does anybody know how to construct AVL-tree to store vertexes and then search vertex using tolerance? for example vertex1(x1,y1,z1) == vertex2(x2,y2,z2) if abs(x2-x1)<=e && abs(y2-y1)<=e && abs(z2-z1)<=e?
you could use a struct to store your coordinates, then create a key from a combination of your values... depends on how you wish to identify your coordinates I guess
Hi,
I am making an installer in install shield 8 and trying to put an option as in a check in the setupcomplete dialog, i am using the below link as help:
http://kb.flexerasoftware.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalID=Q106070
As also stated in this link:
"An InstallScript custom action may...
hm...i dont really understand lets assume I have first vertex1, which is represented by three doubles x1,y1,z1. Ok, I've constructed my key from this combination. But then if I try to add vertex2, which is equaled to the vertex1 I will still have different key for this vertex2 because of the tolerance, but i don't need to add this vertex2 because it's already presented in my map.
@JevgenijNekrasov, the relation between your vertices is not transitive, i.e. while x can be close to y and y close to z, x needn't be close to z. Therefore, you can't construct a strict weak ordering, which is a requirement for ordered STL containers.
What you want to do can be done with spatial index structures, i.e. Kd-trees, R-trees, M-trees and such
By the way, mesh optimization is a complex subject. Throwing away vertices that are close will certainly decrease their number, but may not produce an aesthetically pleasing result.
@avakar thanks! Actually I am trying to construct topology from triangle soup when trying to parse STL file and first of all I need to merge vertexes to remove redundancy, which is presented in STL file format by default and to reduce memory usage and sure to simplifier all subsequent operations
@avakar each facet is defined by three vertices, whose coordinates are explicitly specified. so if you have two adjacent facets they will share to vertices with some small tolerance, initially they are different (they have different coordinates). so you could replace them and share one instance to reference from adjacent facets. this will remove significant redundancy, which is presented in the model. Actually each vertex in STL file is unique, it's just a mesh of vertices.
Making an unknown friend
template<typename T>
class List
{
protected:
class a {
int x;
int y;
private:
friend class b; // <------------ Why this is not an error?
};
template <typename U > class b { //If that is not a error this should b...
Thank you. But the interesting thing in his post is that on comeau it is a redeclaration error. As far as I know redeclaration is not an error, shouldn't it have said conflicting declaration of different type?
The code is ill-formed and Comeau rejects it giving the following error
error: invalid redeclaration of type name "b" (declared at
line 11)
I think this is a bug in g++ and MSVC++. Intel C++ rejects it too. You can fix the code by defining class B above A.
template <typename U > c...
I have the following code: codepad.org/iTsD6Xq3 and it produces 46 linker errors of type LNK2005, quite a few of them are from MSVCRTD.lib, this has me searching for an answer for a few hours now, can someone please help?
@Tony Although in the code as presented you've forgotten to implement one function, most likely the main problem is in your linker invocation. Or if you're using Visual Studio, your setup of the Visual Studio project. Make sure that everything's present and that you have no conflicting runtime library specifications.
@surajkumar it first declares (via the friend declaration) a class with name Something. Then in the same (class) scope it defines a class template named Something. Can't do that.
@Tony Check the project settings for each file. The relevant item is runtime lib. General good choice is multithreaded DLL.
@tony sorry, i forgot, you're using boost but i don't recall what parts of boost, but if it's something that's separately compiled (not just header) than probably that's the culprit
I have a situation in my program where I need to do some conversion from strings to various types and obviously the outcome can only be ever one type. So I opted to create a union and called it variant, as such:
union variant
{
int v_int;
float v_float;
double v_double;
long v_l...
Well, this is not actually a question..
I have just occasionally found out that there's an interesting way to declare local variables inside a switch/case block. Instead of using braces inside every case block, you can write:
switch (action) {
int res;
int value;
case ACTION_OPEN:
res = o...
@JohannesSchaublitb The C++ tag that was there (?) would be very appropriate because, if I recall correctly, C and C++ differ in the rules. In C++ you can't jump over an initialization. Of course someone would have to bother to write a proper answer...
Is there a way to check for the inclusion of header using pre-processor directives, so if that header has already been included, indirectly perhaps, it won't include it again?
@Tony The three main ways are (1) ordinary include guards, standard C++; (2) Lakos style external include guards, also standard C++, only makes sense for larger project and possibly not even then; (3) #pragma once, not C++ standard but de facto standard, supported by most compilers.
but I have one header that I accidentally included twice, once directly and once indirectly, both have include guards; my compiler still complains about double definition of a global function
it could, but better check the speling of the include guard symbol ;-)
hey, wait, compiler or linker?
@tony the exact diagnostic would help to, so to speak, diagnose the problem, but "double definition" sounds like linking error. if you define a function outside a class, in a header file, you need to make it inline. a function template is not a function definition in this sense, but a full specialization of a function template is (it's a bit subtle).