I’m just sort of guessing that this relates to some Win11 needless UI shenanigan.
I’m just sort of guessing that this relates to some Win11 needless UI shenanigan.
I am perfectly happy to have one less thing to worry about, don’t get me wrong.
So… what the heck happened there?
A fair point, but I do want to highlight that we’ve had plenty of companies like Bethesda releasing crap like Starfield, using tactics that specifically turned on their artist employees, and then scratching their heads on why it didn’t sell as well as Skyrim or Doom. I’m also seeing a lot of C-class laziness here.
Maybe they could consider just, you know, not releasing things that suck so bad.
Yeah, but I figured he at least took into account that his fans need to be alive as of voting time.
“FREEZE for me!!!”
Seriously who the fuck cares about a caucus victory in the state of Iowa.
Thanks Lemmy. I just had to wiki to double-verify that Keanu Reeves is not dead.
Thank God.
Christ, someone needs to block it.
I’m pretty sure you can access the children of a node as a list with get_children(); which exposes all of those features anyway.
I’ve built multiplayer stuff and can give you a little advice on that, sure.
First up, the limit for the amount of network traffic which can be sent over the web is surprisingly small, especially if you’re talking about international distances, so don’t ever send anything you don’t absolutely have to. In the way of that, it actually is possible to have custom nodes synchronize, by linking them to a common shared piece of data that describes how they’re built; but I really don’t recommend it as it gets very complicated. (This is technically true with Unity, too, but Unity does things a little differently with GameObjects, and legally they’re kind of a pain in the ass these days.)
You can use either an array (slash list) or a modifier node, but I generally personally prefer modifier parent nodes because the tree is very efficient and it seems to allow for more flexibility. It’s also easier to inspect visually when you switch to remote instead of local. It’s up to you, though; you can do either.
There isn’t anything about this project that feels “too ambitious” for Godot’s high-level networking, it’s pretty much what it’s made for. It’s also been around for quite a while. In fact, you can technically even swap it out for GodotSteam’s Steamworks networking interface now, but I haven’t tried that out yet; I imagine something similar is eventually coming for other services.
I don’t remember the name of it, but there’s a video somewhere on YouTube that walks you through creating a very basic Team Fortress clone with Godot 4’s high level networking. You might want to look it up.
Come to think of it, “X” is awfully close, as a glyph, to a swastika.
Thanks, I hadn’t heard the term.
…what the heck is “deadnaming”?
Respect, but… No.
I agree with you on this, but I feel we should highlight that there is a big difference between “is being implemented” and “will be implemented”.
Yemen is a goddamn rodeo clown here.
It’s not nearly as much fun as it sounds anymore. It’s all VPNs, Usenet, torrents, and signal hacking.
The only traditional conglomerations left are in southeast Asia and maybe the coast of Africa, and I gotta say, they do not look like they’re having any fun.
Signal 11 is a segmentation fault on Linux systems. It means your program (Godot) is trying to access memory that doesn’t belong to it. If it showed up in Dev6, it would most certainly help to file a formal bug report.
That may also help you narrow the issue down on your end, but this is part of why you never want to risk using a dev build on a real project. They just aren’t done yet.