Yeah, but since this is not "Game Development" room, I thought it would be problem to ask something about game development.
Okay, I am programming simple game in SDL. And I have render function, you pass textures to it and it renders. Anyway, the important part is, I render stuff every frame and if I do not put SDL_Delay(1) in render function, everything goes insanely fast. But, AFAIK it is really bad to use delay when it is not really really necessary. So, what is my problem? How can I solve this without delay?
@MuhamedCicak You are supposed to have code that calculates where objects are at a given time. You seem to make stuff move whenever a frame has passed which makes no sense. Instead make stuff move whenever some number of milliseconds passed. That way you can have high frame rate without delay and without your physics going crazy.
@MuhamedCicak No. The point is to make the physical movement independent of the frame rate. You update physics until it is up to date in the while loop without drawing anything. Then, once the physics is up to date you draw it on the screen. There is no point drawing outdated state onto the screen.
@nwp Im sorry, I have hard time understanding this... Lets say I have an object car. And calculate_next_physical_frame function would calculate its movement etc. about every 16th frame, right? If so, wouldnt there be an problem that if user presses for example left arrow, I would get 1 ms later car going left. Or is that even problem?
for example in flappy bird the bird will follow a precise and predictable arc
you know when the bird needs to hop
if the input lag is longer then you will need to tap sooner
however it doesn't make it unplayable
in a fps shooter you need to be able to shoot as soon as you see an enemy coming around the corner and any delay will make it much harder to get the kill
@nwp I have used what you have told. Now I have my objects going really slow. Shall I increase their velocity or reduce the time of the updating movement etc. (i.e. calling calculate_next_physical_frame)
@MuhamedCicak Of course. Previously the program did nothing during the delay. Now it always does something, either calculating physics or drawing to the screen.
You could limit the FPS and say that every frame should only be drawn once and then you wait until it is time to calculate the next physical frame.
@MuhamedCicak You have an infinite loop. It will consume all available single threaded CPU resources no matter how fast the CPU or what libraries you use.
@MuhamedCicak After you draw the frame with display_current_frame_to_screen you wait std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now() - current_time + physical_frame_length milliseconds (assuming it is a positive number). That way you only draw frames when needed and otherwise sleep which should get your CPU usage down a lot.
@nwp Wait, is that equivalent to moving calling of display_current_frame_to_screen function to while loop? I hope it is, because if not, I did not understand anything...
@MuhamedCicak 100/8, a thread can only run on a single core at a time and the OS will shift the thread around for various reasons (most likely heat distribution on the chip)
@MuhamedCicak It is different in the case where calculate_next_physical_frame takes more than 16ms because your version of moving display_current_frame_to_screen into the while would draw to the screen whereas my version of waiting wouldn't. My version skips frames when the CPU has a hickup (windows update or something) while your version slows down the game and then makes it run super fast to catch up.
@nwp Can you paste modified version of previous code you wrote (on ideone) to the version you are talking about? My English is not very perfect, as I dont talk English everyday, so I would much easily understand what you are talking about by seeing an example code.
@nwp Hahaa, it takes now 0.2% I will have a read about that function (sleep_until). Oh, by the way, why do you need to write "while loop" there, couldnt it be "if statement" instead? Because, as I can see, it will anyways be done once (the while loop) as there is: current_time += physical_frame_length;
I'm wondering because, as I understand, a++ inside an expression means evaluate a, return it, and then increment it, so *--it++ if analogous should be, decrement it, evaluate it, return value currently pointed at, and afterwards increment it back
Then, analogously I expect a = *(--it++); be equivalent to it--; a=*it; it++;, as it++ should return it, and when evaluation has been completed be incremented, while ++it should first increment, then evaluate
Which inheritance? From the boost::addable<>? Why do you think validate should be a free function? And Integer is just a toy class for experimenting with Boost.Operators (library which is new to me).
for example, if i send domething like this \\.\F: i know its a device, and something like this C:\Users\ thats a path, but is there something to tell them appart code wise? or do i just have to read the string
How did this guy commit multiple solutions to the same commit branch? (e.g. chapter03 commit has the solutions to exercises 7-11). How was he able to do that; to post multiple different exercises to the same commit branch? I hope that makes sense and I didnt mix the vocabulary up. I know how to commit things, but not do multiple programs within the same commit branch.
So for example: In chapter03, he has solutions to exercises 7-11. Did he post those all at the same time or at different times? IF he did do it at different times, how did he doit?
Let's say you have an empty repo, now push a commit that adds an exercise 7, push another commit that adds an exercise 8, and now your repository has two exercises