Last time I read the manpage I finally figured out why it's that way: put last what is being created, like for cp or mv. Guess that lasted for what, 5 days?
I'm looking up the docs for Boost.Range and apparently there's the possibility to get a range out of a call to e.g. boost::find but apparently never the range I need.
@RMartinhoFernandes It's always from one end to either the other end, or to the iterator, or to the next iterator. Never from iterator to next, unfortunately.
Some people complained about circular_buffer's iterator validation. The crash logs always point to 'invalidate_iterators', an internal function of circular_buffer.
Anyways, I disabled both Eigen's vectorization and circular_buffer's iterator validation. I'll have to wait to hear from my beta tester with the iPhone 4S too see if the segfaults go away.
> The main object. At most one should be created. An alternative is to use unsafePerformIO to automatically create a singleton Vty instance when required.
Hey guys, i was wondering if anyone understood how to use a BFS on a puzzle where the purpose is to get a block from the left side to the right side (other pieces that have conditional movement may be blocking its path)
Anyone know any tutorial? etc? I just need a tip really cause i'm blanking
user406009
BFS is where you put the next item at the end of a queue.
@EthanSteinberg Hum, so if i have multiple pieces i just add each possible move they can go to a que and then add each possible move from that move toa que and so forth until i reach a goal state?
user406009
3:28 AM
Yeah. If you want a path of previous moves you can store it in the state.
user406009
Guaranteed to be optimal if all move costs are equal.(Although probably slow)
user406009
You might need to watch memory, these things tend to balloon out of control with only a few possible moves.
Not sure if this qualifies as off-topic. But let me ask anyway!
I'm playing with LLVM's lldb with a binary that compiled using clang++. lldb complains that the debugserver is not running when I run the binary using lldb. Anyone has any experience with lldb?
what's particularly incorrect about ideone.com/0nZPW ? I guess the question really comes down to whether "template<template<typename...> class...> struct" is valid
actually, this looks like precisely what I want. it might be a bug in gcc-4.5.1: ideone.com/Km2ra (the extra class/typename identifiers on lines 14 and 16 are just there for clarity)