Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
Nov 4, 2011 20:08
damn, well thanks for help!
Nov 4, 2011 20:02
visual studio 2008 compiler
Nov 4, 2011 20:01
i make that problem sometimes.. i define same name twice and the compiler wont warn me about it. i cant think why shouldnt it warn about it...
Nov 4, 2011 20:00
@FredOverflow pastebin.com/utR3cxMm i mean like this
Nov 4, 2011 19:56
it doesnt make sense... because how could i use BOTH of them at same time?
Nov 4, 2011 19:56
i really hate that its possible to use SAME name in different scopes
Nov 4, 2011 19:55
is it possible to make it trigger errors for those btw?
Nov 4, 2011 19:55
one of them was inside if() so it didnt trigger errors :D
Nov 4, 2011 19:55
im dumb, yeah, i actually had the maptype map1; declared twice...
Nov 4, 2011 19:54
oh crap!
Nov 4, 2011 19:53
hmm, ill try
Nov 4, 2011 19:51
yeah it compiles, but it looks like the data is different when i use .insert() i really dont get this...
Nov 4, 2011 19:51
std::String yeah.
Nov 4, 2011 19:50
can you see any logical flaws?
Nov 4, 2011 19:49
pastebin.com/CMRwRse4 here is how the error looks like
Nov 4, 2011 19:49
nope
Nov 4, 2011 19:41
wait a second...
Nov 4, 2011 19:41
maptype map1;
Nov 4, 2011 19:41
but i dont understand WHY i cant just do map1 = map2;
Nov 4, 2011 19:41
i solved my problem by using .insert() for my maps
Nov 4, 2011 19:40
so im not trying to do: string = int etc :D
Nov 4, 2011 19:40
i have many maps that i copy
Nov 4, 2011 19:40
i mean, i dont try to copy DIFFERENT typed maps
Nov 4, 2011 19:40
AH
Nov 4, 2011 19:40
the other map is: typedef map<int, string, greater<int> >
Nov 4, 2011 19:39
how come? :O
Nov 4, 2011 19:39
@RMartinhoFernandes typedef map<string, int, greater<string> >
Nov 4, 2011 19:37
int->string and string->int maps.
Nov 4, 2011 19:34
hey, i was trying to copy a std::map like: map1 = map2; but it didnt copy the elements inside them, is that normal?
Sep 28, 2011 14:07
@AlfPSteinbach i was thinking if i could make it more efficient to generate small random numbers, for example if my strings are 256 bytes long, and i want to take one letter randomly from it, could i generate one 32bit random number and split it into 4 numbers and be guaranteed the quality of those numbers is same as generating 4x 32bit numbers and rescaling them to 8bit ?
Sep 28, 2011 13:50
not sure if this is the right place, but anyways: is it possible to generate 4x 8bit random numbers using 1x 32bit mersenne twister generated number and be sure they are "equally random" each of them ? or what about 2x 16bit etc?
 
Aug 25, 2011 00:57
@nicol, i thought of that too actually, but wasnt sure. maybe you are right. i need to make more tests & try your method as i said earlier. cya later.
Aug 25, 2011 00:48
@nicol, "you should optimize when you need to" when i work with OpenGL, i tend to optimize everything top-shape for the reason that the hardware varies so much with people, and in OpenGL its different than with C++ since its much easier to make 50% slower rendering with lazy methods, other than in C++ where you can waste a hour optimizing and get only 0.01% faster...
Aug 25, 2011 00:45
@nicol, i wouldnt say its premature optimization when i only know one method (which is superfast), but it is buggy (because its using multiplication instead of decrementation). and because i already have the most optimal version, i would like to know how to do the same but with decremenation, and keeping the performance the same, thats the whole point of this question. i have not used FBO before so i am suspicious about the performance of it. but i will try it later when i have time.
Aug 25, 2011 00:36
i might improve this effect later though, but at the moment, all i care is about speed and making it as simple as possible.
Aug 25, 2011 00:35
@nicol, really, i dont care how the colors look :) in fact, i think orange becoming red might give a wacky look rather than "ugly" ;) i want to use this effect just for me actually, so there are no users going to whine how unrealistically it fades... and no, its not really premature optimization either; i just want speed, the quality isnt important, the real purpose for this effect is to make fast moving pixels (or lines) look more "solid" so they dont disappear too fast from the sight.
Aug 25, 2011 00:29
@nicol, (forgot the @)
Aug 25, 2011 00:26
i dont need exactly 255, but its the theoretical maximum, which i want to be able to use. i just want the fastest possible trail effect that its possible to use, i dont care about quality, just that if it looks like the previous pixels are fading out. nobody is going to count the colors if orange becomes red and so on, its not a real issue for me.
Aug 25, 2011 00:19
how do you know it will round down, when my current implementation rounds them closest integer? (or up, i dont know which, but definitely not down since then this bug wouldnt appear!) - is it FBO feature to round it down or what?
Aug 25, 2011 00:19
i think your calculations are wrong, if i want a trail of 255 pixels, i would have to use calculation such as: color*(1-(1/255)), which will get stuck on a color value 254, whereas 2/255 gets stuck to 127 etc. so the trail length = value where it gets stuck actually.
Aug 25, 2011 00:19
@nicol, where in your example code do you tell the opengl to allocate floats for the pixel values in the FBO? because that would be the only way to make the multiplication actually work. Isnt there a way to do this without FBO? i really dont care about the color quality, just the speed. optimal solution would be to use a shader that modifies the current buffer pixels 1 value lower and does nothing else, no extra memory allocated whatsoever. is that possible anyhow?
Aug 25, 2011 00:19
if i dont need to change my pixel format, how will this actually solve the problem of pixels which never fade to perfect black color? (i mean if you use multiplication, there shouldnt be a problem with substraction)
Aug 25, 2011 00:19
@karx11erx, im not rendering smoke, just some particles flying around, and leaving nice trail, while using as little power and memory in GPU as possible. by million i might have been exaggarated a bit ;)
Aug 25, 2011 00:19
@Nicol, multiplying the color will make the bug i talked about; thats why i cant multiply, or i will see previous frame pixels FOREVER on the screen at certain brightness. also, do i need FBO if i disabled GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT from glClear() ? i dont care how "quality effect" it will be, i only care about speed.
 
Jul 13, 2011 14:03
@jalf, but is it possible to upload the indexes to GPU just once? i couldnt find a function for index pointer (glIndexPointer was for colors), is the only way to do that is to send them again every frame with glDrawElements() ? even with just uploading indexes, it would take 150MB/s in my app, and i really want to take the advantage of the VBO in the means of "upload once", and use them kinda like display lists, except that i can easily modify them.
Jul 13, 2011 14:03
@jalf, but i dont want to send anything to the GPU.. i thought thats the whole point of using VBO: the data is already there, no need to send anything, unlike with vertex arrays.
Jul 13, 2011 14:03
@jalf, my quad/triangle rendering codes are identical, except that i push 2 more extra vertices in the triangle rendering code, which then results in larger buffer(s). also, wouldnt it make sense that the quad splitting in half would actually be faster because it uses 2 vertices less of memory access ? if you have Vertex, Color, TexCoord, Normal, VertexAttr, then it is wasting a lot of time reading those, when it could use the already read values... not to mention how much you would save in memory size!
Jul 13, 2011 14:03
@jalf, tested now more, no matter what settings i have, the GL_QUADS is always faster. i have tried setting all buffer counts to same, all buffer sizes to same, and so on. But GL_QUADS always wins, the lowest difference between those two i got when i set them to use exact same amount of buffers: 33fps with triangles, 36fps with quads. SO, have anyone else done such tests ? this makes me think why do they want to get rid off this if its even faster.
Jul 13, 2011 14:03
@jalf, i've been testing between triangles and quads a lot now, and every time i notice quads is faster. does this make sense in the means of how GPU's work? could quads actually be optimized inside the GPU better than triangles? or could it be something to do about memory manager: triangles takes more memory. but i have set my VBO buffers to the same size though... maybe its about how many buffers i render then?