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09:31
@ratchetfreak hey about the ecs post on system efficiency
it could be particles or anything really
what tickled me is the fact that there are systems waiting for components to appear
in order to update them
09:47
Requiring all components to have an update(delta) is a mistake
because there are things that only need to act when a specific event happens
they dont
ill post up a sample code
to see if im able to explain myself
ok updated
10:41
@MartinMatilla updated my answer
also EntityX could instead have separate vectors based on the template arg.
so that foreach<T>(...) is really a getVector<T>.foreach(...)
in fact that's nearly exactly what's going on: github.com/alecthomas/entityx/blob/master/entityx/System.h#L176
thats a map for the systems, but there is no direct connection (yet) between systems and components
each system can update the component(s) it prefers
yeah but there is no "search"
and if there is then the cost is only dependent on the number of systems added
oh wait lemme check something
i didnt look into how it searches the entities with given components
the search generates this iterator: github.com/alecthomas/entityx/blob/…
10:58
this is why I dislike such frameworks, overly complex engineering without any real description of the cost for each operation
over the list of entities that have the component you want
and it's operator++ uses next which scans over the entities
so you probably end up being better off with several entity managers that each contain mostly distinct sets
that could be an option, although it kinda defeats the purpose of having the handy ::each<>() method
plus the management of individual entities
i was aiming more for a enable/disable systems
ok issue closed, got told to cater my own system manager
makes sense..
not the best sign for quality TBH
there are only a few ecs frameworks out there
and i dont have time to code my own
so i'll guess ill keep using this one
its flexible enough for what i need
 
2 hours later…
13:21
hi guys
why returning an array is wrong but returing a struct with data member an array is correct?
@user8469759 Because the language says so™
Also: std::array
no specific reason then
just because the standard says that
that's kinda the core of C++ oddities
 
1 hour later…
14:45
If I had two array x and y of size nx and ny
how could I do something like (wait I write down the snippet)
    int * a, * b, na, nb;
    if(nx < ny) {
      na = nx;
      a = x;
      nb = ny;
      b = y;
    } else {
      na = ny;
      a = y;
      nb = nx;
      b = x;
}
where x and y have to be intepreted as int * x, * y
you mean dynamically allocated array?
then just use std::vector
15:09
nono, I mean I have two static array
s
Revolutionary idea: keep size and an array together so they won't go out of sync
Use std::vector
and I want to use two further pointers, one to the first element of the array of minimal size and the other one pointing to the max
what do you mean "keep size" and an array together
?
"keep" is a verb here
he means to use a struct { pointer, size } to keep both together
I got it now... sorry
but anyway
15:12
which leads to using a std::vector instead, which already has that functionality
Anyway, using C arrays and pointers to the first element suggest that (one of those) a.) you're dealing with legacy code b.) you're dealing with uni assignment c.) you're doing FFI d.) you don't yet know about std::array and std::vector
you should describe your problem in more detail
to justify the use of pointers and sizes like that
it is very error prone and will be a headache for you to find the bugs
I understand all of your suggestion, but can you just tell me if what I want to achieve can be done just using pointers?
I don't understand what more infos should I proved
provide*
what is the question?
If I had two array x and y of size nx and ny
how could I do something like (wait I write down the snippet)
int * a, * b, na, nb;
if(nx < ny) {
na = nx;
a = x;
nb = ny;
b = y;
} else {
na = ny;
a = y;
nb = nx;
b = x;
}
15:15
give a bigger picture about what you are trying to do
i can read the chat history, dont repost it xd
what does this snippet try to do?
it's pretty common to get stuck in the wrong path when solving a problem
assume legacy code please
anyway
I have two array, of known size
and I'd like to have a pointer to the one with less elements and another one with more elements
thats better!
I.e. say x has 5 elements and y has 10 elements
15:16
what is stopping you
I'd like to have a pointer a pointing to x[0] and b pointing to y[0]
ok
have you tried this snippet? does it work?
of course not... why would I've asked otherwise...
did you try debugging?
what values do you get?
what values do you not expect?
it doesn't compile for conversion stuff
15:18
"doesn't work" oh ffs
SSCCE
less acronyms please...
except ffs which I got what it means
15:57
Is this overkill? const std::array<sf::Vector2i, 4> array { { {{0}, {-1}}, {{1}, {0}}, {{0}, {1}}, {{-1}, {0}} } } };
@kim366 what do you mean by "overkill"?
Too many curly braces
So const std::array<sf::Vector2i, 4> array { { {0, -1}, {1, 0}, {0, 1}, {-1, 0} } } }; would also work, but it wouldn't give me an error when I implicitly cast from float to int for example
4 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
 
3 hours later…
19:28
Why some (most?) developers do not use the default private section in class declarations.. and explicitely declare a private section below public members?
@SergioBasurco Because it is more readable if the public interface is first and thus you need to issue public: first and then you have to issue private: later.
it just annoys me a bit that IDEs will default to default private block first, and public below. These little nuances...
19:53
If you want public first, write struct.
struct Foo {
   /* public members */
private:
   /* private members */
};
Not familiar with an IDE that makes you write it a particular way. You can mix sections after all
class Bar {
public:
  /* some public stuff */
private:
  /* some private stuff */
public:
  /* some more public stuff */
20:40
!C++

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