Your computer is low on memory. Save your files and close these programs: Nexus Mod Manager - what, 6GB of 16GB RAM free is not enough for you, windows? wtf
@Pawnguy7 Not really, unless 'negative numbers have sign opposite of positive ones' counts. Or unless you're doing complex trig - in which case you'll want to consult a good book for all the appropriate equivalences
Well, I am trying to make the asteroids spaceship movement, but it seems to favor things on its right side (-90->90 range), and shudders when moving to the other sides (90-270)
I have to joke. My wife is currently upset with me, because I won't believe her car is falling apart, where I maintain the only problem is that it needs new brake pads. She's concluded I know nothing about cars (despite the fact that at one time I made my living as a mechanic).
C++ Is like a woman, you care for her and buy her flowers and she poops in the same house as you. LUA is like a dog, it'll shit on your rug but still love you no matter what.
Every 10.0s: zpool status -v
pool: bbs
state: ONLINE
scan: scrub in progress since Tue Apr 16 22:55:58 2013
274G scanned out of 797G at 19.7M/s, 7h33m to go
0 repaired, 34.30% done
config:
NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM
bbs ONLINE 0 0 0
mirror-0 ONLINE 0 0 0
ata-WDC_WD15EADS-00P8B0_WD-WMAVU0666656 ONLINE 0 0 0
I guess I shouldn't wait for my fileserver scrub to complete
@sehe ASN.1 was sort of a distant predecessor to do vaguely similar things to JSON, but standardized by the ITU, so it's very much in the over-engineered category.
@sehe The last I heard there were something like 5 or 6 ITU "recommendations" (standards) covering ASN.1 -- the smallest of which is something like 300 pages, if memory serves.
@sehe It may actually be even worse than SOAP, though it's a little hard to say. SOAP's biggest problem (IMO) is that it tried to cover everything involved, like authentication, security, objects, XML dialects, etc. ASN.1 does stick to its subject. in case anybody has time to waste: itu.int/ITU-T/asn1/introduction/index.htm
@DomagojPandža Yup -- when I was about 26 or 27 I was sick of having a "real" job, so I quit and spent a couple of years making my living turning wrenches.
@JerryCoffin money and power are the best device to turn people into slaves - the whole human institution is too (the whole you should be doing what everyone else is doing)
@Borgleader It's 2013. You don't have to, but it could have some very nice performance boosts for you because games are inherently good at separating work which doesn't have reaching side effects, meaning that it can spread along multiple threads. But do try to minimize running D3D state changing commands from multiple threads and meet the deferred context. Just pushing away the game loop off the main thread allows you not to hang and provide the user some feedback on what exactly is going on
Hope no one gets too upset for me doing this, my brother was killed recently in an accident and we have setup a fund to create a scholarship in his name. He was a software developer in Tampa, FL. If you can't donate, please share, it is for a good cause and through a legal non-profit organization: https://fundrazr.com/campaigns/7UIn0
@Borgleader You're doing it for experience. Code defensively and expand as you go. But multiple cores are a fact of life (and with them the appeal of multiple threads), the sooner you get used to them and ditch the decade old fear -- the better.
Out of curiosity I decided to make the JSON parser UNICODE aware and parse to an actual AST tree (a beauty if I may say so myself). The roundtrip test checks out (allthough the ordering isn't stable, so the first test reports a false negative; use list<pair<K,V>> instead of map<K,V> to prevent this). See my github — sehe1 min ago
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, most of those effects are too strong. Eyes don't really suck that much. They're quite good at controlling the level of brightness. Even standard lights don't manifest lens flares. But when you analyze the scene without considering the involved radiometric quantities, you make shit decisions.
Looking directly at area lights creates a strong bloom effect, but no lens flares. Same goes for car headlights. Small area point-like lights generate a glare effect due to diffraction. God rays are good, they emulate particles in the atmosphere in a game which is really void between objects.
Basically, it's a trick, you do a high-pass filter and write it down to a very narrow buffer in width and during the final pass you stretch and blur it. Procedural lens flares, basically. People are really desperate for cheap effects, so they throw them around.
@CatPlusPlus Bastion was a shining example of interactive storytelling. Even if the gameplay is similar for Transistor, I won't care, I'll buy it for the plot.
@DomagojPandža It's "inception"-y from the interviews/gameplay videos I've seen. There was one where she enters some guys mind and alters his memory to make him believe he killed his girlfriend. When he woke up he felt so guilty he comitted suicide. She assassinated him by having him kill himself and make it look like a suicide. There also seems to be Assassin's creed-esque parkour.
Also what do you mean, when he catches her off guard, she was hanging off a ledge for like 15 seconds while he was shooting a nearby wall the entire time