this post was submitted on 18 Mar 2024
84 points (100.0% liked)

Transprogrammer

818 readers
1 users here now

A space for trans people who code

Matrix Space:

Rules:

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I lived in a perfect OOP bubble for my entire life. Everything was peaceful and it worked perfectly. When I wanted to move that player, I do player.move(10.0, 0.0); When I want to collect a coin, I go GameMan -> collect_coin(); And when I really need a global method, so be it. I love my C++, I love my python and yes, I also love my GDScript (Godot Game Engine). They all work with classes and objects and it all works perfectly for me.

But oh no! I wanted to learn Rust recently and I really liked how values are non-mutable by defualt and such, but it doesn't have classes!? What's going on? How do you even move a player? Do you just HAVE to have a global method for everything? like move_player(); rotate_player(); player_collect_coin(); But no! Even worse! How do you even know which player is meant? Do you just HAVE to pass the player (which is a struct probably) like this? move(player); rotate(player); collect_coin(player, coin); I do not want to live in a world where everything has to be global! I want my data to be organized and to be able to call my methods WHERE I need them, not where they just lie there, waiting to be used in the global scope.

So please, dear C, Rust and... other non OOP language users! Tell me, what makes you stay with these languages? And what is that coding style even called? Is that the "pure functional style" I heard about some time?

Also what text editor do you use (non judgemental)? Vim user here

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 5 points 7 months ago

In my case I want to move that player, meaning, changing the position of that player object (probably gonna be a vec3 or vec2). So like this:

void move(vec2 by){
    this -> position += by;
}

I will look into impl. They do seem very useful from what I have heard from the other commenters on here. Thank you for contributing and sharing your knowledge!