Hi, I'm the VS IDE. I can find all the include files and compile the project successfully, but I still think it's an error so I'm going to underline random includes.
room topic changed to Kyrostat: About to align DeadMG on a 16 smack boundary. Also, bacon. (no tags)
Sorry, I can't make sense of that sentence at all. Also, afk
In case it helps: username@hostname:port/path/to/resource is the usual form of a url (often with a protocol:// when it's not clear from context). Obviously, the username is not part of the actual url, though the path/to/resource might not be valid for other users, depending on server implementation
yeah, we do need to get some basic structure, for now I suggest you just start of doing your thing, first person to get a structure that doesn't cause uproar wins the race :D
Okay, added Program Structure section in documentation for anyone who wants to read it.
If you don't like the structure, discuss it here first since people may have already committed to it. After which time, highlight any modifications made in the documentation (including deletions with strikethrough).
if I swap out '/lib/lua/lua_static_lib.a' I don't want to have to go through the entire code base changing the version number. Sure it could be done through some sort of pre processor or build script, but why not just solve the root problem
well... I guess if you are doing something like a bug fix, make a branch (if you want) for the bug fix in your fork, but then merge it back to main before it gets pulled into the master repo
let's say a couple guys want to work on a little thing, I assume one of them will make a 'master repo' for that feature, they will work on it like a mini project, with there own versions of the repo, pushing changes around. Eventually, they will have the little job finished, and one of them will take responsibility for a pull request to the actual master
@thecoshman Well if worst came to worst, you could always download the code and integrate it into main manually
It would be a pain, but not unthinkable
However, we're having a slight problem with the repository which lets us have up to 10 developers working at a time. In order to have more, we'd need money,
If you or anyone is interested in helping the effort, we've basically come to the agreement that money is split amongst those who participate, save for those who invest money, who get their money return before anyone else sees a dime
Assuming there is money which comes from this, that is
Or you could probably wait a month and I'm sure half the developers will lose interest, and you can join then. :)
In any case, as far as I'm concerned, you decide the rules on this
So if you say you won't tolerate new repositories, I'll stand by your decision
The funny part is that I have VS running here, I've managed to run your D3D9 sim thingy after fighting of some alignment issues with function parameters. I think I've located the problem with the silent failures, but first I must consume this rather expensive lasagne.
Once we get the abstraction layer sort, this will not be a problem
@Neil your mising the point
The problem @Neil is that is we make an abstract window class, we need to still write platform specific code for each platform. If we add full screen support for windows, we need to code the window specific code and the abstraction layer support. It could work just fine on windows, but as there is not support in linux, it will not run
ok, let's say you are adding a feature, and you have it all working on windows, but it needs to be ported to linux and mac. We can commit to the master repo, but only to a branch. This will let us keep the main trunk in the master valid for all platforms. It lets others take your changes
Once all platforms have been supported with a feature, we can then merge it back to the main trunk
again, if you are changing something that will break a certain platform, then do it in a branch
and don't be afraid to use stub implementations for other platforms
Well I mean, for an absurd example, if you were to write "openWindow" in the interface, all the work around opening a window using the windows API could still be isolated
So long as we don't try doing complicated things with these windows, for instance
so yeah, we would have our windowing library, it will have an 'openWindow' function. Depending on what platform you compile for, it will actually call a different function, one specific for the platform. Once we have the abstraction layer done, this is not really a problem. But until then, if I wrote an openWindow function in the abstraction code and then implement it in linux, it could compile when built for linux, but will fail for windows and mac
Probably the best solution to this, is to also write stub code for the other platforms
but what our ground rule of "don't break the build"? I can't write windowing code for linux, windows and mac. I would just have to write stub code so that it compiles at the least, maybe at run time implements a work around
When we compile on different platforms, the windowing abstraction system will handle at compile time using the correct system calls
if I add a feature to the windowing system, such as 'full screen' mode. It will need to matched with platform specific code, we can't just have abstract 'goFullScreen()'
it is during the compile process that the abstraction layer will look for stuff like `#ifdef LINUX linux_make_window_function(); #endif #ifdef WIN window_make_window_function(); #endif`
@thecoshman If it has stubs, it won't work all the same. If the class simply wasn't there, it would still compile, assuming your factory included and used the proper class for the proper platform and nothing else
@thecoshman If you want to flesh out all three platforms, then yes you have to write the stubs. You worried about what the abstraction methods will be? Is that it?
I'd just assume build the model around windows and let that model serve as an example for other platforms once we get around to coding it, obviously doing our best to keep the interface generic
@thecoshman No, my solution is "Watch how Windows support is done. WindowsPlatform derives from Platform and implements openWindow, so logically, if I want it to work with Linux, maybe I should make LinuxPlatform which implements openWindow."
we said from the start we want to be able to run on Linux Windows and Mac. And it is not just a case of writing the interface, we need consider that the way X11 (and what ever shit Mac uses) will influence the way we want write the interface
exactly, so we can't just drive deep into "this is the best way for windows, oh sorry, would you prefer it another way? well, it's done now so work it out"
@thecoshman So we don't even have a reason to suspect there will be a problem. I think we could get stumbled often and in many different ways in the creation of this game if everytime we think there might be a hypothetical problem but we don't know what it could be, we wait for someone to straighten out the issue
@DeadMG well, if it's things like taking comments from before functions and presenting them in a nice format, it can be rather nice. Some times, just presenting the data in a new way can give it more meaning
Sometimes, I write blocks of comments explaining what the function is doing and how it goes about doing it. And for personal pleasure, sometimes I append a latex'd (math stuff) pdf with a particular source file documenting my research/math.
Doesn't work with a production environment, but for smaller experiments, it's gold.
Rule of thumb: If code is unclear, verify that you can't make it clear. After which time, check yet again that you can't make it clear. Failing that, add a comment.