I'm building this because we have like 1 GB of strings to be allocated and I'm using a pool that allows to segment each allocation based on memory segments.
@Borgleader I was curious. I am however working on a program for class.. but Im gonna do mine the old fashioned way...by actually trying to solve it myself. ;p
@Nathan actually i wouldnt mind people asking questions in order to solve a homework question, but they have to abstract the homework from the question (which students practically never manage to do).
for example, drilling down from "oh im trying to do this but it doesnt work heres 60 lines of code" to "oh my loop condition for reading the file reads the last line twice heres the 4 lines of code involved" (id close as duplicate but at least its a much better question :P)
@Borgleader my program was involving binary files, but my teacher realized that somehow or another, our previous teacher didnt teach us binary files yet. So he changed them to text files, which Is easier.. but now Im trying to solve a few things.
1.) refreshing my memory on dynamic arrays. and 2.) string functions like .find() etc
Inside information, basically. What proper emulators are doing, with all the documentation they have on it, it's nearly trivial to move it to Xbox One (and by extension, PC) from PPC. Especially as the GPU side is driven by a variant of DX9. On the other hand, Cell's selling point has become its chokepoint (PPU + SPEs + zero copy memory with no partitioning). :D
like if you do uh... char const* p = "some string"; the \0 has already been added
if you allocate a buffer yourself though with like new, you have to account for it, if youre gonna use it with functions that expect null terminated strings
@StackedCrooked Because there are so many things to take in consideration when building a memory schema. If the memory will be autoreleased, if you will use them inside a vector, if X or Y for the memory size, how big will be the container, etc. And during that process my computer freezes because I'm identifying what is consuming >4 GB of ram.
We'll be releasing the memory mapped data structures once they're ready, right now we have a static allocator/deallocator, a memory pool and building memory mapped stl containers.
@Prismatic example of a CRTP base as some folks mentioned
there are variations on the theme, some closer to e.g. what Boost.Concepts does—but the core of it being using dependent types and special member functions
:28614232 lol, I actually did click on the link to make sure it worked
@AlexM. Luc posted the link to the "example" (which was actually the link to the message), I said that this isn't an example. Luc edits the message to make it the link to Coliru example.
Plus the class I've been working on is fairly complex imo, hard to break it down into neater chunks. For some stuff it feels like to follow DRY I need to make the code more verbose and uglier
lol I don't know if that's a great idea. I can paste the source file up but its part of a larger project and you won't be able to compile or test it easily
Thats the code I'm working on right now... though at a glance its probably not easy to tell why I think its bad (or maybe its obvious idunno)
Mostly my ListView class needs to support multiple directions and orderings (column, row, ascending, descending) and I'm finding it tricky to do that in a clean way. It actually kind of works though so thats nice (tested column only so far)