@PaulD Im sorry, I do not understand you. I am clumsy about these things. Do you have exact steps of how would I use the library? How do you mean add project to your solution? Isnt solution already a project?
@MuhamedCicak There's a difference between project and a solution in Visual Studio, actually.
@MuhamedCicak Project is essentially an entity uniting an implementation and header files with setting describing how to compile that and into what and for what platform. Solution is a union of projects, they can be in different languages and may target different platforms or even produce no binary at all.
@MuhamedCicak You create a solution and then you add to it all the needed projects, typically you need to build box2d as a separate project and build it into a dll or a static library
@PaulD I see. Thanks for the help. After I build it into a dll, I need to put the dll into my Windows/System32? I heared something like that, dont know if its true.
@PaulD You put your DLL in system32 if and only if you are part of the Windows development team at Microsoft. For everybody else, it should be considered completely off limits.
> Variables declared at block scope with the specifier static have static storage duration
> static storage duration. The storage for the object is allocated when the program begins and deallocated when the program ends. Only one instance of the object exists.
@milleniumbug Yep :P I just wonder why do you do:
#ifndef HEADERhashHere
#define HEADERhashHere
instead of
#ifndef PROJECTNAME_CLASSNAME
#define PROJECTNAME_CLASSNAME
because a.) all major compilers I use support it (MSVC, gcc and clang all do, Intel C++ compiler probably too) b.) if I ever have to use a compiler which won't support it, conversion from #pragma once to your regular include guards is trivial, the other way around, not really
@SzymonMarczak Naaah, I'm learning Vim a little, but as a hobby. But. I really don't like IDE, I prefer to make my own development environment - editor of choice, compiler of choice (yes, in the terminal), debugger of choice... For now I'm using Visual Studio Code, GCC/Clang and GDB. And I really like it.
@Toreno96 I liked CLion. I have been looking for other IDEs, but didn't find any good for me. Also, someone told me to use Brackets, but it's slow cuz it's developed in Node.JS. I don't recommend to program in Node.JS. Choose Python or Java.
@milleniumbug Yep, you can call C++ from the other language.
@milleniumbug I wanna try out jucipp, but I got Could NOT find LibClang (missing: LIBCLANG_LIBRARY LIBCLANG_INCLUDE_DIR) while compiling. Maybe do you know how to fix it somehow? I'm just lazy and probably it will take you less time to answer than I would go for googlin' :P
Ok, this cmake -DLIBCLANG_LIBRARY=/usr/lib/llvm-3.5/lib/libclang.so -DLIBCLANG_INCLUDE_DIR=/usr/lib/llvm-3.5/include/ fixed it
now got Could NOT find ASPELL (missing: ASPELL_LIBRARIES ASPELL_INCLUDE_DIR)
assert is optimized away with NDEBUG (IOW release mode)
so basically it only can be properly used if you're writing some code and you assume a condition is true, so it can properly notify you while you're debugging if that assumption is ever false
you potentially could check for input parameters, but only if they're precondition errors checkable by users
e.g. std::vector::operator[] could use assert in its implementation
but std::vector::at must obviously throw an exception
In my experience employers like spending like 2000$ on a new PC in order to make you work faster. It is an easy investment with clear benefits and probably costs them nothing because tax laws are dumb.
@nwp not with my employer, unfortunately. My PC costs around 300-400$. I'm out of memory and when building I even have to close the IDE otherwise PC freezes
@nwp and that drives me mad
@nwp also they expect me to work "fast", while my pc works like pentium based pc from 90's
Well, explain to them that this is like digging a hole with a shovel. It can be done, but using a digger would be so much faster. They will put you near the top of the list for new investments.