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11:06
^ Still missing this..
I should get some of that RSS stuff sometime
user3010322
Welp.
user3010322
Airport time.
user3010322
Now I just have to dick around for an hour before the flght leaves.
user925777
hey! are there any good guidelines or recommendations on when should function return pointer vs reference. for example, a simple getter. should a getter return a pointer or a reference?
user3010322
11:10
A getter shouldn't exist if it's just a dumb grabber.
user3010322
Make the variable public if it's just a simple getter/setter and save the hassle.
Best is to return by value. Second best is reference. Third is pointer.
user925777
I'm not going to do public variables, I'm not comfortable with that :)
Ell
Ell
@JaakkoLipsanen How come?
user3010322
Never let me near your code. :D
11:12
@JaakkoLipsanen Then you lose by default.
user925777
I just dislike public variables, except on POD classes
Ell
Ell
Good reason ;)
irrational biases guarantee bad code.
come back when you can handle writing good code
Public variables are rarely a good thing.
user925777
StackedCrooked: in what cases should I return pointer instead of reference?
11:13
If you find that you need to make them private later then it may be difficult because so much code already depends on it.
@JaakkoLipsanen If it can be null.
Ell
Ell
I think pointer if it's some kind of memory buffer
maybe.
idk :P
Factory should return std::unique_ptr of course.
user1804599
I like dictionaries.
@Ell Dude.
A pointer is an address.
Ell
Ell
Yah
11:14
It's really bad as a buffer. (But some people do it!)
user1804599
@Ell Then you’d have begin() and end().
user1804599
They could return pointers.
user925777
StackedCrooked: what about if the value can be null, but the getter should never be called when it's null (basically, if the class isn't initialized yet)
Ell
Ell
ref to std::vector? I really don't know :L
user925777
should I make it return a reference and throw an exception for example if the value is null?
11:15
two-phase initialization?
you seriously suck.
user925777
:D
@JaakkoLipsanen That should be impossible. If that is made possible then something is wrong with the design.
returning a reference or pointer or value is the least of your problems.
user925777
:(
@Puppy lol
user1804599
11:15
@JaakkoLipsanen How can you invoke a method on an object that hasn’t been initialised yet?
user1804599
Apart from calling it from within the constructor, of course.
@JaakkoLipsanen You should probably throw an exception then.
user925777
rightfold: the object has been initialized, the stuff that the getter returns might not be yet
user3010322
That's not very comforting.
user1804599
Then it’s not initialised.
11:16
either initialize it in the getter as you need it, or don't provide a getter for it.
user3010322
MyThing t;
t.Init(); // might as well just call abort()
ITT we want to be comforted
@ThePhD what exactly are you doing with your thing?
user3010322
Take the Init() call and put it in MyThing's constructor.
user1804599
@ThePhD Eww, mutability.
user3010322
Rightfold, I might need your help to make Glaskell soon.
user1804599
11:18
What is Glaskell?
user3010322
Since you like building parsers and all.
user1804599
I don’t.
user3010322
Oh. Then why do you make so many of them for so many languages?
user1804599
Because you cannot parse without a parser.
glaskell?
user925777
11:19
well I have "int main() { Game game; game.Run(); return 0; }". if somebody calls game->GetGraphicsDevice(); before calling game.Run() then it will be null :P but nobody should ever call it!
@ThePhD Because he keeps making new languages.
More than you :)
But you got further.
@JaakkoLipsanen You suck. The game.run() logic should be in main().
@StackedCrooked A lot further.
user1804599
@JaakkoLipsanen Why is there a game class?
user3010322
@JaakkoLipsanen GraphicsDevice should be initialized before the game's constructor ends.
user1804599
11:19
Just have a RunGame function which uses local variables.
for some reason that looks weird to me
user925777
rightfold: but that's ugly :(
user1804599
No, it’s not.
user925777
also the Game class is.. "abstract"(?)
user1804599
wat
11:20
@JaakkoLipsanen It's substantially less ugly than having a Game class.
user1804599
> Game game;
user3010322
Abstract can't apply to a concrete object.
user925777
rightfold: that was pseudo-code
You instantiated it. Not abstract.
user1804599
OIC.
user3010322
11:20
@milleniumbug Pseudo-code.
user925777
MyGame game;
game.Run();
user925777
looks like this in reality
user925777
MyGame inherits from Game
user3010322
@Puppy Makes it easier to wrap things in a Try-Catch block.
this is definitely very suck.
user3010322
11:21
@JaakkoLipsanen :(
user3010322
Oh!
user3010322
I have an example that can help him.
@ThePhD Must be so hard to do try { /* stuff */ } catch(...) { /* stuff */ }
user1804599
// @JaakkoLipsanen
void RunGame(GraphicsDevice& gd) {
    State state;
    for (;;) {
        auto input = ReadInput();
        state = UpdateState(state, input);
        DrawGame(state, gd);
    }
}
user925777
Is my design really that awful :P ?
user1804599
11:21
Something like this or something.
> MyGame
@JaakkoLipsanen Yes.
user925777
:(
user925777
Maybe I should just go back to C#
user925777
11:22
the superior language!
nah
your design would be equally shit in C#.
it's a shit design no matter what language you implement it in.
user925777
it's pretty much 1:1 design from XNA
I imagine getting Crysis' sources for Windows just to see that it is called WindowsApplication1
I'd laugh my ass off
@JaakkoLipsanen Pro tip: Microsoft can't design APIs for shit.
they occassionally push out stuff like PPL or LINQ but most of it is pure crap.
user3010322
@JaakkoLipsanen XNA is not the greatest API in the world, though it was functional.
user3010322
11:23
Having used XNA for a long time myself, I know where you're coming from.
user3010322
Look at the link I gave you; that's a design of a "game" class from an engine I have. Notice the constructor does all the initialization and there's no "Init" method necessary: run does not initialize any internal variables, it just starts a loop and keeps track of a few timers, nothing more.
user925777
hmm
user3010322
All initialization should be done by the person who wants to deal with certain things. If there is anything to be built or constructed, it should be initialized in the constructor.
user3010322
And nowhere else.
unless you lazily initialize it in the getter.
user1804599
11:26
Unless you want lazy initialisation, but you should do that everywhere the thing is accessible (i.e. write a function because fuck duplicate code).
user3010322
@JaakkoLipsanen If the base "Game" class were to make a GraphicsDevice, you would need to ensure that the GraphicsDevice object was created when the Game class was constructed, not when Run is called (because that just means your class can fail after it 'successfully' constructed, which is a bad message to send to people).
user925777
yeah.. okay.. I think that I can move all the module/system initialization stuff from Run to constructor
user3010322
Smart choice.
user1804599
I don’t see why there needs to be a class at all, really.
user1804599
It has only a single function and no other behaviour, and that function is only called once anyway.
user1804599
11:32
You could just as well make the members local variables and the function a free function and everything will work fine.
user3010322
@rightfold I use it when I want to ensure things like VerticalSync and time-based tick/update calls.
user1804599
Uh.
user1804599
You don’t need a class for that.
user925777
rightfold: the point is that it is reusable. The "Game" class is in the "engine code" while on my game projects, I just inherit from it, override few methods and tadaahh it works
user1804599
Oh right, I forgot that functions are not reusable and higher-order functions don’t exist.
user3010322
11:34
Game class should probably != engine
user1804599
@ThePhD How do you do that exactly in a way that cannot be achieved by making the variables required to do that local variables?
user1804599
IOW, how does it not fit within here?
user925777
rightfold: well, I dont really like C-like coding :) OOP ftw!
user925777
ThePHD: what do you mean?
user3010322
@rightfold Easy: it's a class that has 3 timers on it and 3 std::chrono<long long, milli> on it that keep track of render, update, and running time. It calls Update() and Render() based on the times you pass in.
user1804599
11:36
@JaakkoLipsanen I also don’t like hammers, so I hit nails with a screwdriver.
user1804599
@ThePhD Why can they not be local variables of a RunGame function?
user1804599
You can perfectly pass them as arguments. Doesn’t have to go through this.
@rightfold ≈you're screwed
user925777
@rightfold: while you are using the hammer, I'm using nail gun and be a lot more efficient! :P
user1804599
A nail gun would be a pure functional design.
user1804599
11:38
What you’re doing is a screw driver, i.e. the completely wrong tool for the job.
@JaakkoLipsanen and oop you go
user925777
:) I'm pretty new to C++ and I just prefer the OOP approach
user3010322
@rightfold They can be. But then, you can take any class and just blow it up into a function with RunGame() that takes an onupdate() function and an onrender() function.
user1804599
And it would be great.
user1804599
Fuck classes with only a single non-returning method.
user1804599
11:39
If the only real way of using your class is my_class().some_method(); then my_class is terrible.
user3010322
If onupdate and onrender are just going to access the same state, it makes much more sense to place it in the same function or have it be part of a class.
user925777
@rightfold: it has a lot more methods. Exit, Update/Draw/Initialize (these are overridable), CreateDefaultScene, SetupGraphics etc
user925777
and i just started making this, so there might be more in the future
user1804599
They can all be utility functions.
user1804599
They are private anyway.
user1804599
11:40
So wtf.
user925777
or they can all be virtual functions in the class!
user925777
they are protected or public
user1804599
Eww, calling virtual functions from a class in any way other than NVI.
OOP is like learning the national martial art in your military school. They teach you to fight and it probably gets you further. Somehow people started thinking this way is the proper way to fight.
But it's just one style.
@JaakkoLipsanen There are many approaches, and most problems are best solved by a combination, and some problems are best solved by one approach which may well not be OOP.
you will never succeed in C++ or C# if you cannot handle non-OOP approaches.
user1804599
11:41
@StackedCrooked Laten we ISIS joinen.
user1804599
Gezellig elkaar kapotschieten.
user3010322
@Puppy Or he will, get paid lots of money to make something, and then someone else is going to come across his code and gouge their eyes out.
user925777
I understand that :P But I don't believe that OOP is inferior approach in this case
Brazilian Capoeira Jutsu
@JaakkoLipsanen Yes, but you just said that you have an OOP bias.
which is trivially obvious to everyone from your code, by the way.
user925777
11:43
Puppy: well sure, but that's mostly because I have programmed with C# for the past years and I have just started to use C++. It's hard to not to have an OOP bias!
alright
I'm not saying that having an OOP bias is your fault.
user925777
:D
I know that there's a lot of OOP biased people, materials, and languages out there.
Mainstream OOP has as much relation with object orientation as mainstream music has to do with all of music.
and C# certainly was one of them and Microsoft almost universally is one of them.
but if you want to produce good code, you're gonna have to get over it.
I had an OOP bias phase too.
it didn't last very long because I'm a genius and the other Loungers smacked me in the face until I got it
user1804599
11:45
Speaking of programming paradigms.
user1804599
I want to write something in Clojure. It’s been a long time.
user1804599
@Puppy same :D
OOP today is basically inheriting abstract classes and implementing interfaces again and again.
user925777
StackerCrooked: thats my code exactly.. Basically all of my classes are interfaces. "ISomething" -> "clas Something : public ISomething"
user925777
I know that I'm overusing them :P
user1804599
11:47
We use classes a little too much at work because I wasn’t very familiar with DI when we started.
user1804599
But now I realised you can just use partial application instead.
user1804599
But this project is old and starts to suck.
@JaakkoLipsanen Yeah. Run-time inheritance isn't actually that useful in many problem spaces.
user925777
it's just that I'm not sure how to do it otherwise. Basically I'm trying to abstract all library-specific stuff so that when I'm actually coding the game, I wont have to for example call any OpenGL functions etc. And I'd also like to design the code in way that I could later possibly add a Direct3D renderer.
user1804599
Higher-order functions and arguments.
user925777
11:50
so now I have for example "IShader" -> OGL::Shader, "ITexture2D" -> OGL::Texture2D, "IVertexBuffer" -> OGL::VertexBuffer
first
user1804599
Templates.
OO-wrapping OGL is a joke, OGL is chock-full of shitty global mutable state and there's nothing you can do about it. D3D is much better in this regard.
user925777
Puppy: yeah I know but it kinda works at the moment :)
user1804599
Kinda works ≠ works.
11:51
but secondly
user925777
well I want to belive that it will work!
user1804599
Faith-based programming is not a good thing.
the reality of it is that it's a waste of time.
by that, I mean that the probability that you would be able to abstract OGL away enough to feasibly swap in D3D is very minimal.
and even if you succeeded, the value of doing so is, again, minimal.
D3D is a superior API from an API perspective, so if you only need Windows support then just use that; else you can use OGL on all platforms so just use that.
there is not a tremendous amount of value on being able to switch out your rendering API at run-time.
even if you decided you would run D3D on Windows and OGL elsewhere, you could switch them out at compile-time much more reliably and efficiently than doing so at run-time.
user925777
@Puppy: I'm not going to change the API at runtime. I know that I could do typedefs etc to not have to rely on inheritance/interfaces/virtual stuff, but that feels a bit hacky to me
@JaakkoLipsanen It's not hacky. It's vastly superior. Inheritance is hacky.
typedefs are designed for exactly this problem.
inheritance is designed for a totally different problem and has totally the wrong semantics for what you need.
run-time inheritance is only the right solution if you need to swap between derived class instances at run-time.
but you can't do that, and you can't mix an OGL::Shader with a D3D::VertexBuffer, so your interface is a total lie.
you promise your user semantics you can't implement and you do it because you don't need the semantics of the code you're writing, which is clearly insane.
user925777
11:57
well the user doesn't have access to OGL::Shader (since it's in private header).. but yeah... damn!
user925777
maybe I should use typedefs then
well, think of it this way.
if you have a function that accepts an IShader, I can't derive from it and provide my own shader.
only an OGL::Shader is really acceptable.
so... you've gained nothing by promising your user that any IShader is a valid parameter.
user925777
yeah
user925777
true
user925777
:(
user925777
11:59
damn
user925777
I shouldn't have come here, now I'm really sad
don't be sad
you learned something important.
your code was shit before you came here, the difference is that now you know it and you know why, which is definitely an improvement in your situation.
user1804599
Always be sad. You suck.
user925777
:(
shut up rightfold
4
user1804599
12:02
Hey, fuck.
user1804599
> -10 22:41 removed User was removed (learn more)
Correct log is correct.
user1804599
This is cool:
user1804599
Does native arrays have a built-in T operator[](index_type) and can it be introspected with decltype/sfinae or some other way?
user1804599
12:14
Maybe. Probably not.
Or shorter, what is the native index type for native arrays?
size_t?
int?
user1804599
std::size_t
ptrdiff_t
and I doubt that you can actually introspect the operator itself.
> std::ptrdiff_t is the signed integer type of the result of subtracting two pointers.
Xeo
Xeo
the standard has "for exposition" signatures of built-in operators
Was this back when 2GB of memory was sufficient?
This was when 32-bit machines were becoming more popular.
For example Java max array elements is 2G because they don't sign there stuff.
So max image size in ImageJ is 2GP
There were still many 16-bit machines.
@Mikhail 2G ought to be enough for everyone.
You can always make arrays or arrays if you need more :D
@Mikhail No, it's 2G because they fixed the width at 32bit.
else they could simply go up to a 64bit signed int which would be easily large enough.
12:22
@Puppy yeah but it could be 4GB
eh.
user1804599
No, because Java has no 32-bit unsigned integer types.
that's only for 32bit processes running on 64bit OSes.
and if you're using Java why would you ever not use 64bit on a 64bit OS?
64-bit is so long that long can't even contain it.
user1804599
int in Java is always 32 bits regardless of architecture.
12:23
on a 32bit OS it's pretty rare that you could get above 2GB for a single array and still have enough space left for everything you need.
In the same vein it would be cool if we had hardware checking for unsigned integer underflow. if (unsigned - signed < 0)
we do, AFAIK.
the languages simply don't normally expose it.
user1804599
You shouldn’t be able to subtract a signed integer from an unsigned integer.
user1804599
They’re distinct types.
pretty sure that in Wide, you cannot do so.
user1804599
12:25
There should be an explicit typecast.
unless signed is bigger than unsigned, in which case unsigned -> bigger signed is a lossless conversion.
how does it work in Go?
Scott's argument is that signed index at least makes sanity checking possible. However, can't you achieve the same by using unsigned int and also check for range [0,max_uint/2)
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold I like that in Haskell, floor and similar return integers
instead of the same type that was passed in
@StackedCrooked Nope. Both Windows and Unix permit more than half the address space for user-mode programs under certain conditions.
user1804599
12:27
@Mikhail type error.
user1804599
You cannot subtract ints and uints in Go.
user1804599
You need to explicitly convert either operand.
Xeo
Xeo
abs should also be signed -> unsigned
@rightfold Yeah we should have that in C++
it would break way too much code.
12:28
Maybe something like -Wall could prevent it?
user1804599
I know clang warns when comparing signed integers and unsigned integers.
user1804599
But I don’t know what else it warns about.
there are quite a few warnings with good C++ implementations about potentially unsafe signed/unsigned mixes.
idk i get fucked by it in VS often
so often I have stopped using unsigned
hence why I said "good".
Xeo
Xeo
12:29
the Usual Arithmetic Conversions are fucked up
and complicated
it's annoying
user1804599
I think that in Go the operands to arithmetic operators must always be of the same type.
only made worse by the fact that signed integer overflow/underflow is UB.
user1804599
You cannot even add int and int64.
@Puppy Isn't it well defined as underflow/overflow?
@Mikhail Only unsigned.
Xeo
Xeo
12:30
@Mikhail no
Ell
Ell
Only unsigned
Reading Google Groups discussion from 2003. That's actually the year that I started learning C++ using Accelerated C++ in preparation for internship at game company.
Xeo
Xeo
@Puppy unsigned has no under-/overflow :P
@rightfold That's pretty silly, because int (assuming int32 here) can be losslessly expanded to int64.
user1804599
> Comparisons are discussed elsewhere. For other binary operators, the operand types must be identical unless the operation involves shifts or untyped constants. For operations involving constants only, see the section on constant expressions.
user1804599
12:31
@Puppy int is either int32 or int64 depending on the target architecture. But yeah, you cannot add int32 and int64 either.
user1804599
But this behaviour is simple and simplicity is good.
user1804599
user=> (type (+ (short 2) (int 2)))
java.lang.Long
user1804599
lol
user1804599
@LuchianGrigore been a long time.
Ell
Ell
I think I'll try to build wide again
12:35
heeeeey
sup?
yeah, hard @ work
Ell
Ell
I have clang 3.5
user1804599
This is terrible:
user1804599
user=> (type (+ 1/2 3.14))
java.lang.Double
looks like scheme
Ell
Ell
why is it terrible?
12:37
@Xeo then what is the correct term to refer to the rollover to 0?
user1804599
Because you have a ratio and it implicitly converts it to a double.
because i often hear people refer to this as unsigned overflow and I want to be more correct than them.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked "unsigned integers obey the arithmetic modulo 2^n" or something like that is how the standard describes it
owkey
unsigned integer overflow causes the number to be reduced modulo a power of two, > meaning that unsigned integers "wrap around" on overflow. This "wrap around" is the cause of the famous "Split Screen" in Pac-Man.[1] A "wrap around" corresponds to the fact, that e.g. if the addition of two positive integers produces an overflow, it may result in an unexpected result.
Wikipedia uses "wrap around" with explicit quotes.
Ell
Ell
@rightfold I guess.
12:41
@Ell You'll probably fail then, because Wide is built against 3.4 and Clang does not keep API compatibility.
Ell
Ell
Ahh I see
but if you're on Linux 64 I have a TC build you can download
Ell
Ell
I won't bother then
I am on linux 64
wut, I'm still on 14.04
Ell
Ell
also, I can never tell how to build clang + llvm correctly
12:42
@Ell Let me just run it to make sure it's the latest commit, it's not always great at noticing changes.
Ell
Ell
@Puppy Okay, cheers :)
@Ell stacked-crooked.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/llvm/clang (first run ./checkout-clang.sh them ./rebuild-clang.sh)
Xeo
Xeo
> --enable-assertions=no
why would you ever do this :(
I'm not gonna fix their bugs.
12:45
@Xeo Because Clang asserts on everything.
Xeo
Xeo
No?
With assertions disabled, you'll likely just get a compiler crash and sit there, dumbfounded
Ell
Ell
Hmm. I only have boost 1.55
LLVM asserts on invalid input.
@Ell that's the latest version
Ell
Ell
Yeah I need 1.54, I'll dl and build
12:47
@Ell Oh yeah, Cat's dynamic linking shit is super annoying. I think that LLVM and Clang are statically linked into that executable, but Boost is dynamically linked. Or they could both be dynamically linked. Not sure.
Xeo
Xeo
@Puppy ?
@Puppy I used a copy of the boost 1.55 lib and renamed it to 1.54 for your Wide.
Xeo
Xeo
Clang doesn't assert if I give it an invalid program, unless it has a bug
@StackedCrooked lol
@Xeo Yeah, but that's Clang, not LLVM.
it's boost program options
Xeo
Xeo
12:49
Yes, and guess what, we were talking about Coliru's Clang build
well, I was merely describing why I might want to build without assertions.
although the optimal behaviour would be instead to replace it with an exception throw.
Xeo
Xeo
@Puppy So you want a crash in LLVM instead of an assertion?
Or what do you get instead of an assertion for invalid input?
well, ideally, I'd really prefer an exception.
@Xeo On two occasions I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.
Ell
Ell
hmm. I think installing 1.54.0 will overwrite my 1.54.55 headers won't it?
12:53
not actually sure if PO changed significantly between the two versions.
but I think you don't need the -dev version with headers, just the raw package with the libraries.
user1804599
@Ell Not if you do not install it to the same location.
Ell
Ell
aha I got "Didn't request any files to be compiled" Time to learn how to write wide :P
have a look at the tests in semantictest.
they contain examples of most things
I love how Babbage got annoyed by stupid users when the computer was only a concept.
oh yeah, and I'd make a shell script with the include paths you need in it, because stupid Clang won't make their GCC header finding code re-usable.
so right now Wide can't find any system or library includes by itself.
12:56
@Puppy I should learn to figure this out as well.
Clang has quite a bit of code dedicated to finding the correct header paths.
but it's all phrased in terms of Clang executable command line arguments converted into cc1 driver command line arguments, so totally unusable for anyone else.
Xeo
Xeo
DHL tracking, y u give me hope

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