@LewsTherin the sa_data field is probably not accessed directly. bind probably casts the struct you passed in back to it's original type. If it doesn't, it knows the address of the data it want's in sa_data and accesses it using sa_data[0] sa_data[1] etc
@codemaker Ah thank you. I think I understand somewhat than before. So to summarize whenever we cast an address, it just says this address belongs to an object of the type it is casted to, although the compiler knows better..
@LewsTherin When you are done, could you just take a quick look at this
class Zoo {private: Animal animal; };
Zoo::OpenZoo() { // Make a dog animal = dog; } So there is no way of doing this? I can't understand it I want the variable animal to be available to all functions and I want a dog attached to it
@LewsTherin something along those lines. By doing the cast, you are telling the compiler that a pointer points to a different data type. Same memory address, different type. The compiler will then do whatever you tell it with that memory.
@BPDeveloper yes, you can do that. Just not exactly in the way you are trying to do it there.
@BPDeveloper but you want to make a dog. First animal needs to be a reference or a pointer. If you aren't going to assign it when you first construct the class, then make it a pointer.
when I use a member variable(a vector) in the capture list of a lambda inside a member function, it says that member is not a variable ... what am I doing wrong ?
@FredOverflow also, schools try to teach c++ to people with no programming experience with out teaching them any general programming concepts. They are bound to fail.
@DeadMG oh, but if I do that and then change the bool inside the struct block the result is that the bool isn't changed when the function leaves right?
Oh wait, now I get it :) He meant "only to const-reference (but not to non-const reference)". I thought he meant "only ... in C++03 (but not in C++98)".
so when the hit_bottom bool is true, in my block struct, then I want the current_rect to be the next item in the vector, so I find the current one, and move one down.
block& tetris_canvas::current_rect()
{
if (current_r.hit_bottom)
{
std::vector<block>::iterator found = std::find(rects.begin(), rects.end(), current_r);
if (found != rects.end())
current_r = *++found;
return current_r;
}
else
{
return current_r;
}
}
but my block that hits the bottom dissappears after this code in the if statement executes
so I think either this is wrong, or somewhere I've gone wrong
I think you shouldn't store "hit bottom" as a variable. Prefer stateless approaches. (Implement a function that returns true if the current block is at the bottom.)
if (found != rects.end()) current_r = *++found; invokes undefined behavior if you find the last real element in the vector, because then you dereference the end iterator.
@StackedCrooked I guess then I'd need a class that represents a block and knows about the canvas boundaries, or would you put that function in the canvas class?
@TonyTheLion No. Generally objects should not have knowledge of their surrounding class. So Block should not have a pointer or reference its surrounding grid or canvas.
In my code I have a move method that moves the block inside the canvas. Then it checks if the new position is valid. If no, then it restores the previous position.
@StackedCrooked right, so I guess the obvious one is then to have it in the canvas class. Since I obviously need canvas data to check if the block went outside it's boundaries
Please let me know if I need to provide more/different parts of my program so far if what I've provided isn't enough.
I'm still working on my program with the Airline class. The Airline class contains a vairable to an array of dynamic Flight objects.
In the Airlines class I have (which can't be...
So I went to the dentist for the first time in 6 years. He had a lot of work scraping the "stone" of my teeth (I don't know how you call it in English, it's called "tandsteen" in Dutch). But apart from that I had no problems. No holes or anything. What a relief!
a bonobo having sex with another bonobo is totally different to a bonobo having sex with a human
of course laptops are a product of evolution
humans evolved to have large, competent brains and general-purpose hands with which to construct tools, because using tools was an evolutionary success
In one of the two zoos in Berlin, a pair of two penguin males built a nest about 2(?) years ago. The caretakers slipped them an egg, and, IIRC, they successfully raised a chick.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, I know better things to waste my time with than someone who argues that homosexuality is not natural and evolution needs any more proof than what the natural history museums are packed with up to their roofs.
@DeadMG I might be wrong there. It might be that chimps have bigger ones than we do. It's years ago that i read this. Looks at his bookshelf If I only knew where.
@DeadMG That's wrong. There have been, in historical times, people who lived non-monogamously. Scientists have been among them, and described those societies. For example, ISTR a society on a Pacific island where always all sisters of one family would marry all brothers of another family. Obviously, they successfully raised their kids, and I'd be surprised if those kids didn't have a heck of a better childhood than those being raised in a monogamous Western 3-person family.
@DeadMG Yeah, but societies living in different ways than what we are raised in shows that monogamous families is not the necessarily one and only way for us to live.
(Not that I'd want anything else, mind you, but I don't think my ideas are better than other people's. They are just mine.)