovine", and the source is in Furrovine++?
INCONSISTENCY
21:23
SCANDALEUX
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah, the ++s should be on the other side of the dot.
See?!
.h++ and .c++ is weird
Ctrl-B it is.
And nobody is noticing the <> around user-created .h? :$
I use <> almost everywhere.
21:24
umm
error : no suitable conversion function from "lambda [](lua_State *)->int" to "lua_CFunction" exists
@BartekBanachewicz Weird.
typedef int (*lua_CFunction) (lua_State *L);
@EtiennedeMartel so it should work?
@BartekBanachewicz If that's MSVC, I heard it lacks that bit.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ICC :/
kill me.
21:25
@DogPlusPlus is that a group header?
Red squigglies. So lovely.
Does Furrovine use PCH?
also he got access to top secret data
Also OMG
@BartekBanachewicz Non capturing lambdas are implicitly convertible to function pointers, so it's a bug in your compiler.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think you mean bacon strips
21:25
he has separate IndexBuffer and VertexBuffer WTF @ThePhD?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't thikn lambdas can be converted to function pointers can they?
Hm what's going on? o_O
@BartekBanachewicz He has buffers for everything.
@MooingDuck If captureless, yes.
@EtiennedeMartel non-capturing.
21:26
@BartekBanachewicz Arent they supposed to be separate?
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh.
@Borgleader in OpenGL it's essentially the same buffer object, just with different data.
Different target, though.
In D3D, several things share a GpuBuffer.
I have a base class GpuBuffer.
> Enclosing information in types is cool.
21:27
VertexBuffer, IndexBuffer, ConstantBuffer, etc. all derive from GpuBuffer.
@DogPlusPlus Because g++, clang++, your-mom++
They confirm at compile-time what these resources are.
I have this templated :P
or wait, I don't.
You can change that at runtime, just as OpenGL allows you to
I don't see a reason to template it because the underlying type itself is not templated, so I don't gain much of an advantage.
21:29
I like the . you put into Include of VC++ dirs to make the include not be mad about <>. Also, can I has zlibstaticd.lib from your dependencies? The one I provided doesn't play ball with your source.
@BartekBanachewicz Meh, I don't see much use in doing that.
@DogPlusPlus IN the Furrovine++ repo, there's a single DOwnload.
It's called FUrrovine++.zip
Index data cannot be used for vertices and vice-versa, so having the compiler bark at you if you mix them is good.
@R.MartinhoFernandes My first goal when wrapping is "don't limit what original API gives you"
Extract it inside of FUrrovine++ and it'll place all necessary prebuilt Win64 and Win32 libraries, from FBX to zlibstatic
21:30
@ThePhD Thanks for mentioning that an hour ago. :Đ
but yea, I will think about that
Sorry. :c
I thought I put it on the front page's wiki...
@BartekBanachewicz That sounds good, but you should not push it too far: adding limits give stronger invariants.
Stronger invariants yield correct code easier. It is also easier to reason about it.
So you need to balance those two conflicting goals.
21:32
NOPE
Didn't put it in the page's wiki
I'm a horrible person. :3c
so, if I can't bind capturing lambda as C function.
what should I put in it to bypass that...
DIAF. :Đ
@BartekBanachewicz void* all the way?
@MooingDuck no. We were talking about limiting functionality. You are lost in the middle of discussion again :)
@BartekBanachewicz std::function
@BartekBanachewicz oops
Guiz?
@MooingDuck no suitable conversion function from "std::function<int (lua_State *)>" to "lua_CFunction"
@BartekBanachewicz Nope.
std::function provides no such conversions
21:36
@JohannesSchaub-litb there's target, but apparently nope.
What does the API that takes the callback look like?
but AFAIK you can query it for the function pointer if you know the type of the object held
@BartekBanachewicz you'll need to pass a pointer to the lambda as a function parameter, and call that function.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lua_pushcfunction(lua_State*, lua_CFunction)
@BartekBanachewicz That only works if there is a function pointer already in it: it does not magick new function pointers into existence.
21:37
@MooingDuck a pointer to the lambda...? O.O
@BartekBanachewicz no, can't be done with that signature
Oh wow, I just caught myself wondering why there was no std::unordered_vector. Time for bed and it's only 5:30 pm.
fucking fuck.
@BartekBanachewicz only works if you can pass a void* parameter to the callback, but yours can't.
@BartekBanachewicz If you can store a std::function in lua_State, you can pass a regular function that retrieves the std::function from the state and calls it.
21:38
-2
Q: How to make a function that receives an enum

user2221404class Shapemaker { public: static Shape * shapeCreate(CDrawView::shape sh); }; My enum on my CDrawView class is enum shape{line, rect, elli}; shape current_shape; when i call Shapemaker::shapeCreate(current_shape) on I get error c2653'CDrawView' : is not a class or namespace name on shap...

Kill me
So the question is, can you store arbitrary data in a lua_State?
i needed unordered_vector a few times
@R.MartinhoFernandes That only allows one callback per lua_State.
@DogPlusPlus Head to Ploughland/wiki for more information about the dependencies.
push_cclosure is like push_cfunction + upvalues or something. So you can put the pointer as a light userdata, then use a function to retrieve that and call it properly to push. Or something. Read the API.
21:38
i wonder why it hasn't been proposed yet
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's ugly, but you can
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think that is possible
As lightuserdata
@MooingDuck (If it's a POD and not copied you can always cheat and derive from it and static_cast)
you guys have improved your troll awareness skills. i'm impressed!
But push_cclosure sounds much better.
21:40
hm
yeah fuck why I am not using that instead :/
I can push userdata with it
Different approach is to push your C++ functor in some form as a (heavy) userdata and hook the Lua call operator to do the right thing. Maybe. I don't really know.
Lua call operator = Lua C call to function pointer
basically Lua calls C function, but it can push some data for stack
now, the registered function can use this data
... to call appropriate C++ function!
man, if I get this rolling it will be awesome
@BartekBanachewicz and that data would be.... chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/8541063#8541063
@MooingDuck aha!
hello fools.
21:42
gimme 5.
6 mins ago, by Mooing Duck
@BartekBanachewicz you'll need to pass a pointer to the lambda as a function parameter, and call that function.
@MooingDuck I know, I know
:D
I like being right. It only happens so rarely
This is kind've why I wanted to put hte binaries in teh repo rather than the download page.
Here's the trick I talked about, even if not needed: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/…
21:44
That way, when someone gets my repo they don't have to do complicated "get the prebuilt binaries" shit.
what is a "modeling language"? (eg, UML)
Also, @BartekBanachewicz FBX isn't apart of assimp, I don't think.
@ThePhD anyway assimp is nice
@Crowz it's a scam
UML is the language you come to hate after having to use it at least once in class.
21:45
A modeling language is a language used for modeling.
A modelling language is a language used for modelling.
I don't quite get what UML really IS. Is it like... a language? Or maybe I should rephrase, is it a language like C or C++?
@Crowz UML is a language like powerpoint
@MooingDuck whatcha mean?
@Rapptz Ah, Jimenez's work. SSSS and the eye shading.
21:47
I thought it was more like a series of class diagrams and stuff
@Rapptz Too bad that'd never happen in the game. D:
It's meant to be a more visual and organized collection of your code.
@ThePhD Why not?
I can only imagine that's taking the entire computer's processing power to make function.
@Crowz It's not a programming language.
But it is a language.
21:48
That, and it says it on the lower-right corner: Not Actual Gameplay.
@MooingDuck What?
There's even "Language" in its name!
@Crowz exactly: diagrams
@ThePhD Yeah, but it's real time.
Real-time with only that single renderer running.
Now add physics and managing the rest of your game and that'll probably become wholly impractical.
21:49
@ThePhD Not really. Duality supports similar tech, 16.67 ms because of the vsync. Based on a scanned head mesh.
Great for movies, though. :D
What I mean is: saying "never" is a bit premature.
It's not really a problem. :D
@EtiennedeMartel Okay. So it's more for the logical steps of programming, but isn't directly programming? ie, how things should work together, but not the implementation itself
Sorry for being such a noob
user142019
> If an error occurs, or the end of the file is reached, the return value is a short item count (or zero).
user142019
21:49
Lol a "short" item count.
Isn't 16.67ms a bit slow?
It's just a matter of getting the architecture to record facial expressions. The technical representation is simple, the equipment - is not. :/
@Rapptz Per frame.
I need a carrier.
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes AT&T
@Rapptz Just enough for 60fps, I guess.
21:50
@DogPlusPlus Ah.
Screen space subsurface scattering and eye processing takes ~ 2-4 ms.
And that's the gist of "realistic faces".
Now animating it is a problem.
Well, not a problem. Just expensive.
Aren't 120fps screens emerging?
I wonder whether that is yet another head scan or an artist's rendition of someone. The artistic cost is the biggest bottleneck.
Subspace scattering would be cooler.
Anyone has a tip to debug those 'no matching function for call to 'forward(...expression here...)'' errors? I.e. I'd like to know what template argument was passed :s
21:52
It doesn't tell?
Nope. It's seriously displayed as forward(expr).
Sigh. Try clang?
I do have the type of the expression but that's half the story.
can you see the difference between 60 and 120 fps?
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
21:54
The biggest shitty zone is 30 - 60. 60 - 120 is not really that much of a deal.
30 was a thing when interlaced displays were popular.
> error| inheriting constructors are not supported
@LucDanton ouch
@LucDanton Erm.
Nowadays, it just feels slow. And sometimes animations get interpolated over twice their length to match 60 fps.
If you were to switch between 60 and 120 fps, you would be able to notice a difference, but 60fps is still high and sufficient, so you shouldn't give a fuck
21:55
yeah ive just never seen any demos
with say a 120hz tv and a 120hz product
> clang: clang/llvm/tools/clang/lib/Sema/../../include/clan /Sema/DeclSpec.h|449| clang::ParsedType clang::DeclSpec::getRepAsType() const: Assertion `isTypeRep((TST) TypeSpecType) && "DeclSpec does not store a type"' failed.
Well, switching from a 320+ ppi retina display to a regular display also feels like a switch from glorious to shit.
But it fades very quickly.
And various others.
@JustinMeiners Find one on YouTube.
tl;dr I don't target Clang.
21:56
@R.MartinhoFernandes I hope thats a joke
@DogPlusPlus true
@R.MartinhoFernandes YouTube videos all run at 30 FPS, IIRC.
yeah - I cant think of any web streaming that even does 60 fps..
Dude, I just linked to a clip from Airplane!. Why are you taking me seriously.
Hey, regarding variadic calls
21:58
I thought Airplane! was enough of a hint.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But... but... I TRUSTED YOU
Xeo
Xeo
Variadicius says: You suck.
3
@EtiennedeMartel I trusted you to get the hint!
@R.MartinhoFernandes did you just have that video on hand?

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