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01:00
I gotta sleep. I'm ratted, and Anne and Bailey are both moaning. BFN.
@MartinJames Later.
@MartinJames Your dog is male or female? ... not do I have any implications
user3010322
01:17
@melak47 Sure. :D
404
it's private :p
lol
user3010322
Add Rapptz to it. :D
user3010322
01:21
What am I
@Rapptz there you go
user3010322
supposed to be looking at again?
user3010322
Should I download the code and build it and run it?
anything...everything. :E
@ThePhD needs boost 1.54
user3010322
Agh.
user3010322
01:22
Whyyyy. :c
because I <3 boost :3
also, boost 1.55 doesn't like VS2013 :/
dynamic bitset?
user3010322
Can you give me
user3010322
a precompiled boost 1.54 :c
is float2 a 2d vector?
01:24
@Rapptz yes. dxdr/math/vector.h
weird name for it lol
user3010322
Those are the GLSL / HLSL names, I think
user3010322
Well, HLSL
user3010322
float2, 3, 4
user3010322
float4x4
01:24
yeah, I wanted to have HLSL compatible struct definitions at some point
user3010322
That kind fo stuff
user3010322
Agh.
user3010322
Goddamn boost.
user3010322
y u do dis 2 me :c What do you even NEED boost for?
I saw dynamic_bitset
> We couldn't find any code matching 'boost'
lol okay github
01:26
@Rapptz wut
@ThePhD I use boost::chrono, and signals2
user3010322
std::chrono D:<
@melak47 #include <boost/dynamic_bitset.hpp>
user3010322
And what the hell is signals ?
@Rapptz oh, yeah and that :p
@ThePhD boost::format
@ThePhD Also for io
01:27
@ThePhD I use it for "events" in my window class
@ThePhD also if you want to read files with directories
@melak47 Qt?
the only thing I use Boost for is Boost.Filesystem.
@Mikhail no, boost :p
@melak47, I wanna see it too :(
user3010322
@Jefffrey NO YOU'RE NOT GOOD ENOUGH. D:<
user3010322
01:28
Nah I'm just kidding it's melak's decision. <3
@Jefffrey you're invited, too :p
@ThePhD But..but..ok. :.(
user3010322
I should make a StaticMesh like you have
user3010322
But I'm too lazy. :c
What's Window?
Oh I found it.
01:30
no, don't open that! it'll melt you like the nazis in Raiders of the Lost Ark
> SnakeGame
Why does it use CamelCase when everything else uses snake_case :(
I had that class too back in the early days :3
user3010322
Lol
user3010322
Why uint16_t ?
01:31
@ThePhD you're gonna have to be more specific than that :S
user3010322
For Window
user3010322
for width, height, clientwidth, clientheight...
user3010322
I know displays won't be exceeding uint16 anytime soon, but still.
I uh, don't know :)
why not uint16_t?
your Window class is really inconsistent
user3010322
01:33
I dunno
oh, no, I remember why
window sizes are 16 bits :/
user3010322
uint32_t seems like jsut a more natural choice
user3010322
.... They are? o.0
user3010322
WORDs?
when a window changes its size, you get the new dimensions packed in a DWORD
2 words in a DWORD = 1 WORD each
user3010322
01:34
Oh.
on the other hand, CreateWindowEx etc take ints...sooo...whatever :E
Why do you have getters for height and stuff but the actual fields are public?
I have getters?
apparently I do..
lol
Why are all members of this class public?
01:36
I just realized Jeffrey uses snake case...
Apparently this did not occur to me before.
the casing is inconsistent too
@Rapptz yep :/
@Pawnguy7 I used camel case in the other snake.
Window *win = reinterpret_cast<Window*>(GetWindowLongPtr(hwnd, GWLP_USERDATA));
So what's wrong with it?
Is that yours @melak47?
01:38
@Jefffrey define other snake
@Jefffrey what do you mean?
@Pawnguy7 The one that has textures and I've abandoned
@melak47 You wrote it?
@Jefffrey I didn't invent it, but yes?
01:38
What was meant to be there?
@Rapptz shut up :E
@Jefffrey I thought it was snake_case too
user3010322
FPSCamera's are overrated anyways.
@melak47 :D
Oh neat. Dinner time.
I started a branch for that, did something else instead :p
01:39
I wonder if I could build this in MinGW.
user3010322
Try it and let me know.
when I come back from dinner sure
@ThePhD why did you quit last time? ... are you the original phd or his clone/duplicate?
@melak47 It's officially the first time that I see a reinterpret_cast actually used somewhere ;)
01:41
my avatar is my reaction when i first tried to make a GUI in C++
@User17 since he has access to my github repo, he must be the original :)
O_o
user3010322
@User17 Because my love for you was so overwhelming, that I couldn't take it and had to leave, otherwise I would have lost myself in my deep affection for your stunning beauty, your neverending grace, and your scholarly aptitude.
So this is what I need to do get my Haswell down to a managable temperature... youtube.com/watch?v=2eFzNpTOaOw
totally original phd, always so sweet towards everyone ... except I am sure you would say that to a turtle too if the turtle is indeed a regular here :x
01:43
Um...
@Mysticial have fun with that :E
@melak47 I'm so not gonna do that...
BIN IT WITH FIRE
Aaaaaaaand bin.
01:44
Deliding is one thing...
Wait what?
bin what?
user3010322
Lol
Oh...
I plonked telkitty. that's why I couldn't see it.
@melak47 Delidding is one thing. The problem is figuring out how to mount the heatsink without the lid.
user3010322
EnumParser<Semantic> SemanticParser
        {
                {Binormal, "BINORMAL"},
                {Normal,"NORMAL"},
                {Tangent, "TANGENT"},
                {TexCoord, "TEXCOORD"},
                {SV_Position, "SV_Position"}
        };
user3010322
^ I actually like it, BUT
Since even the smallest screw up will crush the CPU die.
user3010322
01:46
the underlying storage makes me sad. =[
user3010322
Plus, I'm not sure it can handle flaggable values. :c
@ThePhD y u no liek maps
user3010322
Not bad for an approach to the engine.
user3010322
I like how it's going so far.
user3010322
Pretty clean API, a little hand-and-arm tied to D3D but Shrug.
user3010322
01:48
That's life.
@ThePhD I like it better if I can just use strings, plus it'll be more extensible.
user3010322
@MarkGarcia ?
user3010322
I don't see what you mean.
@ThePhD I guess you're using an enum for those Binormal and stuff. You have to extend that enum if you're adding attributes, which is kind of a violation for the library.
Still I'm just guessing what you're doing.
user3010322
Oh, that.
user3010322
01:49
Not my library, it's Melak's
@MarkGarcia Using strings would be slow though -/
@Borgleader Then I'll prefer tag types.
user3010322
@Borgleader The underlying API takes strings
@ThePhD I can't decide where to put things... i.e., should a constant buffer have methods for binding it to PS, VS, whateverShader, or should I just mirror the D3D API and have context.PSSetConstantBuffer(s)? :/
01:50
I care about extensibility.
@MarkGarcia those strings aren't extensible :p
user3010322
@melak47 Hm. Maybe I should show you my implementation thus far...
user3010322
..... AS SOON AS I CAN UPLOAD IT AFTER I BUILD D:<
@ThePhD I can send you the precompiled boost now :D
user3010322
Just put it in the Dropbox.
01:51
do you want the ultra compressed 390MB version, or the uncompressed 9.37 GB one?
@melak47 Oh. Hehe. Then I guess that's more than enough. ;)
@melak47 That's Boost?
user3010322
.... Wat.
As in the Boost C++ Libraries?
user3010322
How about no to either. @__@
1 min ago, by melak47
@ThePhD I can send you the precompiled boost now :D
01:52
@MarkGarcia yeah
@ThePhD haha, wha?
user3010322
Are you including, like
user3010322
ALL of boost in there?
user3010322
Or just the precompiled binaries? @__@
user3010322
If it's just the binaries than WTF is boost smoking?!
@melak47 I wonder what compiler are you using, but my builds just tops at 4GB.
01:53
well, uh, I suppose I could delete the dlls and just give you the libs :D
user3010322
Bleh
user3010322
No, it's fine
@MarkGarcia 32+64 bit?
user3010322
Just drop in the compressed version
user3010322
@___@
01:54
@ThePhD I can remove some 800KB docs :)
@melak47 Ah. I only build 32 bits though. That's why.
user3010322
@melak47 Oh, man, you're a lifesaver! I wouldn't know what to do with all that extra space!
user3010322
That's like, a QUICK GIF man.
what the hell
my boost 1.54 libs all have 1_55 in the name
user3010322
Lol.
01:56
I'm not entirely sure what version I'm sending you :E
user3010322
Get fucked.
12 minutes left :p
or you could just use your boost 1.53
don't see why it shouldn't work
user3010322
I don't have boost anymore.
user3010322
I ran out of space because LLVM builds are mother fuckers.
the precompiled 1.53 is still in the dropbox :D
user3010322
01:58
I ended up deleting them both in the end so now I got lots of space.
user3010322
Why do you need it compiled anyways?
user3010322
Aren't all the libraries you're using templated and header-only?
I don't think so
I mean, you can try :p
@ThePhD Most, not all.
chrono and signals both have libs in my boost binary folders
user3010322
02:00
Oh.
user3010322
Then nevermind.
why boost.chrono?
user3010322
Also, why not std::chrono?
user3010322
I thought std:: was up to snuff in that regard?
std::chrono seems to get me inferior resolution to boost::chrono :/
user3010322
02:00
Oh. Probably
user3010322
After all
user3010322
typedef system_clock high_resolution_clock; or w/e on MSVC
same with gcc but I get good resolution
I'm not depending on it too much right now, you should be able to just switch it out...but there's still signals
user3010322
Meh.
user3010322
02:01
This is why you roll your own events~
so, when do I get to look at your void* mess? :3
user3010322
Which reminds me, I still haven't figured out how to restrict class ownership.
restrict_ptr
user3010322
=l
restrict ownership of what to whom?
user3010322
02:03
struct Arf {
     Event<int> woofcount;

};

int main () {
    Arf a;
    a.woofcount(); // Nice, anyone can shoot off messages!
}
Event<int>...?
user3010322
The ideal would be that the owning class (Arf) would be the only one who can call .Invoke or () on events declared in its scope.
cout << "Hello world";
user3010322
@Rapptz It's an example.
user3010322
One way to solve this is to add a template parameter
02:07
@ThePhD private?
user3010322
struct Arf {
     Event<Arf, int> woofcount;

     void Invoke () {
          woofcount( 2 );
     }
};

int main () {
    Arf a;
    a.woofcount(0xBADCA11); // Error: private function not accessible
    a.Invoke();
}
user3010322
@MarkGarcia How do you subscribe to the Event<int> if it's private?
Why not private?
through accessors
Arf owns the event, why expose it?
user3010322
That doesn't make sense. Returning an const Event<int>& means that internally you can't modify the storage of Event<int> without doing a const cast inside and then declaring the subscriber functions on Event<...> to be const.
user3010322
That's a massive violation of least-surprise.
02:09
I need to stop booking myself into all these social events
user3010322
@User17 Stay in and code more. <3
You really can't see how private solves your issue?
I need to ... if I don't complete my current project by the same time next week. I might as well kill myself
@ThePhD upload finished
user3010322
@melak47 Now it has to download.
02:11
@Rapptz you're back? does that mean you tried to build it with mingw yet? :p
I shall attempt!
good luck :E
The thing is that the project was almost completed, but there are just paramount amount of bugs
@Rapptz does mingw even have all the d3d dxgi etc headers?
user3010322
@Rapptz You make it private, but then to subscribe (or to get subscribe operators) you have to take up function names on the class you placed the event on. Just to achieve encapsulation, that's NOT a good burden to place on your clients.
user3010322
02:12
@melak47 Yes.
@melak47 Mingw-w64
lol not used to putting my password to clone
I'm almost certain it won't compile.
gcc doesn't have __declspec(property()), does it? :p
user3010322
Lol.
@melak47 I tried D2D in mingw once and it worked, except for that the resize method segfaults in the distributable DLL. It's not mingw's fault I think.
user3010322
02:14
Here, I've been talking about it a lot...
@melak47 I'm just bored.
user3010322
Let me just post an actual example.
user3010322
@Rapptz PAPER?!?!
Mainly testing my meta build system.
....wat, I see no errors
02:17
I just made the ninja file, that's all
you'll want to build snake as well :D
user3010322
@Rapptz @MarkGarcia Here's the problem, how would you solve it with minimal inconvenience to the user of "Event" ? coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/25db3b55088516cd
user3010322
Oh and @Xeo too
@ThePhD Make another class called EventCaller or something, which, well, calls the event. Make the EventCaller private while keeping the Event public.
And make Event's operator() private, and make EventCaller a friend class so that it can call Event::operator().
Friends can be useful sometimes. :P
user3010322
So you propose something like
user3010322
02:25
private: EventCaller<int> on_woof;
public: Event<int> OnWoof = on_woof;
Personally, I'd rather make Event as HandlerSet, and EventCaller as Event.
@ThePhD Something like that.
Might be the other way though.
public: Event<int> OnWoof;
private: EventCaller<int> on_woof = OnWoof;
Only EventCaller needs a reference to the Event object.
user3010322
Hm.
user3010322
I suppose that's the least cumbersome.
user3010322
It requires you to initialize it in the constructor every goddamn time, but beggers can't be choosers. :P
user3010322
02:28
.... Um.
@ThePhD We need the committee to make a "initialize from sibling member" feature for member initializers. :P
@Rapptz but now everything that wants to have events needs to define add_signal :/
-shrug-
I came up with it impromptu
That's one option.
It solves the issue.
user3010322
02:29
It is one way of solving it, but I don't think it scales very well. That, and uh. ANyone who's used C# events will flip their shit. :P
This isn't C# bud.
user3010322
Doesn't mean we can't have nice things!
I like the += syntax.
Also I probably should have called it connect
but meh, it solves the problem unless you have a million events then it's just annoying but for < 7 events it's manageable :s
user3010322
It does indeed.
02:32
Actually.
If you have a consistent naming scheme then it doesn't be difficult
it doesn't be difficult? :)
meh
doesn't have to be*
Also.
Thanks to you I found a bug in my text wrapping.
:D
@Rapptz ?
I think I'll rejoin the hype and make another attempt to create a graphics library. :P
user3010322
02:37
^ @MarkGarcia With field initializers
user3010322
your approach is VERY good
user3010322
It provides the least amount of bullshit and only costs 1 extra reference
@melak47 My meta build system indents everything by 1
this breaks wrapping
@ThePhD That's great!
02:38
yay I cought an exception saying "The operation completed successfully" >_>
it shouldn't do that
Normally, if I ever find my class not able to do something, I'll first consider making another one.
@melak47 lol
user3010322
@MarkGarcia Indeed. @EtiennedeMartel this might be relevant to what you were talking about before with a class owning its delcaring class
user3010322
Oh also @Xeo, because he should see it and tell us if we did a good thing or not. <3
I don't get how that's more maintainable than the enum btw
user3010322
02:40
@Rapptz It preserves the original syntax of Event ( myclassinstance.SomeEvent += myfunction; ) and prevents any user but the class itself from calling the event.
uh-huh..so CreateWindowEx "completed successfully", but didn't return a window handle. what
user3010322
There's actually a potentially easier way to go about it, though.
@melak47 I had the same problem once. Caused by an invalid style flag.
@MarkGarcia but I didn't change my styles :(
Or an invalid parameter. WinAPI is really good in hiding errors. :(
user3010322
02:44
Problem: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/25db3b55088516cd
Solution 1, Event Caller: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/362e12f7ef23a9e5
Solution 2, Template Friend: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/0fcabbd33921d2a5

@R.MartinhoFernandes @Xeo which would you prefer? :O
user3010322
@MarkGarcia ^ templating friends is another way to go about it
user3010322
You have to declare an extra template parameter, but it's arguably less work than EventCaller
@MarkGarcia you have had that problem too?
If you're so hellbent on your syntax, go with solution 2.
oaky, found the problem. Apparently windows doesn't like it if I throw in my WndProc? :p
02:47
It's probably the best solution.
@Pawnguy7 Some unsupported style on my OS. The style's for Windows 8 only.
@ThePhD Whatever suits you.
@MarkGarcia do you remember what it was?
@melak47 It's okay if you're handling them in your message loop. And if it's single-threaded also I think.
@MarkGarcia it's not single threaded. :D
user3010322
@Rapptz I just want something that someone would pick up and say "Wow, this is really easy and convenient to use."
02:50
@melak47 That's why. Normally I don't want to go into the complexity of a multithreaded message loop.
user3010322
Syntax makes or breaks that ease of use. It's why people want generic lambdas and other things in C++: because we don't want the syntax to be a godawful mess.
this syntax is an abuse of overloaded operators
@Pawnguy7 WS_EX_LAYERED when used in a control.
user3010322
Is it really?
it only makes sense for people who come from C#
imo anyway
user3010322
02:51
True enough, I guess.
@MarkGarcia Oh. Have you had any other similar parameter trouble?
@MarkGarcia the problem was just that I assumed my WndProc wouldn't be called on any windows but my own - so it should always have a pointer to my window instance in the user data segment. but maybe it get's invoked before that user data is set
@ThePhD so, what is this furrovine?
user3010322
@Pawnguy7 Huh?
You are making something, correct?
02:52
@Pawnguy7 Some with wrong class names, but for most of the time experimenting, it worked.
is Boost.Signals2 header only?
@Rapptz idk
@melak47 Ah the this in user data trick. I haven't yet encountered a problem with it.
user3010322
@MarkGarcia My problem with it so far is that messages can slip through the cracks.
user3010322
Like WM_NC_CREATE
02:54
@melak47 Okay. Um. I couldn't get it to compile btw
Your headers can't be found
@ThePhD You can also provide a this through the LPSTARTUPINFO.
@MarkGarcia me either. I just decided I would throw if the window WndProc was called on didn't have the this ptr there (which I assumed must mean it's not my window)
@MarkGarcia Oh. I couldn't create a window. I will have to check the registration part again or something.
@Rapptz what headers
Not the directX headers, just your headers
user3010322
02:54
Because you can't do SetWindowLongPtr until after you get the hwnd, and before the CreateWindowEx launches, it shoots like ~10 messages before the function exits.
In file included from D3DEngine/src/dxdr/ShaderSemantics.cpp:1:0:
D3DEngine/src/dxdr/ShaderSemantics.h:2:29: fatal error: util/EnumParser.h: No such file or directory

 #include "util/EnumParser.h"
                             ^
idgi
@ThePhD In my proxy wndproc, I always check if the pointer is nullptr. Haven't failed me yet.
@Rapptz I added /src as an include dir
user3010322
@MarkGarcia I do this too, but I was wondering if there was a better approach. :c
user3010322
@DeadMG :O
user3010322
02:55
What magic parameter is this?
user3010322
I haven't seen it before...
@ThePhD WinAPI parameters are always magical. :P
user3010322
HWND WINAPI CreateWindowEx(
  _In_      DWORD dwExStyle,
  _In_opt_  LPCTSTR lpClassName,
  _In_opt_  LPCTSTR lpWindowName,
  _In_      DWORD dwStyle,
  _In_      int x,
  _In_      int y,
  _In_      int nWidth,
  _In_      int nHeight,
  _In_opt_  HWND hWndParent,
  _In_opt_  HMENU hMenu,
  _In_opt_  HINSTANCE hInstance,
  _In_opt_  LPVOID lpParam
);
user3010322
Where's this startup instance thingymahjigger?
@ThePhD I think it's for CreateProcess :E
so I'm a bit confused @DeadMG
@ThePhD hInstance? Use GetModuleHandle(nullptr).
look at the first member.
it contains the last parameter to CreateWindowEx.
Isn't it passed in WinMain?
@melak47 nah, it's just GCC handles "" differently than <>, where as VS doesn't
@Pawnguy7 It is, but that's fugly to handle realistically.
02:59
fuck WinMain. I don't have one :)

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