again, what does limit do? all the function you pasted does is find the min & max values in the histogram and call limit to find new corresponding pixel values
Is it invalid to pass a function into a class template as above ?
Totally yes, you're mixing up type and non-type parameters.
fun is a non-type argument, it's an address of a function, like an arbitary number 0x12345678.
typename T is a type parameter. You can only pass it types, like int,My...
I just have some stuff to do today, tomorrow we got meeting again and i FFS can't figure out, why the project takes like 5 to 10 times more memory on my machine than on the others
@Xeo Whatever happened to the youth today. <shakes_head/> Now, When I was a student, I learned to make sure to not to have any lectures before noon, which fits much better into the schedule of a student in Berlin. (And mind you, Berlin's schedule wasn't as bad as it is today. There were actually events starting before midnight, you know.)
@Xeo Oh, and if you got stuff to do, what are you doing here in the chat? The chat is likely the time killer #1 for me.
hi everyone youtube.com is filtered in my country can give link and you download it and send to my mail the move is very Little and i must show it ????
Well, you could use the fact that the binary exponent is explicitly stored in floating point numbers:
unsigned log2(unsigned x)
{
float f = x;
memcpy(&x, &f, sizeof x);
return (x >> 23) - 127;
}
I don't know how fast this is, and it surely is not the most portable sol...
In my first Comp Sci class, we did the following exercise. Granted, this was a lecture hall with roughly 200 students in it...
Professor writes on the board: "int john;"
John stands up
Professor writes: "int *sally = &john;"
Sally stands up, points at john
Professor: "int *bill...
GMan has posted a code for the delicious auto_cast “operator” that allows to write code such as the following in C++:
float f = 4.0f;
int i = auto_cast(f);
// instead of:
int j = static_cast<int>(f);
or, more saliently,
T x = value;
typename nested_type<with, template_arguments>::...
so i use BOOST.EXTENTION to load modules. I have a special file that describes each module. I read variables from that file.
so such example:
shared_library m("my_module_name");
// Call a function that returns an int and takes a float parameter.
int result = m.get<int, float>("function_n...
The C++ tag is listed third. It used to be 7th or so just one or two weeks ago. Which is wonderful, only questionable because the question count numbers look totally wrong.
If it read top to bottom, the tags that are currently in the bottom below the fold would get more visibility than tags with more questions. I don't think that would be good. This way, all the top tags are above the fold.
@martinho go and see every single change stackoverflow has done since it was created. except for its creation, it just pissed off users on meta. because they do changes abruptly, taking things out and put new ones to replace them. this is ui 101. you can't do that. if you change to make "things better" then you're doing it wrong. you're making things worse. users don't appreciate being lost, having to look up every monday and thursday things they knew where to find.
it has to be subtle and slow.
or else in a different branch, a parallel different url for users to play with if you wish. but not shoved down users throat.
@miss micrometer is a longer wavelength than nanometer and therefore has less energy. one thousand times less energy, one thousand times lower frequency.
@PiotrLegnica some context ... do you want us to read the code and figure out the context and what it does and what for and what's the goal on our own?
To help compare different orders of magnitude this page lists some items with lengths between 10−6 and 10−5 m (between 1 and 10 micrometres, or µm).
Distances shorter than 1 µm
*~0.7–300 µm — Wavelength of infrared radiation
*1 µm — the side of square of area 10−12 m²
*1 µm — edge of cube of volume 1 fL
*1–10 µm — diameter of typical bacterium
*1.55 µm — wavelength of light used in optical fibre
*3–4 µm — size of a typical yeast cell
*3–5 µm — size of a human spermatozoon's head (radius by length)
*6 µm — anthrax spore
*6–8 µm — diameter of a h...
I have a bsic question about defining structs. i want to create a struct but don't want it to be global. so i go and define it inside main. next i want to pass this struct to a different function as an argument. the problem is that the function is outside of the scope of main, so it does not what is this struct that i have defined.
so i pass a pointer to that struct to the function, but it can't access it's members since it doesn't know it. what's the way of doing it right ?
Hello guys. I have a problem with the timers in my win32 C++ DirectX game (a little demo). I am using "timeGetTime" to get the current time and use it to playback the animations or for logic by using the delta time (I also use a constant for normalization when animating). I use a tickrate as low ...
I made "very vexing parse" up. I don't know that there's a real name for T x(); being a function declaration. "Most vexing parse" definitely refers to T x(T()); and similar forms, though.
It's all quite vexing and I cannot wait until initializer lists and the new {} initialization syntax is widely supported.
On that note, the sky is a most unusual color this afternoon (blue!) so I'm going to go outside.