The following program aborts with pointer being freed was not allocated:
#include <boost/program_options.hpp>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
boost::program_options::positional_options_description positional;
return 0;
}
I compiled and linked the program with Boost 1.46.1, wh...
Well, I consider asking here and actually posting a link to a question 2 different things. If someone now magically knows the answer, he can post it through the question link.
In his answer, specifically in the linked Ideone example, @Nawaz shows how you can change the buffer object of cout to write to something else. This made me think of utilizing that to prepare input from cin, by filling its streambuf:
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
using names...
Question about boost::array how can I write a function which creates a boost::array and determines the array size when the array is constructed inside the function
boost::array<double, n> createArray(); requires the size of the array
@sbi Well, C++ is like a very fertile ground. Wonderful things can sprout from it without any further assistance. Sadly, it can also be used to plant those maneaters and stuff. :)
Does a vtable gets created for an abstract class that have pure virtual functions and virtual functions ?
class Abstarct {
public:
virtual void f() = 0;
virtual void g() {}
};
Thanks.
Is it undefined behavior if I go through the elements of a 2D array in the following manner?
int v[5][5], i;
for (i = 0; i < 5*5; ++i) {
v[i] = i;
}
Then again, does it even compile? (I can't try it right now, I'm not at home.) If it doesn't, then imagine I somehow acquired a pointer ...
Or has anyone experienced slower performance with IE8 when compared to IE6 when huge number of connections are involved? (IE being used programmatically)
@Nils, use a pointer to the vector if you want to return it. have the pointer point to a value assigned by new, like my example. You CAN return blah, which is a pointer to the vector, and not the vector itself.
@Nils How about defining it in the topmost function where you require it? If its large, its ok because even if you create it like a normal object 'in the stack', the actual contents will still be in the heap. only the length and and a ptr to the array and such should be on stack.
@MartinhoFernandes This is why there is a mid-point: you can see the time it takes to fill the vector, and the time it doesn't take to not return the vector thanks to NRVO.
humm @Raze so you are saying even if the vector object itself is on the stack it allocates memory on the heap which is free'd once the deconstructor of a vector is called.
@Nils If the vector is sized correctly beforehand and the data you are writing has a valid format for the type, that is valid. I often use that with unsigned char.
@Nils That is a usable technique. But from personal experience with a library which abused the "write in a reference parameter instead of returning a value" technique, it can be very painful for the library user.
@jalf That will have to wait. I don't have enough points on c++11 for that. If you suggest the reverse direction, people like me which have points on c++0x will have the possibility to vote.
Hello folks.
I'm not very good at math and I've a problem: I'm trying to make sprite always rotated to mouse cursor. That's what i have:
// mx is mouse X and my is mouse y
double rotate = (float) (atan2(mx, -my));
// Set rotation takes rotation in degrees
sprite.SetRotation( rad2deg(rotate)...
@MartinhoFernandes We now have 15 people who can vote on c++11 tag synonyms, most of which are regulars here. What more do you want? If those people can't get 4 upvotes, the synonym idea must be flawed.
@MartinhoFernandes Actually it's one master and n synonyms.
@TonyTheTiger Well, except you won't be among the top ten tomorrow, because the reason it's so silent here now is that everybody is busy tagging their most-upvoted C++0x questions c++11, so we will end up not even being in the top twenty...