Consider the two following prototypes:
template<class T>
void whatever1(const T& something);
template<class T>
void whatever2(T const& something);
They are both identical. Yet what if T is not a usual type, but a pointer type? For instance, let T be Somewhere* then whateve...
@DeadMG so I guess I should think about it as fun is a function and a function pointer at the same time bcz it's not a variable that take memory like arrays. (array and &array are the same ) is this correct ?
@DeadMG You can choose to do either with the assumption that the one being updated last 'lags' behind but that's very possibly needlessly complex. I'd update the two in tandem from the previous values.
@DeadMG that can be converted to a grid with traversable and non-traversable cells, which can then be A*'d, but you're right, there's probably better methods
@DeadMG I used to know some stuff about how they use A* in robotics, but I know they don't build graphs of the entire search space all at once, but like @JohnSmith was saying, you just look at stuff at your 'frontier', which could be generated on the fly
@DeadMG a lot of games will, if units touch and are travelling to more or less the same position, will simply have them share one path until they get close.
@DeadMG if it's very empty, just draw a line, check for collisions. If they collide, split the path into several paths that go around the object that was collided with, and recurse. Lousy for mazes, but low memory and fast for wide open spaces.
@DeadMG so then don't path around swarms, don't have them plot paths through swarms at all. Have them path to a swarm, "shuffle as they can" to the other side, then path to destination
@DeadMG Used to play Combat Flight Simulator, most frustrating mission was when some of the higher up bombers dropped bombs on the lower bombers and the whole formation went up in a gigantic explosion