the worlds richest company wouldnt be there today without ritchie. (and all the others by the way, too). and in addition you should know that technological advance is not measured in moneyto that
@bamboon Of course it wouldn't. But dmr would have created something with no value if it wasn't for people like Jobs turning it into something with value.
the value of C, as a construct for making things, is measured exclusively by the value of what people can build with it
and also, unless you want to start travelling to other planets, then I think that money, food, and similar things of real physical value are the useful products of technology
Ah, I completed section on how to fix Boost.Filesystem so that it can handle general Windows filenames. That's section 5. If you view using Google Docs (it's quite blurry in Google docs, and no table of contents) then that section starts on page 16. Enjoy. Please tell me about errors, misconceptions & possible improvements. Thanks.
If you have a list of enums, would there be any good way getting a random enum value? Or is it a proper way of putting each enum value in a vector and generate a random numer and use it as an index fine?
@DeadMG new allocates requires the memory for a class and performs the constructor on that class. I wouldn't say they have nothing to do with each other.
@RMartinhoFernandes They work when you only indent with tabs at the beginning, and do the rest with spaces (and no, it doesn't depend on tabwidth — aligning with only tabs do). But yeah, tabs suck.
How widely used is alloca in the real world? Should I teach my students to use alloca when it makes sense? Or should I teach them never to use it? Coming from a C++ RAII background, the idea of not having to call free manually sounds promising, especially in functions with multiple exit points.
Sorry, using alloca as a default argument is something that has been recurring in my own imagination. I'm toying with allocators and especially what changed with C++11. So got caught up in my daydreams :)
@MrAnubis Yes. Makes adapting any preexisting function or function-like thing (functor, function pointer/reference, pointer to member) to a particular signature easier.
I have a struct with a pointer and an int, I want to find one in a vector of these structs with std::find, should I implement operator== for the struct?
it actually represents a square drawn on my canvas, and it contains a pointer to a QRect and a bool (I said int earlier, but it's bool).
just cause I need the bool associated with each square
now, I have this struct and it's called block, in my canvas class I have a function block current_block() but for some reason my compiler complains that it doesn't know block. I'm confused???
If I have one class named Owner that has a member variable of class Dog that has an non-default parameterized constructor. How do I do set it up then? I am soon giving up, feels like I tried all combos.
@TonyTheLion struct block; struct canvas { block get_block(); }; is fine, except you can't call or define get_block unless a definition of block is visible.
Java is the land of "I only ever write my programs the way the Lord Gosling deemed correct. I never raise questions, think independently, or look outside of the Kingdom of the Virtual Machine. Inheritance is my only God, and never shall I look for other programming tools or paradigms."
now, if I have a bunch of squares on my canvas, and I need to find the one that's closest to the one I'm moving around, to detect possible overlap, is there some existing algorithm I can apply?
Given that you are using squares, can you not calculate the square at each corner of the rectangle (the point can be converted to a square index. Let W be the the number of rectangles in the width, let H be the number of rectangles height-wise.
Let RX be the width of a rectangle, and RY be the height. Let any given corner of the "moving" rectangle, be PX and PY. (PX / RX) will give us the rectangle at a point on the X-axis, call it RESULTX. (PY / RY) gives us a vertical position. call it RESULTY. If the rectangles are stored as a continuous array, you can use [(RESULTY * W) + RESULTX] to get the rectangle in question, otherwise it's as simple as [RESULTX][RESULTY].
Do that test for each corner of your moving rectangle, and use the center of the target rectangle as an origin. Call that OX, OY.
You should have four Tuples now, PX1, PY1, OX1, OY1, etc
pick the one with the least distance.
This is, of course, my "I've already had a bottle of wine" solution.
I have a binary file i'm reading a table out of.. the column names are preceded by their number of characters. So while reading out of it using a BinaryReader
for (int i = 0; i < columnCount; i++)
{
int headerLength = bReader.ReadInt32();
data.Columns.Add(new string(bReader.ReadChars(headerLength)));
}
for (int i = 0; i < columnCount; i++)
{
data.Columns.Add(new string(bReader.ReadChars(bReader.ReadInt32())));
}