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19:00
@ndugger what @ssube said, that's how all the frameworks do it
you don't have to use a literal switch. It can be an if, a lookup table, anything.
alright
you just have to separate processing the request and delivering the response
(I don't remember who sent me the SO question about Zelda, but I'm gonna read it! :D (
if you need something ad-hoc, you should extract a class from the function and create an API around it
19:00
(Thank you, whoever you were!)
@ShaharNacht Don't want to discourage you, but this is just years of experience. They knew the platform, they knew the game well, they knew the math well.
It's a complex problem with many open-ended questions.
@Cerbrus yeah i think he has a point as well. "This is not my question" does seems a bit like this is not what i asked for. Haha
also, @ndugger, minimize the lifespan of each variable
I'm not telling you to use Havok, I'm telling you to learn from it.
19:01
if you have a bunch of variables that are used across 250 lines, then your code is too spaghetti
Well, the function is only like 70 lines, but yes, lol. I'll refactor this bit when I get home
variables should be active for the shortest number of lines
@ShaharNacht the Havok's manual actually goes in depth explaining why the engine does the things it does.
once you do that, you'll start to see natural function splits
@Mr_Green Read it, literally
Either way, it shouldn't have taken him nearly that long to realize I wasn't the OP...
Yeah still :P
@ndugger I hate it
@Loktar That's fair. I have mixed feelings about it, but I still think it's prettier than writing ternaries in jsx
> Broad phase traverses the global scene spatial partitioning structure to cull out the candidates for mid and narrow phases.
Likewise, the midphase traverses the triangle mesh and heightfield internal spatial partitioning data structures. Midphase reduces the triangles in all meshes reported by the broad phase to a smaller subset.
Narrow phase performs filtering and exact intersection tests (ray test for raycast() queries and exact sweep shape tests or overlap tests for sweep() and overlap() queries).
19:03
@ndugger your mom is prettier than JSX
it doesn't take much to be prettier than html in js
I've met earthworms that were prettier than jsx ternaries
Don't do jsx ternaries then :p
you can have other stuff in your render above the return
@BartekBanachewicz Thanks! =)
@ssube theres no comeback to that...unless he hates his mom he has to accept it
19:04
Not to bash on my coworker, because he really is smarter than I am, but he doesn't like { condition && <Foo/> } because he thinks it's too magical.
thats cold brah
yeah you don't have to do that though
you can do
@ShaharNacht anytime. I was into that quite much in high school.
one sec
@Loktar yeah, we've been talking about that today
19:05
class MyAwesomeHttpRequestHandler {
  constructor(request) {
    this.request = request;

    this.processHeaders();
    this.callAppropriateHttpMethod();
    this.processResponse();
  }

  get() {}
  post() {}
  put() {}
  delete() {}
}
@FilipDupanović Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq. For posting large code blocks, use a paste site like gist.github.com, hastebin.com or pastie.org
Well, we do in some places have a renderFoo method that has an if/else in that that returns the proper component
tier 3 support is going to start writing tools for the lower tiers, so I and they will be using React+Redux heavily
@BartekBanachewicz Haha I AM in highschool!
@BartekBanachewicz So, to conclude, there is no simple "x+=4 unless there is a wall" in 3D?
but that can be verbose for something really simple
19:06
pastie.org seems like a dirty place to go...
@FilipDupanović yuck, classes
true, but it's the only way you can break it into units for testing
render() {

	const foo = (<p>Hello</p>);

  if (someFoocondition) {
      foo = '';
  }

	return (
  	<div>{foo}</div>
  )
}
lol wow horrible formatting
@Loktar except you just broke it, because foo is a constant
@ShaharNacht Again, 3D has nothing to do with it. Good quality fast simulation requires both fast broad, filtering phases and accurate vertex-level phases. This is true regardless of dimensionality. IOW, good physics won't be just "x += 4 and check"
19:07
I get what you're saying, though
@FilipDupanović that's a ridiculous claim
the ternaries inline are kind of weird
especially if you have a lot of them
makes it confusing
@ndugger your not making a lot of sense to me tonight
so I end up building my jsx before my return
@BartekBanachewicz I'm confused, why not? It worked in 2D for me...2
and then returning what I need based on a condition, in those scenarious anyway
90% of the time my returns are straight jsx
19:08
@FilipDupanović no, it's just a good way, sometimes
(And also to somewhat success in the 3D demo)
@ndugger take 5 minutes to think about the difference between a functional and prototypal approach to HTTP request handling
@ShaharNacht If you settle on just one collision method, you're always in a compromise. If it's too precise, it will be too slow. In your case it's fast, but imprecise.
@ShaharNacht Well 2D simply makes the problem easier.
@FilipDupanović functional is a program-flow thing, prototypical (assuming that's what you meant) is an inheritance thing
Why? I've worked heavilly on a prototypal/OOP node framework before. It gets messy as fuck compared to functional
19:09
you can make more mistakes and you have a higher performance headroom to work with
you can and often do combine the two
Just as Bartek about functional programming
@BartekBanachewicz Wouldn't I put all phases in the checkCollision()? So that I CAN just move and then test for collision?
that's how the docs suggest as well
both methods, either one
ternary, or the one I posted a shitty example of :p
if/else component would be heavily relied on otherwise.. making your other components dependant on it as well
19:10
@ShaharNacht essentially, yes. But e.g. borders or rougher shapecasts are a good example of what might be added as well
ternaries can go kill themselves
so if they don't update to react 0.18 for example you're kind of screwed
but since the render is just a JS function, I say just use plain ol' JS
@ShaharNacht to elaborate, you might want to have different shape models for different phases
@BartekBanachewicz Which can also be put inside the general collision function?
var loginButton;
if (loggedIn) {
  loginButton = <LogoutButton />;
} else {
  loginButton = <LoginButton />;
}

return (
  <nav>
    <Home />
    {loginButton}
  </nav>
);
better example to replace my shitty one lol from the react docs
19:11
@ShaharNacht checking them, yes, but you also want to precompute some things sometimes
@BartekBanachewicz Like what?
@ShaharNacht a convex hull
@BartekBanachewicz I REALLY hope I don't sound offensive, I'm curious, not blaming or anything :P
What's convex hull?
19:12
In mathematics, the convex hull or convex envelope of a set X of points in the Euclidean plane or Euclidean space is the smallest convex set that contains X. For instance, when X is a bounded subset of the plane, the convex hull may be visualized as the shape enclosed by a rubber band stretched around X. Formally, the convex hull may be defined as the intersection of all convex sets containing X or as the set of all convex combinations of points in X. With the latter definition, convex hulls may be extended from Euclidean spaces to arbitrary real vector spaces; they may also be generalized further...
this is useful for more complicated shapes
an AABB is essentially an even rougher approximation of a convex hull
Oh, as in collision model? I thought about just making them by hand...
@ShaharNacht that's something else. A collision model could just be a simplified model. A convex hull can be easily computed from a concave model though.
I'm confused?
@ShaharNacht refer to this ^
first is a bounding sphere, second AABB, third convex hull, fourth physics model
Ah-huh
What do I do with this information?
(The bounding sphere, I assume, is an actual sphere, and not polygons?)
19:16
@ShaharNacht the algorithm goes more or less like "if AABBs colide, then { if (convex hulls colide) then if (models collide) }
Oh, thanks!
Why not, for example, cut the convex from that?
As in, if AABB then if model?
Wouldn't that be faster?
@ShaharNacht because for complex shapes AABBs are a very rough approximation and you'd be doing a lot of unnecessary computations
@FilipDupanović thankfully I turn my chair lol otherwise my neck would be in constant agony
@ShaharNacht Doing collisions on model level is extremely heavy, while for convex hulls more efficient algorithms exist.
Do convex and model use the same calculation? They are both undefined shapes...
Oh
19:18
@SterlingArcher watch out for your C1 and C2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_(anatomy)

we talked about this somewhere on CS
@ShaharNacht AABB is the simplest calculations, followed by sphere, followed by convex hull, and concave hull is the hardest
@ShaharNacht stuff like this
The Sutherland–Hodgman algorithm is used for clipping polygons. It works by extending each line of the convex clip polygon in turn and selecting only vertices from the subject polygon that are on the visible side. == Description == The algorithm begins with an input list of all vertices in the subject polygon. Next, one side of the clip polygon is extended infinitely in both directions, and the path of the subject polygon is traversed. Vertices from the input list are inserted into an output list if they lie on the visible side of the extended clip polygon line, and new vertices are added to the...
of course in 3D you have to replace "line" by "plane"
convex hulls are usually used to simplify calculations instead of concave hulls
of course if your game only has bouncing balls and nothing else you might well get rid of it :)
that's why it's also important to know what you will be simulating
Planning on a VERY SIMPLE first person shooter
19:21
even those amazing engines require fine-tuning for a particular simulation to perform well
Collision is ONLY so that you don't fall through the floor or phase trough walls :P
@ShaharNacht in this case you'll prolly be fine with character capsules
What's that?
@ShaharNacht in that case bounding box or cylinder should be adequate
19:23
@KendallFrey But the world can't be a box...
it's essentially a cylinder and two spheres, commonly used
@ShaharNacht I meant for the player
you use spheres because it makes it very easy to make it work on rough terrain
@BartekBanachewicz Why is that?
@ShaharNacht because it's easy to compute the climb angle using a sphere, which you can use to limit climb rate
it gives convincing results in general with little effort
19:24
(Was planning on using boxes for the players, I don't need any accurate hitreg for the bullets
What's climb angle, the slope I'm walking on?
@ShaharNacht yeah. Has an additional benefit of working on stairs
was just about to say "mind the stairs"
I don't understand the picture, the capsule isn't even touching anything
mildy interesting story, I once made a game that didn't use a bounding box for the player, it extended the bounding box for the walls inward a bit. As a consequence, walls at right angles to each other would have a gap at the corner where the player could get arbitrarily close to the corner before hitting the walls, and even walk though the corner to the other side of the wall.
@ShaharNacht it would touch the edge of the stairs
19:26
@KendallFrey Haha! :P
the point where it would touch determines how steep it is
@Kendall explains some of the wall-through walking experiences I've had in my life
@BartekBanachewicz Ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh I see!!!!!!!!!! Mind-blow
@FilipDupanović Nah, that's probably quantum tunnelling
now if someone could only explain why do you sometimes fall through the floor...
19:27
@FilipDupanović In games or IRL? ;-)
I wonder what the probability for a person to quantum tunnel through a door is
gosh, in games only, thankfully!
Well, I have 2 assumptions:
(ALTHOUGH, as was proven here, I know almost nothing about collision. so take this with a grain of salt)
This is probably one of the most interesting conversations I've read in here
help, I can't read
19:30
you really need to be here more often
1. In games (discrete simulations only appearantly) You don't actually move, but rather teleport very short distances every frame. If you move quickly, you teleport a large distance, which might skip the floor entirely!
@FilipDupanović some games don't use capsules, they simply use a point where the feet are
@KendallFrey Who's you?
don't sweat it, 95% what I know from collisions I've read from you @ShaharNacht and @BartekBanachewicz
19:31
@BartekBanachewicz a foot-sphere and head-sphere is also useful
AABB for larger stuff, foot-encompassing-sphere for ground collision
@ssube well if you want to shoot things you typically aim in the middle, hence the cylinder
2. I've seen some games (Like Minecraft) do collision by just squeezing you out of solid stuff, which might sometimes squeeze you in the wrong direction (down instead of up)
@ShaharNacht correct
the squeezing/bumping eventually leads to an invalid position that doesn't get caught?
19:32
@BartekBanachewicz that works for bullets but makes climbing a hill look wrong (the player is too far out)
I was actually right with my "shot in the dark" guesses?
adding a sphere around the feet is dirt cheap and works well for walking
@ssube I meant two spheres and the cylinder in the middle, i.e. the capsule
@ssube but sounds like you can mitigate that if you pay attention to the units
ah, yeah, that's about the best way
@FilipDupanović units don't have much to do with it
head, body, feet using sphere, cylinder or box, sphere gives you good precision with few checks
19:34
@ssube but they do play an important role overall
I prefer a box around the body, because they're usually somewhat flat and wide, but the top/bottom definitely should be spheres
but if you made sure a staircase step was of a height that would allow the bottom sphere to intersect, you wouldn't have that issue @ssube?
with float arithmetic, you want to be as close to 0-1 range as possible
Well maybe I'm exaggerating but you don't want numbers that are too big or too small
@FilipDupanović why do you think game staircases always have big stairs or make you float slightly?
I've seen maybe one or two games with actual per-step collision
everything else fudges it so you sort of slide up the stairs
@ssube That's actually for a different reason
19:35
oh so you want the step to hit the... cylinder and not the sphere?
I've watched some mappers explain that
@ssube the best ones use IK and that's amazing when done right
@ShaharNacht no, it's because you'd just get stuck on the steps
@BartekBanachewicz IK is good for animations, not collision
and while the procedural animation stuff GTA uses is awesome, you can't do that in a first-person camera
or you'll be horribly sick
hmm maybe you're right
it might still make sense to do capsule collisions and only animate basing on IK and feet raycasts
19:37
@BartekBanachewicz IK is typically based on bones, so you do a capsule per bone
morrowind's models have great examples of how stair and IK/bone collision meshes are set up
@KendallFrey I'm working on satellite stuff today D: I actually can't goof off much
@Loktar @BenFortune
stairs have an angled box that sits flush with the top edge of the step, animals have a capsule per bone that's bound to the bone's movement
Potentially @rlemon ^
then collision just uses that and you're good
@BartekBanachewicz bones also always have two ends (like capsules) and you can scale the ends of the capsule, plus when you have a joint, the spherical ends fit together well. Math-wise, you do two sphere checks and a cylinder.
man we've come far from cubes and ramps
maybe I should grab another beer
19:43
So, to really conclude, I had A LOT of fun with you guys! Thank you sooooo much for your help!!! :D
And as to my "eternal" question of how there was such good collision on stuff like the N64, even with such weak hardware, I take that the answer is "it's not that simple, go read up online". :P
(I'm really tired and gonna go to sleep soon, any final thoughts?)
stick to SO ✨
I will! ♥
Int32Array.prototype.fill is factor 3 slower than a for loop in v8, pretty disappointing
Any way to "add you guys as friends"? So that I can keep contact?
We're always in here; just stop in occasionally
19:46
OK, bye! =)
can anyone explain to me how I handle a redirect after I posted a registration form using ajax? everything is being saved in the database etc but the successcall after the post (= success: function( data ) {}) returns the full html document(starting with <!DOCTYPE html> and ending with </html>) that I want to load in my browser I use controllers and dao (pdo) to post my data with php
@copy take that on the topic of primitive loops @nduggger
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne if think you should always be following the redirect, no?
@AwalGarg how would you do it? (source code)
@VaibhavPachauri Probably not, with web assembly coming it will be replaced with some decent languages like Python or OCaml
don't let @BartekBanachewicz hear you mentioned Web Assembly in April 2016
19:55
@FilipDupanović what do you mean? after I checked if the user is inserted I use:
$_SESSION['info'] = 'Registration successful';
$this->redirect('index.php');
1 message moved to Trash can
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne Please don't post unformatted code - hit Ctrl+K before sending, use up-arrow to edit messages, and see the faq.
@copy lol
of all the languages to pick
Maybe C# even
so the redirect uses the header to redirect me but I never really get redirected.. It just gives me the html of the document it should render in the dataObject in my ajax successhandler
19:57
in JS, you always follow the redirect for XHMLHttpRequest dvcs.w3.org/hg/xhr/raw-file/tip/…
@BartekBanachewicz That too
ahh, you don't actually do a redirect (as in, the document location changed), but the client making the request will follow a 302, so the response you're getting is the response of the document the client was redirected to
@ssube which one would you pick?
And everything that uses llvm
19:58
if you want to redirect the document, then read the response headers and change the document location
@FlorianMargaine Python isn't bad, but python devs and web devs seem like very different groups. The JVM languages will be huge.
if I have this set up and want to modify the transactiondate field in the object (like slice()) , what's the best way to go on about it?
    monthlycost = _.chain(items)
    .groupBy("transactionDate")
    .map(function(value, key) {
      return {
          date: key,
          Cost: sum(_.pluck(value, "amt"))
      }
    })
  .value();
ugh
my workplace is very python-oriented
@ssube I was impressed that a lot of the Python devs are web devs?
I just thought that webasm will let them use it for the web too ._.
20:02
@copy are you aware of that antipattern?
@filip
The network tab does show a redirect
class Element s a where
    drawElement :: HasUI s => s -> a -> [DrawRequest]
    click :: Vec2 -> a -> Effect s

data Element' where
    drawElement :: HasUI s => s -> Element' -> [DrawRequest]
    click :: Vec2 -> Element' -> Effect s
yeah, that's the XMLHttpRequest client following the 302
The more I think about this the more 2nd version makes sense
@BartekBanachewicz Nope, lemme read
20:03
I suppose Lisp would go #2 all the way? @FlorianMargaine
@FilipDupanović I see a post 302 type text/html and then a GET 200 xhr
@BartekBanachewicz I don't understand the difference
(because I don't know what data and class do in haskell)
and the response body that you get should be the response of the document you were redirected to... but that's just host networking and the XMLHttpRequest client... the user's document location won't be affected
@FlorianMargaine The first one defines a type class (the Haskell interface, right). Any data type can say it belongs to that type class then by providing the required methods. The second one defines a plain record type with two fields that are functions instead.
So in order to make 2nd approach work, you need a "constructor" that fills those functions with a concrete set of operations.
@BartekBanachewicz and not with the 1st?
20:07
@FlorianMargaine With the 1st you provide a class instance.
maybe it'll get clearer when polymorphism appears
class isn't defining any actual data type
@BartekBanachewicz I've seen the latter pattern
so the data type has to define its own implementation of the functions
so it's like go's interfaces
@copy TLDR I'm designing a UI system and I walked into the antipattern
20:08
class -> interface, data -> class
@FlorianMargaine a bit, yeah
to a C# programmer anyway
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne not really related, but this is nice jakearchibald.com/2015/thats-so-fetch
CLOS doesn't really have #1 built-in...
@BartekBanachewicz I don't understand the disadvantage of the former approach
20:10
> When I was using the above interface, I found myself immediately wrapping the results of text, hbox, and the other combinators in AnyWidget. By throwing away the information of exactly what instance of Widget it was I lost nothing, all the same operations were available to me
So nothing was lost, but what was gained?
well, for example, I'd like to have a button. But then I'd like the user to be able to customize its appearance
when I give him a record of functions, he can easily replace the ones provided
@FilipDupanović how can I change it so I do get a pagerefresh? did something go wrong with the post/redirect/do I just need to do something with the data returned/...
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, I see
-- consider
augmentWithFrame :: Element -> Element
augmentWithFrame e = e { draw = newDraw }
     where
          newDraw = drawFrameAround e ++ (draw e)
20:13
@BartekBanachewicz so... inheritance?
@FlorianMargaine kinda, I suppose.
but done in runtime
@BartekBanachewicz So it's just more convenient when defining your own types of widgets
I think there's a different name for it
@copy I... think so. I'm actually not sure.
Hey guys, I have a question if you don't mind. In this website, blog.onlyscience.org/?page_id=831, there's a link with div class="showHideCondsText"... it's supposed to show and hide a part of the text... and it's not working, and I'm not getting any errors... could you please help?
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne off the tip, I'd read the response headers and just do document.location = reponseURI;
20:15
@copy I'm trying to think about common scenarios that might appear and how that model would fit to them
but I have to admit I'm hardly an UI expert
I know that DOM is shit and that reactive bindings are good, but that's about it
In OCaml you wouldn't use the latter pattern because it creates on closure for every function
But I don't know how to model this either
Kez
Kez
Hey guys how does one remove duplicate params in url string?
@jarvis we use it with a VM in windows.
We just deploy an image
@Kez sample URL please o/
Kez
Kez
@FilipDupanović www.example.com230=on&230=on&10=on got this so far: jsfiddle.net/vpbsye3r
\o
20:25
new Map(location.search.slice(1).split('&').map(param => param.split('=')))
if you want an object location.search.slice(1).split('&').map(arg => arg.split('=')).reduce((args, [arg, value]) => {args[arg] = value; return args;}, {})
@FilipDupanović could you take a look at my code? I pasted my php in the css section, I am really confused about where to read the headers, i've never had to do it before to make this work.. jsfiddle.net/xntg0odd
@FilipDupanović ?a=b=c&
hello
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne what is your objective?
I try to post this registration form using ajax
everything is being saved
@copy depends on whether you find a => b an appropriate answer
20:34
but on success or failure the redirect doesn't work
like an insert to a database?
yes but that part works allready
if it is ajax why do you need to redirect your user?
I want to show a message saying registration successfull or failed
in the successhandler of my ajax the data object that gets returned contains the page that has to be rendered in the browser instead
if I understand properly you want a form to be sent to the server and you want the server to say if data entry was successful. Is that it?
@FilipDupanović It also creates { "": undefined }
one sec @Pieter-JanDeBruyne, I'm not familiar with jQuery
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne I am. Are you hosting on windows or linux?
@copy yeah and JS just truncates that (properties that have an undefined value)
I wrote <?php if(!empty($_SESSION['info'])): ?><div class="alert-success"><?php echo $_SESSION['info'];?></div><?php endif; ?>
in my template to echo the success message and under that the content is being rendered
I am on a localhost on mac atm
20:38
but what @copy said @Kez, a=b=c is {a: 'b', c: undefined}, use my example if your building the search query yourself
cool. I am on a linux system. Give me a few instant and I will wrote a working example
would that help you achieve your goal?
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne but wouldn't it be simpler if you just used JS to add the message?
I have done ajax posts with redirects before and I feel like my code is the same
like, if you know JQuery called #success(), without reading the response headers and what not, you know everything went alright
20:39
might be yes but this was the way I used to do it when I worked with php
Kez
Kez
@FilipDupanović like so? jsfiddle.net/vpbsye3r/3
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne didn't really figure out how to read response headers with JQuery
the response I get in success: function(data, textStatus, request){
the data Object contains the full html I want to show in the browser (it has the page I redirected too with the info I set in $_SESSION['info'] so I can@t be too far away from the problem right +
ohh, well, if you just returned a fragment of the document that you can add to the body, that would get you somewhere
can you do a conditional check in PHP to figure out if the request is coming from a XMLHttpRequest client and only return the fragment from the redirected response instead of the full document?
:30115352
$(document).on('submit', 'form', function(event){
				event.preventDefault();
				url = $(this).attr('action');
				data = $(this).serialize();
				var posting = $.post(url, data: {data});
				posting.done(function(data){
					console.log(data);
				})
			});
20:51
if you don't return a fragment @Pieter-JanDeBruyne, you'll have to do something like document.createElement(response).getElementsByClassName('alert-success')
ok it's working with the code happy provided.. I get the messages
and a pagerefresh
Im trying out Java, its so cool :D
@happy
any way to implement this in the code I allready have because I don't need to post all fields like they are
or do I use this method and change the data ?
21:17
@happy what is the difference between using $.ajax({
type: 'post', and $.post() I still don't get why my code is not redirecting and the one you gave is... also if I change the data element being posted with your code it still posts the fieldvalues :/
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne the complete story is coming, jsut had to do some stuff
@copy benchmarks ?
JavaScript engines are a mystery to me
Well, it's not serious anyway, I just wanted to see how far I can go
@Pieter-JanDeBruyne hastebin.com/pugazodeti.xml
 
1 hour later…
23:09
Immutable.js is nice
But I keep trying to do Map.key instead of Map.get('key')
mo.js is also pretty cooll
23:21
how can I create a function that generates me a new object key value that doesn't exist?
23:40
@DanielKobe have any more of an explanation?

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