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04:46
@Thaven can you suggest me, which one is better? I am noob for physics gaming. Thank you :)
 
1 hour later…
05:52
hi
any1 here
help me with itextsharp pdf
 
1 hour later…
07:07
@SPFiredrake good morning
07:52
any one here..
jup
@christianstuder Guten Morgen
@yas4891 Salut.
 
3 hours later…
11:07
Morning
@VikasPatidar I think that they are very similar - there is no magic in 2D physics. Maybe you should say what you are trying to achieve?
 
3 hours later…
14:16
@yas4891 Morning.
 
2 hours later…
15:53
Does anybody remember what the bug in C# was, related to for loops and variable scope, that was supposed to be fixed in C# 5.0 as a breaking change?
Found it, Eric Lippert had an article talking about it. It's related to closures in foreach loops.
16:33
@MrAnubis ha ha - thank you. I think ;)
16:53
@insta not a bug
17:27
Yeah, it was a design decision that was made prior to the introduction of lambdas.
access to modified closure
resharper <3
btw vs 11 beta is great :)
 
1 hour later…
18:40
@LewsTherin How's the project going?
@SPFiredrake Hello mate. I'm still stuck unfortunately.
It just never works right.. so frustrated.
Really? The solution I gave you should've working just fine.
Are you getting an incorrect result?
Whenever I think I am close it explodes. I was using that as a template.. but to be honest I don't understand what it does too well. It is something I am doing wrong definitely.
I will write the algorithm again tonight and send it to you by mail.
Alright.
I just have a question: Is the result of the operation going to be a string?
Did you get that?
@SPFiredrake Yes it has to be
19:00
@SPFiredrake The term asynchronous is confusing in CS, does it mean parallel or sequential like bits?
Probably lean more towards parallel than sequential, but the term can be misused
Yeah I really hate that.
Brb later. C ya lads
19:20
@LewsTherin I didn't get those messages, sorry. Asynchronous is closer to parallel than anything else. Asynchronous means it's non-blocking (runs on a separate thread).
I'm getting a rly wierd BOM when saving an XML document to file using XDocument, Im getting "ff 00 fe 00" instead of "ff fe", what might be casuing that?
Looks like it's encoding to UTF16.
yes
that's what I want
but why am I getting the extra "00"?
Oh... That's normal.
explain?
19:34
UTF16 uses 16bit encoding for each "character", whereas UTF8 only uses 8bits (one word).
but shouldn't the BOM be independent of that?
ic
In this case, it looks like it's big-endian (lower order bytes at the start).
Derp, got that mixed up.
Which means it LOOKS like 'ff00' for the first byte, but it's really '0000 0000 1111 1111' in terms of memory.
Since each character is 2 bytes now, instead of one.
8bit (one byte) up above. Been a long day :(
Oi, it IS little-endian! I was right the first time, damnit!
... Ignore me.
In computing, the term endian or endianness refers to the ordering of individually addressable sub-components within the representation of a larger data item as stored in external memory (or, sometimes, as sent on a serial connection). Each sub-component in the representation has a unique degree of significance, like the place value of digits in a decimal number. These sub-components are typically 16-, 32- or 64-bit words, 8-bit bytes, or even bits. Endianness is a difference in data representation at the hardware level and may or may not be transparent at higher levels, depending on fact...
The byte order mark (BOM) is a Unicode character used to signal the endianness (byte order) of a text file or stream. Its code point is U+FEFF. BOM use is optional, and, if used, should appear at the start of the text stream. Beyond its specific use as a byte-order indicator, the BOM character may also indicate which of the several Unicode representations the text is encoded in. Because Unicode can be encoded as 16-bit or 32-bit integers, a computer receiving these encodings from arbitrary sources needs to know which byte order the integers are encoded in. The BOM gives the producer of the...
Two relavent readings :P
Although now that I look at it, that still doesn't look right...
Someone take over before I dig myself even deeper >.<
I remember that happened to me at some point, and it had to do with reading in the file as UTF8, saving to UTF16, and then trying to open using UTF8 again (didn't like it)...
Oh, and I was wrong, looks like UTF32. I'm just a whole bowl of fail today.
Nope, UTF16.
I'm just gonna shutup now.
...
Either way, when specifying the XDocument, check to see what the encoding is set to.
4
A: Xdocument does not print declaration

Fredrik MörkHow do you save it? If I do the following, the xml declaration comes out as it should: XDocument xDocument = new XDocument( new XDeclaration("1.0", "UTF-8", "yes"), new XElement("Books")); xDocument.Save(@"c:\temp\file.xml"); The output looks like this: <?xml version="1.0" encoding...

Try that.
 
2 hours later…
21:50
@SPFiredrake out of curiosity do you use much bitwise?
I try, when I can. Outside of college, there was no reason for me to... Although I did do something recently...
Oh right! I was building out an outlined frame in XNA by determining the lines.
Um, what?
There are 8 points on a cube.
3 bits
3 bits correspond to the 8points - by points you mean sides right?
For loop, 0-7, each one (based on bitmask) generate an additional line segmant.
Nope, corners.
21:53
Right
Using bitwise op seems like a very powerful tool to have.
I just don't know when to use it, though I know how they work.
That seems to be a trademark for me.. not knowing when to use something
Yep, so I ultimately did (i & 1), (i & 2) >> 1, (i & 4) >> 2
Depending on which bit is set, I generate a line going from the currently "point" to the others.
Sounds very interesting.
So (0,0,0) would generate the lines from 0,0,0 to 0,0,1; 0,0,0 to 0,1,0; and 0,0,0 to 1,0,0.
110 would only go from 110 -> 111
100 would go 100 -> 101 and 100 -> 110.
Yeah I see
Power set for the win!
21:57
So what does the output look like? A cube?
Seems to me that it will be very tiny
No, that's just to get the loop functionality down.
I generate the starting point at each "index" and just add the necessary length to the vector (x, y, or z).
This was a quick 5 minute thing a few days ago to get a frame in my 3D tetris game.
That I did back in 2009 and cracked open for the first time last week o.O
3d tetris? Very nice.
Still very buggy, but it was a unique concept that was able to translate into XNA very easily.
I wouldn't know how to start.
Usually, a good place to start is to get the world created and all the entities at least created (not necessarily moving).
Then you just start thinking about how each component is supposed to interact, and code to handle that.
It came together surprisingly quickly.
I'd say altogether, a month, all during a full school workload.
22:04
Lol :P
Were you a beginner then?
Wait how old are you?
26, this was 3 years ago in college.
Wow, very nice stuff
Did you do programming before then?
Yeah, I was a C++ junkie throughout high school.
Explains a lot, but it is no excuse for me.
22:11
So you know C++ well. That explains your ET obsession. You must have mastered C++ templates
Nope. Never even got to play with them, really.
In fact, the concept of OOP was lost on me.
I barely understood pointers.
Even Java didn't help out much.
I find that hard to believe
I was always doing it for recreation before, never really had to do anything "big" or complicated.
And the classes in high school I took were pitiful, mostly spaghetti code.
22:13
HS?
I understood programming logic very well, but there were some fundamental concepts that I just didn't quite grasp.
It was when I finally understood polymorphism that I got really interested and understood the power of OOP.
Now I just like to play :P
Interesting
Educational examples that have no relevance whatsoever, but give me a better grasp of the framework/programming in general.
I would think polymorphism should have made it worse.
Nope.
It was that "AHA!" moment that just made me fall in love with how complex programming is.
22:18
That's really odd tbh. Polymorphism deals with pointers mostly, and if you barely understood pointers, how the fuck did you understand polymorphism? xD
I was dealing with Java when I understood.
I had to go back to C++ and pointers in a later year, but for some reason I was perfectly fine with them.
Oh right.
Java hides all that low level stuff.
When I first dealt with them, I could never understand WHERE or WHEN to use them, so I couldn't understand WHY they were used.
Then I also learned about memory management/addresses, heap allocation, stack frames...
All those classes that most people thought were boring, I couldn't get enough of.
xD
They were fecking complex they were.
I never read that much into them
22:26
Does anyone have an opinion on the nicest way to have events with different signatures bubble up through a series of classes?
@TreeUK o.O Why would you want to?
So Enemy has events which it raises, picked up by a containing EnemyWave class, contained by a Game class
Otherwise your Game class has to interrogate all the Waves looking inside it for it's children to wire up events to.
Hmm...
Game then is the only place which is wired up to by UI code and handles the exposed OnEnemyDamaged/Killed etc.
Since signatures are different, how do you expect to handle them in the Game then?
22:30
So in the case of: public event Action<Enemy> OnEnemyKilled;
public event Action<int> OnPlayerAttacked;
The Game exposes those for the UI to wire up to
How would you go about exposing that kind of event raising then? if not via some kind of bubbling
Well, one thing I've had to do is make a message broadcaster...
But that's a little overkill here.
Hmm...
Why are you using Action delegates for your events?
Why not?
They're simple, less code than creating custom delegates
Just wondering :P
The "problem" with the .NET framework is that unless you specifically hookup an event on a custom class, no code is going to be run.
If noone's listening, the event isn't going to fire.
Agreed
Hence why atm I've got this somewhat crazy triple class redeclaration of events in order to bubble all the way up through them
Do the enemies have a reference to the EnemyWave?
22:42
No
Game has Waves, Waves have Enemies
Considered some kind of Service Locator to let the Enemies etc see other things but that just seemed overkill too
Thanks for the help, just gonna redefine the events and bubble as I said.
Actually @SPFi
I'm going to just add references to each class to their parents and have the usercontrols that are bound to the different levels wire up the events, skip the bubbling entirely. Thanks for that :)
@SPFiredrake rewrote the algo. Will send it to you. Hopefully it is working.. just did basic tests
@SPFiredrake sent. 1us later I should probably have used pastebin :O
sent you a bug fix
brb
23:12
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