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13:04
What is "raunch"?
@sehe Neat. Coerced something that appears to work, although that's a lot of <C-O>.
@Rapptz made a move.
> :nunmap can also be used outside of a monastery.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
I'm confused because I apparently broke the normal mapping, even though I don't remember changing it.
13:21
Did you use inoremap?
@LucDanton hum hum?
@CatPlusPlus Yes.
Do :nmap and look for your normal mapping
To clarify: the mapping is here, but it doesn't do what it used to. To be even more specific, <Esc> ends it prematurely. What should I use to go insert mode -> normal in a mapping?
"normal mapping"
<facepalm>
13:26
guise... it's gonna be 80 degrees tomorrow ;_;
winter pls come back
Nevermind? I think I steamrolled over the mapping or something. Fixed now.
Anyway, now I'm done with the std::forward boilerplate for ever. Whee!
^O is for one command, it'll go back automatically
@Crowz You don't say that when winter is below zero.
I like winter. There are less people
Has been a super nice 'real' winter nice skiing & coding, gtg now
13:29
@JohanLarsson Really? Record lows?
user142019
Oh hey the sun is shining.
@Xeo Wow, I declared a friend auto apply(F&& f, V&&... v) { return annex::apply(f, v.base()...); } where base is private and it works, sort of.
Xeo
Xeo
That was the idea, although I'm not sure why you're being variadic again. :P
Fuck winter
2
Xeo
Xeo
But yeah, and then, with my awesome proposal, you get apply([]member, v), apply([]non_member, v) and all the fun stuff!
13:33
@Xeo To clarify, annex::apply is preexisting and part of the variant interface -- trying out a struct data: variant<int, double> as a PoC. So the friend has the same name.
(Which means this has nothing to do with your suggestion, which is the suck. Hah!)
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Sure, I was just wondering why V&&... v.
@BartekBanachewicz?
Some problems: I can apply(f, v, 0) for instance. But the forwarding version calls .base().
Also, apply can take an explicit template parameter... that sounds hard to enable :s
Okay, I can fix the former by changing base to a static member which simply forwards as a fallback.
As a bonus this forwards as an rvalue where appropriate, whereas it didn't previously since I don't have ref-qualifiers.
Still super annoying to declare 4 overloads to convert to base.
eh why is it when I spend a lot of time learning something, I feel like I am wasting time and should've learned something else?
Everything is a waste of time so get drunk and play video games
13:43
shoooould I do C++, read neuroscience books, or paint something?
> to_base<annex::variant<int, double> >::base()((forward<V>)(apply::v))
wtf GCC
@Crowz Eat pudding. Count to five. Think of a color. Repeat till you arrive at rgb(255, 6, 70), and proceed to think of what to do next.
also... you guys were right about books with the word "games" in the title. This book doesn't teach any real C++
Oh wait that's normal.
I once saw a Java book about making games...
It was really, reall bad.
13:52
I've made games in java. Wouldn't recommend it.
Form games?
user142019
Good.
user142019
Because Java is a piece of shit.
Well, C++ is the industry standard for games for a reason... hah.
Try making a BIG game in java and... nope. Just... nope.
Yay, friend class as_base<Derived, Base>; and I don't have to write overloads!
13:54
@Crowz BIG games are dying in the industry for a reason.
At what point of experience in C++ does one begin messing around with all that fancy pointer, template, stuffs? I find it hard to read, but it seems common here.
depends, really
user142019
What are BIG games?
if you're DeadMG then the first class you ever write is a template.
@Zoidberg I'm saying anything bigger than one level in java in 3D is pretty terrible to write
user142019
13:55
Anything in Java is pretty terrible to write.
Define level.
It's easy to write things QUICKLY in java, imo. Good for quick guis
user142019
It's easier in C# or Python.
as long as performance doesn't matter
Oh, I thought in-class friend templates couldn't get explicit template arguments?
13:56
I don't get why schools teach java. Like, it's not very popular in the industry. Why not teach something better?
struct foo { template<typename T> friend void bar(foo&); }; foo f; bar<int>(f); kind of deal. Supposed to work?
@Crowz It is immensely popular in the industry.
user142019
> schools
I wonder what steps one takes to teach programming rather than to program.
62
A: Why do we study Java at university?

Jerry CoffinA few Universities have somebody who's sufficiently well known that many (if not most) decisions revolve around that person's likes, dislikes, opinions, taste, etc. Just for example, Texas A&M has Bjarne Stroustrup on staff; it probably comes as little surprise to anybody that their curriculum te...

13:58
@DeadMG in games? I went to UofU for game design and they started with java
oh, not for games at all
@Crowz No, not in games, but everywhere else.
@Xeo Wow, I think I actually have found a straightforward and somewhat concise implementation. Interested?
Also, game design? You're lucky they've shown you any programming.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Sure
@LucDanton I don't think so. It should need a declaration in the surrounding namespace.
13:59
Since there have been two updates to MSVS2012, I'm wondering what became of the November CTP Compiler update. If you already had implemented the STL modifications, why have they not yet been released to us? — rubenvb 15 secs ago
@EtiennedeMartel "Electronic Arts Entertainment" cs.utah.edu/info/forms/EAEMajorRequirements_2013-14.pdf
I wonder if game design courses encourage or discourage the MMORPGies.
Xeo
Xeo
3
Q: templated friend function lookup

WalterThe following simple code compiles fine class A { int x[3]; public: A() { x[0]=1; x[1]=2; x[2]=3; } friend int const&at(A const&a, unsigned i) noexcept { return a.x[i]; } friend int foo(A const&a, unsigned i) noexcept { int tmp = at(a,i); return tmp*tmp; } }; but if...

@Pawnguy7 everyone I know who wants to make games wants to make indie games. Idontgetit
@Xeo Thanks.
14:01
"Indie" is not a genre
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton It's the same thing as with ADL get, I think
@Crowz You don't get why people want to make MMORPGs, or why they want to make indie games?
Oh wait, I was going to write an example with std::tuple + imported get. Whoops.
@Pawnguy7 well I'd think people would want to make a big, epic, grandoise game... but everyone wants to make silly side scrollers and dungeon crawlers
PErhaps they are wise :D
14:02
Well shit what's left as an example?
Not that a MMORPG and indie are opposites, but... well, if it gets big, it will need more than a small group.
@Pawnguy7 Ideally I'd think a 100-200 person development group would be perfect
Not a 1-2 person development group
@Crowz Good luck finding that many people
Big, epic, grandoise infinite grinding
MMOs are hit and miss and an epic sunken cost if anything's ~epic~ about them
@CatPlusPlus eh, I'm into the cinematics. I majored in the film part (which only required taking software engineering)
14:05
Cinematics are tiny part of the game
Drakan: Order of the Flame.
You're not making a film, you're making a game
Anyone remember that gem?
user1357851
graphics is what attracts, plot is what retains
I just started playing it again. The combat is a wee bit awkward, but flying around on a dragon setting orcs on fire never gets old.
user1357851
14:06
life is the same everywhere ... even with a house cat or a phone
@CatPlusPlus well, I guess when I think of a good game, Warcraft III is the first that comes to mind. The major things I remember are the cinematics and the music. Guess it's just what appeals to me.
Does anybody here have a basic understanding of vector math? (trig, adding)?
@Pawnguy7 yes.
No the secrets of vector adding are a mystery to us
I am getting odd results. A simple mistake, I imagine, but...
14:08
(a,b)+(c,d) = (a,c*d, b/a)
I am makign the asteroids ship physics.
@Xeo So disregarding the GCC quirk that forwards explicit arguments, it looks like that.
user1357851
is mystery to them when and only when they want it to be
@Pawnguy7 Trig? Yeah I can trig.
What I do is, I have three values: speed, direction, and motionDirection.
This is so that, you can turn and visually face one when (and use that direction when you thrust), but still move the motionDirection).
14:09
@rubenvb What
user142019
They should rename Vi to Vimwo.
user142019
Vim Worsened
What I do is, find the current vector, the key vector(direction and a thrust value, in this case 10), add the vectors, and put them back into the speed and direction.
@CatPlusPlus CoOl hUh?
The speed is fine, but my direction is quite odd.
14:10
are direction and motionDirection angles?
user1357851
@rubenvb you invented new maths?
What's the difference between the two?
yes.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Hm, getting a declaration of get into the surrounding namespace seems troublesome.
One is the direction you are facing, and one is the direction you are moving.
14:11
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_normalization
See vector normalization. That is how you'll turn your little triangle.
@Xeo Yeah I'm not doing that.
Not concise enough. (Okay no I don't really know.)
@Telkitty Heck, a map of R²->R³ is hardly "new maths"
direction = Math.Atan(newVector.Y / newVector.X);
anything visible wrong with this line?
@Pawnguy7 except for the blatant ignorance of possibly dividing by 0 and not taking into account the sign? No. Although the latter may well not be a problem.
user142019
Math..
user1357851
14:12
direction is a double?
Um, the normalised speed vector is the direction I'm not sure what are you doing here
It is.
@Pawnguy7 is that in java?
Variation of the same data type where we don't exploit the quirk, i.e. this time I bring in tuple_cat.
user1357851
14:13
Y & X are doubles too I assume
I think they are floats, actually.
Although, I just remembered, I should be setting motionDirection.
@rubenvb I get the 0 part, but how would I take account of the sign?
wow a picture that's not filthy animu or le meme on the first page of deviantArt. First time I've seen that
user1357851
you know which direction right?
user1357851
you have four quadrants, depends on the quadrant, set the sign
@Xeo Is it?
Or do you mean you find it too verbose?
user1357851
14:17
@rubenvb wiki me
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton That.
And you need to repeat the base-type.
sigh. My book tells me to download this in the first chapter. What is it? thegamecreators.com/?m=view_product&id=2128
Xeo
Xeo
Although you could of course move the declaration to after the definition of data and use data::base_type.
user142019
Give me pizzas.
@Xeo Are you sure about that?
I've always declared before the friend declaration...
Xeo
Xeo
14:21
The declaration only needs to be somewhere in the enclosing scope.
Ell
Ell
give me structural formula of tert-1-iodobutane
@Xeo Given that GCC doesn't complain when there's just the friend declaration I'm not convinced of anything :p
Xeo
Xeo
heh
template<int I, typename Data>
data::get_type<I, Data> get;
Declaration through function type.
Too bad you can't do this for a definition.
Clang likes it too.
Well, except for the inheriting ctor.
da fuck
1) that's not a declaration 2) wat
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton It's a declaration all right
Oh, I was looking at the class definition. Is auto(foo) -> bar really a function type?
Xeo
Xeo
I don't see why it wouldn't be, tbh
Because auto is magical and 'hardcoded' into the Standard. At least that's how I remember it :s
Xeo
Xeo
14:26
And if it isn't, you could always rewrite it with declval.
Which would be shorter even, I think
@LucDanton Yes, it's the new function syntax.
auto main() -> int;
Ell
Ell
trailing return type?
Ell
Ell
Yay I knew something
even if it was just the name :L
Are
you
guys
real
14:28
antivex Foo x();   // <- not a function declaration in C++14
7.1.6.4
auto specifier
[dcl.spec.auto]
1 The auto type-specifier signifies that the type of a variable being declared shall be deduced from its initializer or that a function declarator shall include a trailing-return-type.
2 The auto type-specifier may appear with a function declarator with a trailing-return-type (8.3.5) in any context where such a declarator is valid.
3 Otherwise, the type of the variable is deduced from its initializer.
Your move.
Xeo
Xeo
> The auto type-specifier may appear with a function declarator with a trailing-return-type
Where's the problem?
The typedef syntax is like a declaration, except that it introduces a type.
typedef auto main_type() -> int;
main_type main;
^ like so?
Xeo
Xeo
yea
14:30
@Xeo I concur.
C# cannot implicitly convert int to bool. Sigh.
auto typedef main_type() -> int;   // does that also work?
Xeo
Xeo
I always have to look up "concur" because it sounds like a word for disagreement...
@Pawnguy7 Which is a good thing, I hate implicit conversions.
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow I'd think so.
typedef is a decl-specifier, IIRC
14:31
@FredOverflow Normally yes, but I wish I got warnings rather than errors.
Just write a function bool2int and you're good.
Or just use x?1:0. That's only 4 additional characters.
In this case, the alternative was just > 0, which I suppose was better to read. Hm.
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow That'd be bool to int
> A typedef-name can also be introduced by an alias-declaration. The identifier following the using keyword becomes a typedef-name and the optional attribute-specifier-seq following the identifier appertains to that typedef-name. It has the same semantics as if it were introduced by the typedef specifier. In particular, it does not define a new type and it shall not appear in the type-id.
A lot of terms here, I don't know what to make of it.
@Xeo Oh, he wanted an implicit narrowing conversion from int to bool? Why would anyone want such a thing?
i!=0
Xeo
Xeo
14:34
@LucDanton Which parts specifically?
@LucDanton using main_type = auto()->int; is my best guess :)
user1357851
@Xeo How do I connect identifier to the earlier declarators?
@rubenvb Can you expand on this?
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Through the equivalence to a typedef?
If you use std::vector as a buffer you'll end up initializing every element in the vector in the most expensive manner possible. This will dwarf any CPU cost throughout your application. Use std::unique_ptr<char[]> or stack allocation. Don't waste CPU on initializing a buffer if you don't need to. — John Leidegren 13 mins ago
Some people...
14:38
How big is the buffer?
Xeo
Xeo
MAX_PATH, so 256 I think
LOL, yeah that'll grind the application down to a crawl :)
It's type-id I need to connect, not identifier.
hey I'm only two classes away from finishing an art degree and only five away from finishing a compsci degree. Woop.
And what are you going to do when you're done? Computer art?
14:41
@FredOverflow get a job. Don't have that planned out haha
@Pawnguy7 sup?
Well.
It works for 180 degreees and not the other half.
you pinged me
I did?
@Pawnguy7 are you using radians or degrees, by the way?
14:43
degrees
I beleive Atan takes that.
@Pawnguy7 you did
can you arrow to it?
I find using radians tends to be more effective. I believe there's a toRadians() function in C#, no?
189
Q: Why does this PNG image display differently in Chrome & Firefox than in Safari and IE?

ethreeCheck this image out: On Chrome and Firefox it will show as a pear. Now, try to save it and look at it saved on your desktop. Also, try viewing in safari or IE. It will display as an apple! Try clicking the image and moving it around, you will notice the apple appears. I guess my question w...

^^ Woah, 736 on the multicollider
Ell
Ell
@Crowz well done :L but they are only the classes, you have the exams first
14:45
@Ell Huh?
@Crowz more effective for?
Ell
Ell
@Crowz do you not have exams to do in order to get your degree?
@Ell nope. Hah. Anyway they're probably damn easy like most compsci tests
Ell
Ell
Oh :P
Except for that one with the merge sort proof... that was painful
14:55
Oh.
@BartekBanachewicz I remember now.
IS normal MC multithreaded?
I was going to ask if the slowness while chunks loads was do the the GC.
New Dovahbear!
Okay I think I have an inkling of understanding of the grammar when it comes to declarations and declarator. An unfortunate side-effect but oh well.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
> A type-specifier-seq shall not define a class or enumeration unless it appears in the type-id of an alias-declaration (7.1.3) that is not the declaration of a template-declaration.
That means using foo = struct bar { int i };, maybe.
15:01
@Pawnguy7 I dunno, probably yes
@Pawnguy7 Java. nuff said
@BartekBanachewicz the GC causes the slowness is your yes?
@Pawnguy7 I don't really know. Vanilla MC is terribly engineered
Quite possible. I would be suprised if they didn't render in another thread, but.. who knows.
Is Lundi nearly complete?
user1357851
Cat++ kidnapped by a chick (aka my cousin & her cat)
user1357851
15:05
17
Q: Room-specific welcome message for new users

ThiefMasterLots of the bigger channels have some kind of rules, stuff people are supposed to read before posting or requesting access, etc. In the topic it clutters valuable space that can be used for more useful things (regulars usually don't need a link about when to request access etc. there). When a bo...

^^ Needs upboats
Especially for this phrase:
> Possibly users should be required to click a "confirm" button to be able to talk - otherwise they'll most likely just ignore it without even bothering to read it (yes, I'm talking to you, help vampires)
I haz no upboats :\
user1357851
who actually created C++ lounge
Okay that was a very wild tangent. Also exhausting. I'm going to sleep.
@Xeo Will resume investigating where that declaration may appear later.
@LucDanton wut? What time is it over where you are?
@Mysticial 5pm.
Xeo
Xeo
15:09
@LucDanton Heh, g'day
user1357851
bedtime of course
And I mean the enclosing friend declaration.
Xeo
Xeo
12
Q: What's the scope of inline friend functions?

XeoAfter searching aroung SO, one question taught me that the lexical scope of an inline friend function is the class it's defined in, meaning it can access e.g. the typedefs in the class without qualifying them. But then I wondered what is the actual scope of such a function? GCC at least rejects a...

?
> The name of the friend is not found by unqualified lookup (3.4.1) or by qualified lookup (3.4.3) until a matching declaration is provided in that namespace scope (either before or after the class definition granting friendship)
Oh wow. I think I've alway stopped at things like "first declares" and "If that function hasn't previously been declared then the friend declaration doesn't make that function visible in that scope for normal lookup."
15:14
Fuck lounge, I wanted pirate bay but I cant use my phone..
user1357851
did you get cupcakes for breakkie?
I.e. as if you get the enclosing namespace declaration + ADL-only and that's it -- made quite the jump to conclusions right here.
Neat, I can probably remove several silly forward declarations.
@Xeo 260.
user142019
boo
user1357851
15:36
evil queens, which is hotter: this or this
user1357851
I know, they are both sizzling
This isn't a forum. This is a community with rules. (BTW, did you read the faq?) Guess not. You can't just walk into a community, dump on the front lawn, and ask for help wiping. And then when someone shows you where the toilet paper is, tell them to piss off. Your answer suggests that you lack basic knowledge of C, so like it or not, reading a book is the best advice you can get. Not someone posting the fixed-up version of the code for you - what on earth are you going to learn from that? — Luchian Grigore 51 secs ago
boooya!
user1357851
15:48
@EtiennedeMartel Didn't know you are into beastality :x
user1357851
ride a queen horse ... so profound :p
@Telkitty who even clicks the second link? You had me at Charlize.
user1357851
depends on the taste perhaps ... Monica Bellucci is fairly amazing
user1357851
evil queens are always look so much hotter than the good ones
user1357851
good queens are beautiful, evil ones are just steaming hot
15:55
The only attractive antagonist is the leader.
That's true for most stories anyway.
anybody want to play chess? :D
allot of comments were removed from here, as the opinions on this answer are divided. — Display Name Nov 17 '11 at 8:35
"allot" wtf
It's a special breed of Alot
@LuchianGrigore Man. He also needs to learn how to indent properly. What's with students and their fucked up whitespaces?
Do they not teach basic formatting?

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