var h = 30, = fps
s = 300, = render size
o = 3, = trail quantities
r = 10, = trail length
n = 4e3, = trail path anchor frequencies
a = 0.5, = trail path area (0.1-1.0)
@nyconing no, it's a tool that reads c# XML comments and builds a maml file from them to document a powershell cmdlet. It's all done with reflection. The tool's author didn't code for arrays - eg if your cmdlet takes int[] the documentation would be for array and not int, the element type of the array.
so I am updating his code to check if it is an array first
var FPS = 60;//FPS
var F = 200;//焦点距離
var N = 32;//軌跡の本数
var VERTEX_MAX = 1.5;//軌跡の長さ
var TRAIL_QUALITY = 1000;//軌跡のクオリティ
var mu = 0.1;//前のアンカーポイントへの依存具合
var FPS = 1;//FPS
var F = 50;//焦点距離
var N = 200;//軌跡の本数
var VERTEX_MAX = 9999999;//軌跡の長さ
var TRAIL_QUALITY = 1;//軌跡のクオリティ
var mu = 0.5;//前のアンカーポイントへの依存具合
@Proxy No. WebAssembly is an intermediate language (IL), like MSIL which is what C# compiles to. In the future, it's not far fetched to have C# compile to WebAssembly so you can literally code for the web using C#.
yeah but you said we are going to start using js now more, and with web assembly are we not moving away from js to write in a higher performing language?
The function gets passed a copy of p, so any changes to the copy of p don't affect the real p. Unless you use * Ofc...that'll change the value at the memory location it (the real and copy) points to.
In you fun function, you just switch the parameter p to point somewhere else. It doesn't actually do anything with the value p points to. The pointer p in your main isn't the pointer p in your fun function, you just pass its value (the address of q) to fun, which stores that address in another pointer called p.
@Proxy It's both promising and terrifying. Until now, programming for the web has been one unified experience. Everyone writes HTML, CSS and JS. Sure, there are some languages that compile to JS but they either look like JS, or are very small in use. Nevertheless, even if you use a language like that, you should understand JS. That goes away with WebAssembly. In the future, you could have C# developers writing web code using libraries written in Python, and have no knowledge of either.
yeah that was also a bit weird for me since in the last time everything seems to be converging with js, but from what i have read(which is just a little) seems like with web assembly it will divide it up
@@Proxy Thus contributing becomes much more difficult and the current community will splinter into smaller groups of users. In the long run, I think this will prevent the current momentum we've got going in JS world, and the innovations that brings with it. On the other hand, choosing your own language based on merit and familiarity with better performance, faster load times, less bandwidth consumed certainly appealing.
I'm sure it will. The benefits are too great to ignore. Vastly smaller code to download means that users have to wait less time, your bandwidth reduces, and it takes far less time to parse the code. Mobile devices especially don't handle large amounts of code very well at the moment. With WebAssembly, they can. And there'll be a library available that parses WebAssembly and produces plain JS for non-WebAssembly browsers, so there's no real down-side.
But like I said, JS can read/translate WASM to plain JS and execute it, so even if browsers don't adopt it, they'll still be able to run it (albeit much slower).
I didn't fuck anything. He requested for offline application in ASP.NET MVC a few months ago. He asked me whether we can transform our largest application into an offline app inside browser (not just the css and js files, also the data entry part). I told him I need to do some research.
I googled it and found a few examples but they were so old and unreliable. I asked here to see if someone had any idea and mostly said it needs to be native mobile app.
Ok you people need to be more specific. AFAIK there is no such thing as a specially build offline app for a browser. Anything built for a browser ca nbe used online.
So it should be possible to some extent - what happened?
now, my boss says, you couldn't find any solution for web, so we need to find another person instead who can deliver this for us. But he doesn't understand that it's not easy/common to do such things, most companies build mobile apps instead.
The entire unit is in shock right now, why and why because of this I need to leave. I've developed this application, they never said about offline in the first place.
@Metallkiller They did. Actually some of them did and some don't because they care about their future. He said, you had 1 month time to research and yet you haven't found anything. But I did, I told we need to move to Native App/Xamarin
class Customer
{
public int Code { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
}
List<Customer> customers = ...
var result = customers.Single(q => q.Code == -999).DefaultIfEmpty();
@KevinMaxwell If your boss gave you a notice over that, it sounds to me like he didn't like you to begin with and instead of talking to you like an adult, he waited for an opportunity
He first said, that's awesome but when I started to explain that if we want pure offline web app we need to write client-side codes. But there is a cleaner solution and that is Native Mobile App or Xamarin.
Because I told him, with Xamarin we can use our C# codes/logic to start the process but we need to redesign the UI as each platform has its own code base.
@Metallkiller hmm, It's something in between, because on Web we had more flexibility to fit contents in different areas but in this case we need to rethink about all these.
I thought myself, providing electricity and internet to those countries would be more beneficial than redo the entire app. This way other people in Africa can have fun as well :)
Don't say that. you're not limited. You jsut go another way, wich is to build an agent. Whats the current problem? Is the last status: "We're limited by web, I'll try to find something this week"?
Whats the last status
"It should be web"? Then tell him ok, just need the sync agent.
Build a quick and dirty proof of concept. Open app, pull plug, see how the agent...dunno, builds the app for you (just copy the whole fucking website to that agent), replug internet, see how aent says "syncing now"
can you sacrifice another 30mins to tell us? I'll look sharp to get it before its deleted. I'm not sure which word. Neger = not an english word. Nigger (Not neg... though) = depends on the context if it is bad, it may be ok to use, see results when you search this chat for it.
Haven't decided yet..engineering knowledge is still pretty rudimentary ..with that many, I assume it'll need more than just a simple crystal. But probably yes , unless I come across a reason to stagger them. And some io for comms obviously.
I haven't heard of it, looks like this sort of system used to create quick and dirty apps for custom business applications without actually having to develop anything.