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01:21
Hello.
Is anyone familiar with the DirectX 12 Win32 API?
 
3 hours later…
04:37
a little
@Sammy though I'd recommend you to go to gamedev.stackexchange.com, ppl there are more than familiar with d3d12
05:26
Thanks for the help.
05:42
@Sammy with regard to that i'd recommend you to download DirectX samples, this will show you how to initialize it, and if you want something like a tutorial then read luna frank's book - introduction to 3d game programming with directx12.
05:54
guys what is the meaning of Key type is bounded below, with the lowest value being std::numeric_limits::lowest()
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/54068482/where-exactly-does-my-code-not-adhere-to-the-specification-of-the-key-and-value
nwp
nwp
To me it reads that the Key type must have a lowest value (which excludes most arbitrary precision types) and that std::numeric_limits::lowest() must produce said lowest value.
Thanks @ma1169. But where would I download them?
nwp
nwp
Maybe they initialize some value to the lowest and the logic requires no key to be lower.
ah so key must not go below std::numeric_limits::lowest()
Thanks.
I know a pointer gives the address, but what does a pointer to a pointer do?
06:15
@Sammy it's address to a point in memory where another address is stored
Thanks.
06:27
Does anyone know how to handle the ExtraParams in a .wav file? Lala5th shared this with me soundfile.sapp.org/doc/WaveFormat, but I just don't know how to access and use the ExtraParams. Any suggestions?
 
2 hours later…
08:56
Why is D3D12CreateDevice returning "E_NOINTERFACE No such interface supported."?
@Sammy sounds to me like the GPU driver doesn't support the feature level you requested, should be E_NOTIMPL though
Okay, so how decreasing the feature level should work?
maybe try like some of the D3D9 feature levels
Okay thanks.
Is it because Direct X 12 is so new, not many GPUs can handle it yet?
09:15
there's bunch of GPUs without D3D12 support but you can still use most of the DX12 features at like D3D11 feature level
but I think like everything released in the last 5 years or so has at least 12_0 support
 
2 hours later…
11:06
does anyone use raw pointers in C++, is there use for them or are they completely replaced by smart pointers?
I use them occasionally when referencing into containers/arrays locally, or when doing allocator stuff.
but I don't think I've used non-placement "new" or "delete" outside of toy examples in the last 5 years
nwp
nwp
Sometimes you just want to point somewhere and then pointers are fine. It's only when you need to manage ownership that smart pointers are appropriate.
ok thanks for the responses
nwp
nwp
T* also tends to be a good alternative when you actually want std::optional<T&>.
nice
how long did it take for you guys to become expert at C++? Like 2 years I'm guessing
nwp
nwp
11:18
People have widely different understandings of what an expert at C++ is. There is a tendency that the more you learn about C++ the more you realize its a humongously complicated beast that cannot be fully understood and the lower you rate yourself when it comes to C++ proficiency.
Bjarne Stroustrup who made the language and sits at all the standard meetings gives himself a 7/10 in C++ knowledge, something I couldn't hope to reach. Yet if you ask beginners how their understanding is they might rate themselves 8/10.
mr5
mr5
I'd rate my self -11/10
nwp
nwp
In practice though things are not as bleak. The standard committee makes a lot of complicated rules so that the language behaves as you would expect and most of the time it actually works out. Only some of the time something surprising happens and you realize you don't actually know the rules.
11:33
What do you guys think is the future of C++? I see it as a language used mainly for embedded system design and implementation. What's your take on this?
nwp
nwp
I use it for making desktop software.
are you a software engineer?
I honestly don't know where C++ is heading. There's a bunch of alternatives to it for different use-cases, but none for all its use-cases. In the end we're never going back to like the 90s where there was only a handful of popular programming lanuages
nwp
nwp
I'm not sure what the definition of a software engineer is. My main job is to make medical software for a special camera that helps with some operations.
nice one nwp. Sounds like an interesting job
nwp
nwp
11:46
It's ok. Fulfilling medical software norms is a pain.
12:24
Guys, I really need some help now.
Why this [code snippet](https://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a7cfb9ab8fbb2185) does not compile?

I really don't understand what the compiler indicates.
// print_log.cpp : This file contains the 'main' function. Program execution begins and ends there.
//
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <sstream>
#include <chrono>
#include <atomic>
#include <mutex>
#include <fstream>

namespace Logger
{
enum ERROR_LEVEL
{
INFO,
DEBUG,
ERROR,
};

enum LOG_MEDIA
{
@John you defined as extern Logger::log_media, but only in the global namespace created log_media
nwp
nwp
In other words in line 101 you meant Logger::log_media, not log_media.
I see, thank you so much.One more question,
Any better way to achieve a Logger? Any suggestion or advice is welcome.
12:41
use one that's already written like boost or ETW?
12:51
I am limited to use standard C++ library. In other words, I can't use boost or ETW.
Because I have to port the C++ code to Java by siwg.
The less library, the better.
nwp
nwp
What difference does it make if the code is written in your .cpp file or in a .cpp file that boost people wrote?
ETW is a windows system thing
nwp
nwp
You could fall back to std::cerr instead of std::cout. std::clog also exists, but may not be desired since it buffers.
Because I have to port the C++ code to Java by Swig. If I called boost APIs in my project, I have to firstly port the boost to Jave.
That's not a easy work indeed.
nwp
nwp
So you will be porting your logger to Java as well?
13:00
Yes
yeah, I don't understand what that mean, like are you just going to call from/into the code via swig? If you're just going to "port" the code what do you need swig for?
Why not just use the default java options like log4j?
rather than trying to port something
Sorry for my poor English.
Yes, just let Java code call from/into the c++ code via swig.
13:59
can i pass how to swaps the value in std::Sort
just define a swap function in the namespace, I think it'll just use ADL to use your swap
> any time the standard library performs a swap, it uses the equivalent of using std::swap; swap(*iter1, *iter2);.
but want to sort it
yes, I'm telling you that sort will use your swap function if you have one
because ADL will find a fitting swap function in the namespace of the type before it will find std::swap
14:15
@PeterT ok got a doubt but which namespace??
std?
whichever namespace your type is in
you don't put stuff in std:: except for some rare exceptions
can u give a quick example pls
void swap(MyType& a,MyType& b){MyType temp = a; a=b; b=temp;}
class MyType{ public:
int a;
};
namespace nm{
void swap(MyType2& a,MyType2& b){MyType2 temp = a; a=b; b=temp;}
class MyType2{ public:
int a;
};
}
either of these
void swap(sf::RectangleShape a,sf::RectangleShape b){
std::cout<<"my swap\n";
auto cord=a.getSize();
a.setSize(b.getSize());
b.setSize(cord);
}
auto cmp=[](sf::RectangleShape a,sf::RectangleShape b)->bool{
return a.getSize().x>b.getSize().x;
};
int main(){
srand(time(0));
int xPos{};
for(size_t i{};i<20;i++){
Bars[i].setSize({rand()%200,3});
Bars[i].setFillColor(sf::Color::White);
Bars[i].setPosition({xPos,512});
Bars[i].setRotation(270);
xPos+=5;
}
while(window.isOpen()){
while(window.pollEvent(e)){
i tried this
@Agent_A when writing a comparator you need to take the arguments by reference generally speaking
also const
14:19
its global
dude you literally specify sf::RectangleShape ?
why would you try to put it into the global namespace then, I said "the same namespace as the type"
that makes no sense? the argument list should be (const sf::RectangleShape& lhs, const sf::RectangleShape& rhs)
for swap? const?
oh nvm ,the comparator
14:23
modified em to reference
but @PeterT the swap function is in my .cpp file
forgot to mention this*
so what? you can put stuff in any namespace you want
namespace A{
int a;
}
namespace B{
int b;
}
namespace justToSwap{
void swap(sf::RectangleShape& a,sf::RectangleShape& b){
std::cout<<"my swap\n";
auto cord=a.getSize();
a.setSize(b.getSize());
b.setSize(cord);
}
}
like this?
nwp
nwp
Are you sure you only want to swap the size of the RectangleShapes?
yes atleast for now
nwp
nwp
Wouldn't that create a complete mess if you sort a vector of them? They would basically all be garbage afterwards.
14:27
FWIW if you can make a swap function noexcept you should
@Agent_A "justToSwap" is not the "same namespace that sf::RectangleShape is in"
freaking confused
about?
finally
done\
but eventually messed up The RectangleShape.hpp gotta redo everything
 
8 hours later…
22:46
Is there some trick to get decltype(std::get<idx>(variant)) without actually having a variant instance?
23:08
@Mikhail You usually use std::declval.
idk, does that address the need to form the variant instance?
@Mikhail Yes.
Not sure how
auto size = sizeof(decltype(std::get<1>(t)));
It (at least sort of) creates an instance, but only for use in an unevaluated context.
okay cool it worked thanks
23:13
@Mikhail Glad to help.

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