1.2.0

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Revision as of 6 June 2013 at 17:05.
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This looks really cool! The only problem I can see is if the bullet power is below 1, it won't react to fire in the oscillate mode. I also fixed a tiny problem in the number of values in the REVERSE_ON_ENEMY_FIRE block.

    Skilgannon (talk)12:04, 4 June 2013

    Interesting. Is this functionally different or just for the codesize?
    If so how much is it saving?
    I remember trying something similar to remove a conditional and replace it with a formula and it came out larger so I ditched the idea. Admittedly I was doing something a little different, but cool if you have gotten it to work for you and gained codesize.

      Nz.jdc (talk)14:20, 4 June 2013

      I'm curious, what did you try?

        Sheldor (talk)04:06, 5 June 2013
         

        I noticed the problem with casting the energy drop to an int, but I figured that if an enemy was firing power 1s at a distance of around two hundred pixels, we would be able to get a score of 80+%, even with RM.

        @Nz.jdc
        This method saves two bytes over the conditional method (just enough to fit setAdjustGunForRobotTurn(true)). I don't think it is functionally different from a conditional check. If it is, I probably did something wrong.

        Off Topic: I don't understand how your new Adept movement works. What's the point of moveMode ^= 1? Wouldn't that just return moveMode unchanged?

          Sheldor (talk)19:15, 4 June 2013

          The old neophyte movement changed moveMode from 1 to -1 and back on every bullet hit. Then used direction *= moveMode to flip between orbit mode and oscillate mode whenever we get hit.

          The new adept movement keeps that, but combines it with a yatagan style onDeath lookup table. However note that in adept onDeath uses moveMode += 2. ^ is the XOR operator, so on every bullet hit we toggle the low bit. This allows it to combine pure orbit, switch on death to pure oscillate. Do that a few times as yatagan does, then after several deaths it will go back to toggling between orbit and oscillate on every hit.

            Nz.jdc (talk)00:36, 5 June 2013

            D'oh! I thought that carets were exponentiation operators. Your movement makes much more sense to me now that I realize they are inequality checks.

              Sheldor (talk)04:04, 5 June 2013

              Sorry for being all pedantic about it, but I just wanted to make sure you understood that XOR isn't an inequality check.

              if you have two numbers say:

              a=1000101;

              b=1011110;

              then c=a^b; sets each bit of c to 1 iff that bit in a is one or that bit in b is 1 but not both. Otherwise the bit is set to 0. So c==0011011 is true.

              Again. Sorry for being pedantic but I wanted to make sure that this was clear.

                AW (talk)19:02, 6 June 2013