tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36137506.post8721310269390935774..comments2024-02-09T15:22:59.181+01:00Comments on Tagebuch eines Interplanetaren Botschafters: TableGen #1: What has TableGen ever done for us?Nicolai Hähnlehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18235566517992076346noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36137506.post-43888547649812709802019-06-06T11:23:34.528+02:002019-06-06T11:23:34.528+02:00Glad you liked it!
And as for your question, well...Glad you liked it!<br /><br />And as for your question, well, that's because I fixed those inconsistencies a bit over a year ago :) What's shown in the blog post is the result that TableGen used to give you before those changes.Nicolai Hähnlehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18235566517992076346noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36137506.post-86376096177914781232019-06-06T10:51:17.028+02:002019-06-06T10:51:17.028+02:00Hi Nicolai,
Cheers for this blog series - this is...Hi Nicolai,<br /><br />Cheers for this blog series - this is very helpful and enlightening! <br /><br />I was trying to understand you comment Re ridiculous inconsistencies in TableGen, but for your example I got the following output: <br /><br />------------- Classes -----------------<br />class Tag {<br /> int Number = Tag:num;<br />}<br />class Test {<br /> int Number1 = 5;<br /> int Number2 = Tag.Number;<br /> Tag Tag1 = anonymous_0;<br /> Tag Tag2 = Tag;<br />}<br />------------- Defs -----------------<br />def anonymous_0 { // Tag<br /> int Number = 5;<br />}<br />def anonymous_1 { // Test<br /> int Number1 = 5;<br /> int Number2 = 5;<br /> Tag Tag1 = anonymous_0;<br /> Tag Tag2 = anonymous_0;<br />}<br /><br />It seems that there's no difference between Tag1 and Tag2, so I'm not sure what the inconsistency is?Andrzejhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11068293829732606153noreply@blogger.com