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15:14
hi is anyone there??
@milleniumbug Hello sir!
are you there?
well i had another question regarding files: what is the use of ios::binary? I learnt that it ignores all /n and endline, so what is the use? I was taught that it made file transfer efficient (in school i was taught that), but here i learnt that its to ignore all endlines.
nwp
nwp
15:30
@samjoe ios::binary means you read and write bytes whereas not ios::binary means you write text
@samjoe ios::binary normally means "pass the data through without modification". The alternative (text mode) means "do what's necessary to make this look like a text file is expected to on this system." On Unix there's no difference between the two. On Windows, text mode means a "\r\n" in the file becomes a new-line in the stream you read (and likewise a new-line becomes a "\r\n" when you write).
yes @nwp but what difference does that essentially make? I was told it is good for numbers and stuff.
Hey guys.
A little confused about memory allocation in arrays.
@ParthKohli Hello.
Hi @ParthKohli kohli how was your chemistry paper!?
Sorry I'll talk about this later!
nwp
nwp
15:32
If you get it wrong and read bytes that should have been text you will, for example, get to see line endings that are "\r\n" when it should be "\n". When you read bytes as text you will eventually encounter a byte that cannot be interpreted as text and then the text is wrong or truncated.
So let's say I create a two-dimensional array and I set A[0][0] to 1.
Supposedly, **A = 1.
Then *A should be the address of 1.
Yes thats true.
And what is A? It's an address too, but an address of what?
address of the variable holding address of 1
nwp
nwp
@samjoe Text files can be opened and meaningfully edited using text editors, binary files cannot. Binary files tend to be shorter and more efficient, so sometimes you still want that.
15:34
@nwp That means for text i mustn't use binary for text now i get it! Thanks
Why is A[r][c] = *(*(A+r)+c))
@ParthKohli A is not an address. A is an array. It does happen that when you use A in an expression, it will usually evaluate to the address of the first element of the array--but not always, so don't make the mistake of saying it is an address, or it'll mislead you (badly in some cases).
@JerryCoffin cout<<A; gives me an address.
Parth Kohli A is evaluated internally to a pointer to pointer! The name of array is evaluated to pointer to first element.
@ParthKohli Yes, as I said, when you use it in an expression (which would include cout << A;) it'll typically evaluate to the address. That's not always the case though. For example, if you use cout << sizeof(A); you'll get the size of the whole array, not the size of an address.
15:38
@JerryCoffin Oh, of course. But what is that address I get when I do cout << A?
@ParthKohli As I said above, "the address of the first element of the array".
@JerryCoffin If A is the address of the first element of the array, then cout << *A; should give me the first element of the array.
nwp
nwp
@samjoe be careful that you can store binary data in text (base64-encoded for example) and text in binary data (when you .zip a text file), so you need to look at the format of the file, not the content
@JerryCoffin Hmm, that helps. I can understand how it works for one-dimensional arrays.
In other words, if I have A[0][0] = 1... what will cout << A[0]; return?
15:46
@ParthKohli In C and C++, all arrays are one-dimensional. Something like int array[10][10] does not create a 2D array. It creates an array of arrays. That is, a one dimensional array, each element of which is itself a one dimensional array.
@JerryCoffin That makes sense as well.
If I create an array {{1, 2}, {3, 4}}, how exactly is it stored in the memory?
its a two by two array
If the address of 1 is, say, 50. And let's say it's row-major.
Then the address of 2 is 52 (since an int takes 2 bytes of space)
3 -> 54, 4 -> 56
cout << A should give me the address of the first element of the array, so I should get 50, right?
cout << A+1 should give me 52 and so on.
@ParthKohli int taking only two bytes is pretty much a historical curiosity. On most modern implementations it'll take at least 4 bytes (but otherwise you're correct).
@JerryCoffin Oh yeah, I'm working with an old C++ implementation. But let's just say I'm correct.
15:58
@JerryCoffin Sir we are in CBSE school in india which uses old TurboC++ compiler (even now)
@ParthKohli No. Keep in mind that the type of A is "array of (arrays of two ints)", so A + 1 should give A + (sizeof(array of two ints))`.
@JerryCoffin Ahhh, that makes sense as well.
Okay, let's stick to A for now.
So should cout << *A; give me 1?
Since A is the address of the first element, i.e., 1
yes
@samjoe But that doesn't happen. It takes two dereference operators to get to 1 (cout<<**A;)
It is evaluated as a pointer to first element. * dereferences it to give the value.
@ParthKohli oh i thought you are talking about a 1 D array
16:02
@ParthKohli No. The type of A is "array of (arrays of two ints)". Therefore, *A is an array of two ints. In most expressions, that'll evaluate to the address of the beginning of that array (just like the name of any other array does). Therefore, if you do cout *A; you'll get an address (and that address will be numerically the same as if you had just done cout << A;, but it has a different type).
If A = {{1,2}{3,4}} Then *A is pointer to the first element of A, ie {1,2} (array of two ints)
@JerryCoffin Fascinating. So does the array in its entirety have its own address as well?
I thought that the address associated with an array is just the address of the first element.
@ParthKohli Note that *A is also evaluated to a pointer, as it is first element of A!
@ParthKohli It is, so A and *A are both the same address, just with different types attached. You can also use &A, which will also yield the same address, but with yet a different type (that type would be pointer to array of arrays of 2 ints).
^ mind = blown :|
:)
16:08
oh boy
so for example, how do I go about interpreting *(*(A+1) + 1)?
Like what is A+1?
oh it kinda makes sense now!
Lemme try that: first (A+1) is address
A is an array of (array of two ints).
location of A and A+1 differ by sizeof(A) bytes
Shouldn't it be sizeof(element of A)?
No!
I think that ask Jerry!
16:12
I think he agrees with me.
@Jerry am I correct there?
A + (sizeof(array of two ints))
and an array of two ints is an element of A
That's how it works for one-dimensional arrays too.
Finally some consistency.
I think you are right
A refers to the base element of the array A[2][2], which is the first array of two ints.
@ParthKohli A is array of arrays of two ints So, A +1 is A incremented by the size of an array of 2 ints. *(A + 1 is the element at that address (and in this case, that element has type array of two ints).
nwp
nwp
16:16
@JerryCoffin don't tension me!
Oh boy I finally get it
I too get it thanks
Now you're ready for a real challenge: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/35a876d7c4ca34a1
Please don't do this to us.
hahahaha
I am still in high school, i don't wanna die so young! What I got was the following:
#include <iostream>

int main()
{
int A[3][3] = {{1,2,3},{4,5,6},{7,8,9}};
std::cout << *(*(A+1)+2); // This will print 6 and I learnt that!
}
16:24
@ParthKohli I'll admit it, I'm an awful person... :-)
I think I just forgot everything I'd learned. Thanks for that. :|
@samjoe You've done well. Seriously, probably no more than 5% of C++ programmers ever figure out this corner of the language this well. The snippet I just posted is way beyond what any normal programmer ever needs to know.
Hey, so let's think about this for a moment.
In the first line, I think you've defined an array of pointers.
The array contains addresses to the first letters of each element of the array.
Oh, wait a second.
@ParthKohli It contains pointers to the first element of each array.
@JerryCoffin Oh, um, right.
16:31
@ParthKohli I only make the distinction in this case, because we end up dealing with the same addresses, but with different levels of indirection a lot in this code. So, this first one is an array of pointers to char.
@JerryCoffin Is there a way to put all of this succinctly? I'm just waiting for that one sentence which clears it all up for me.
@ParthKohli No, there really isn't (at least to my knowledge).
Pictures can (often do) help though.
How do you read something like char **cp[] = { c+3, c+2, c+1, c }; in your head?
@ParthKohli "cp is an array of pointers to pointers to char, initialized to c+3, c+2, c+1 and c" (or something on that order).
Brilliant.
For learning, though, draw it on paper or a whiteboard. Boxes and arrows are the way to help visualize this.
16:44
Oops. Too late to edit.
From there, you pretty much just walk through line by line, and figure out what's being manipulated. ++cpp will make cpp point at cp[1]. ++*(cpp+2) would increment an element of cp, and so on.
Hey guys, is there a particular meaning to a "cookbook" in programming?
nwp
nwp
@TheQuantumPhysicist a collection of frequently used code snippets, the python cook book is the only one I've heard of though
@TheQuantumPhysicist Not really. Once upon a time, a guy named Don Lancaster wrote a book on circuits that included "cookbook" in the name. It was pretty well written, so it sold pretty well. Quite a few others then figured they could sell their (often inferior) technical books a little more easily if they stuck "cookbook" in the name as well.
I'm looking for a good book for ASIO, and only found 2 books, one of them is a cookbook actually
There's also a VHDL cookbook
I found this word in a few places, so I'm wondering
It should have code like recipes.
16:56
Here's the original (at least as far as I know): goodreads.com/book/show/2101038.TTL_Cookbook (copyright 1974!)
@JerryCoffin This is great! Thank you!
Thanks for the info guys
@ParthKohli You're quite welcome.
One small question.
Is c[0] pointing to the first element of "ENTER", the letter E, or the entire thing at once?
17:04
@ParthKohli Just 'E'
as a char
@ParthKohli It's pointing to the first letter (but things that deal with C-style strings will typically assume that a pointer to char means a string, so they'll look at the whole string, not just the first character).
For example, when you do printf("%s", c[0]); you're just passing a pointer to the E, but it'll walk through and print out the whole string.
@JerryCoffin Are you sure? Because c[0] is a char, but &c[0] is a char*, which can be seen as a c-string.
Ok so what books should I read to further understanding of c++ specifically aiming towards game development after accelerated c++?
@exitcode depends very much on what you want to learn in game programming. For example, if you wanna program with Unreal Engine, you don't need any specific book on game programming
17:08
@JerryCoffin So what does it mean to point at an entire array in general? Like in the two-dimensional array case, when I did cout << A, I think it meant the address of the first two-int array (first row).
pointer = address in memory
There's no way to know how long an array is, if you indicate to its first element
@TheQuantumPhysicist likely from scratch with sfml or something
And the address of an array is basically the address of the first element, right?
@ParthKohli Mostly it affects how math will work. When you have a pointer to T, then math on that pointer is done in terms of T. For example, T *t; cout << (void *)t << " " << (void *)(t+1); will print out the address of t, then the address of t + the size of a T.
@exitcode Read Stroustrup's book, and then when you're done, you'll know how to proceed
17:11
which do you think would be better for uni, pretty in depth c++ knowledge, or just accelerated c++ stuff - basic and then dabbling in some other languages like rust, or functional programming
@TheQuantumPhysicist principals and practices or the c++ programming language
@exitcode Probably the latter--most universities don't get into much depth in any one language.
@ParthKohli yes. The address is typically the first element. But there's nothing that prevents pointing to any other element. For example, new will return the address of the first element if you allocate an array
@exitcode It's a taste thing. I left academia some time ago, and I learned a handful of languages. Choose whatever you like and plan your future. Btw, I don't know what accelerated C++ is
@TheQuantumPhysicist It's a book. IMO, it was clearly the best in its day, though it was written about C++98/03, so it's now becoming somewhat dated (but there's nothing newer that covers the same ground nearly as well).
@JerryCoffin I learned from this book actually: bookdepository.com/Professional-C-Programming-Nicholas-Solter/…
It's also now outdated
That was like 10 years ago
That's why recommending books is now difficult for me...
does it make sense to buy books for specific game libraries and stuff if I want to do stuff pretty much from scratch and I'm a semi beginner or should I just use documentation and googling for structure?
17:19
I'm a big fan of learning by doing, especially at first
and then books come later
After you design 15 failed games, then you can start reading books to do it professionally
Okay, let me put it this way. I'm going to take a one-dimensional array for reference. A[2] = {1, 2}. Here, A is a pointer to the first element, which is 1. Similarly, A[2][2] = {{1, 2}, {3, 4}}. Here, A is the pointer to the first element, which is {1, 2}. Then A stores to address of what exactly? Surely it stores the address of the first element of {1, 2}, which is 1.
But in that case, if A stores the address of 1, then *A = 1.
So what am I missing here?
A still stores the address of the first element, but its type is "pointer of pointer", so you can't dereference it and get a result. Try to force-cast it to an integer after dereferencing it and see what you'll get
And is there a distinction between "is a pointer to" and "holds the address of"?
I don't think so. A pointer is an address
@TheQuantumPhysicist Yeah, exactly. If A stores the address of 1, why can't I just say *A = 1?!
17:24
@ParthKohli A evaluates to the address of the first element of A, which has type "array of two ints". So, if you try to print it out, based on its type it'll be printed out as a pointer. If you dereference that pointer, you'll get the same address, but now with the type "int", so if you print it out you'll get 1 (i.e., the value of the int at that location).
Because it depends on how you dereference the second pointer
A[0] has the address 1, but A[0][1] has the element 2
@JerryCoffin Oh, that clears up a lot.
Haha wow, nice.
This was great. Thanks a lot!
18:02
@exitcode Read Stroustrup's books first (Programming Principles and Practice in C++, The C++ Programming Language), then read the SFML site tutorials. Then see if you still want to read that book.
18:25
does an entity component system make sense in games
because it feels like if I have different components for different entities etc. there is going to be a lot of components
oh nvm you use inheritance for each component
nwp
nwp
@exitcode it tends to be better than to hardcode a lot of members
@exitcode why would you do that?
@nwp so you have an PhysicsComponent parent and a PlayerPhysicsComponent sub class etc
nwp
nwp
@exitcode That tightly couples PhysicsComponent to PlayerPhysicsComponent and you will get into trouble because you don't want all the things of PhysicsComponent in PlayerPhysicsComponent and the only PhysicsComponent that makes sense is an empty class and then you might as well not have that.
The main point of an ECS is to not have inheritance.
So you have a tonne of classes for each entity type
that's a lot of classes?
it seems like having a load of physics components all doing reasonably similar things in one game is a bit silly
nwp
nwp
@exitcode there is only one entity type
18:32
Entity would be a parent class right tho?
nwp
nwp
@exitcode no, it generally only has an int id; in it and is never inherited from
@exitcode you are supposed to make a CollisionComponent + MovementComponent or something like that, which lets you mix and match and allows you to have collision without movement and movement without collision or neither or both, which inheritance cannot give you
@nwp all the games I've looked at have an entity base class with position and rotation or something and then a sub class for each moving thing in the game
nwp
nwp
@exitcode then you were looking at bad implementations of an ECS
I thought that was the whole point of inheritance and that entities were a perfect fit
^ nvm
nwp
nwp
going the inheritance route is not completely terrible, you just get into some problems, but nothing you cannot work around
18:35
so this guy is getting it wrong?: gameprogrammingpatterns.com/component.html
So that means if you have a game that follows ECS with a load of entities, those entities all have their own classes with velocity, rotation etc members and inherit from nothing
but what if you wanted to pass an entity to a method without specifying what type of entity it is
you store a list of all the types or an enum or something?
nwp
nwp
@exitcode seems correct, neither entities not components inherit from anything, he just uses inheritance to specialize some components, but that has nothing to do with the ECS, just being lazy efficiently reusing code
@exitcode there is only 1 type of entity
so if you had a game of pong, there are three entities: paddle1, paddle2 and ball
all have velocity and position
nwp
nwp
@exitcode there are different implementations. You can use the int id; to get the component, or you use a bitset or some other efficiency tricks.
@exitcode the velocity and position works differently for paddels and the ball, it might make sense to make different components for them
but each component class only works with one type of entity right?
what if you have a hundred physics components for a hundred different enemies with different physics
nwp
nwp
although an ECS doesn't really benefit much here because pong is easy enough to make with class Paddle; + class Ball;, but once you go into MMOs with tons of objects of various behaviors it starts becoming unfeasable to create a class for each thing.
18:42
@nwp aren't you making multiple classes for each thing when you use ecs
for each component
nwp
nwp
@exitcode then you are probably doing it wrong, there should not be 100 different physical behaviors
@exitcode no, you reuse components. The components are not that many, and mostly the same every time, but you will probably have 100 different combinations of components for your 100 objects.
surely all entities must have a class with which to pass to a component
nwp
nwp
@exitcode what do you mean?
lets use skyrim as an example
a giant is going to have a different speed to a skeleton
we need to store this stuff in a class surely?
and if the behavior is the same we only need one class
nwp
nwp
you would do something like Entity giant; giant.set<Speed>(42); giant.set<ThreeDModel>("giant.obj"); and then the same with skeleton
18:50
and then each component has an update method which takes any entity and does something to it
nwp
nwp
and maybe it makes sense to do giant.set<SoloAI>(); and skeleton.set<GroupAI>(); to make them behave differently, or maybe one AI component handles both
so you can reuse components
I was just confused because the guy on that website uses classes for each entity anyway
nwp
nwp
you can reuse the Speed component for the player, but the AI component makes no sense
oh ok thanks
ignore that
i got it now
i understand it
brilliant
I didn't read the whole thing im an idiot
I'll give it a go
nwp
nwp
yeah, he gets rid of the Bjorn class at the end
18:52
would you make each component a separate file
surely you could at least have one component parent class with a virtual void update?
nwp
nwp
I just made a component file with all of them, in a big game with complicated components you would probably have to split that up.
@exitcode what is component struct Speed{ float speed; } supposed to do when update gets called?
that's what systems are for
I guess this is why most people use unity
its pretty tough going from knowing a little programming to making a game with a super minimal library and basically making your own engine
nwp
nwp
you have a system that says for (auto &entity : get_entities<Speed, Position, Direction>()) and then updates the Position depending on the other components
and another system that gets all the AI components and sets their strategies or something, and another system that gets all the ThreeDModel's and renders them to the screen
is there a way to learn all of this
because I feel like you have to know 10 patterns to be able to use 1
nwp
nwp
I would go for either just trying to implement one and then getting stuck and then looking at how others did it or directly studying other's code.
19:00
i assume there is probably a book on game engine structure I should read if I'm writing a game in c++ with just sfml
nwp
nwp
looking at what others did, then deciding that it is all crap and making my own and then understanding why they did it that way is what happens with me, which is the most fun but probably not the most efficient
the problem I have
is I want to learn some more advanced c++
and more on object oriented software structure
But I can't without putting it into practice
But I can't put it into practice without knowing it
nwp
nwp
just make a hobby project, like pong
whatever interests you at the time
I feel like although I read accelerated c++ twice now, I don't know everything in it but I can't think of an interesting way to put what's in the book into practice
Because the book is literally just a student grading program that you add to repeatedly which isn't particularly interesting
No idea what you'd use a template for
nwp
nwp
well, you can try making your ECS instead. Getting Entity e; e.add<int>(42); std::cout << e.get<int>(); to compile and work correctly is not easy the first time.
I must say making an ECS was the most fun code I ever wrote.
and then you can think about if you want to try to make it efficient or just build stuff with it and go from there
19:18
thanks I'll give it a go @nwp
19:36
@exitcode Does Accelerated C++ have exercises? Did you solve them?

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