I'm still looking for a good explanation of an algorithm which produces all possible permutations of a string, with distinct characters first
Just found recursive solutions, but want an iterative.
The idea is to just choose one character place it everywhere possible and leave the rest of the string unchanged. For each of the string generated this way do it with each character again.
@DeadMG I'm not really sure if I understand something in your latest post.
> So far, I've decided to have a hash mechanism, where I will hash the arguments and use a thread-safe cache to ensure memoization of "pure" functions. This would effectively mean that for all the calls to std::containers::vector()(int), there is only ever actually one call.
Do you mean to memoize a vector lookup? I can't imagine that being faster than an normal lookup.
@DeadMG actually, as far as I coudl se, it wasn't even SSO that made the difference. We saw about the same perf difference on longer strings. I didn't look into exactly what caused the difference, the goal for now was just to check if there was room for optimization in their in-house string class
@MartinhoFernandes depends on when you mean. I'm pretty sure it was in a week before the standardization. But 8 years earlier? Or 20? ;)
@Collecter don't think so. But it seems to be fairly old, so they were probably comparing it against const char* mainly, and maybe against some early not-very-robust-or-optimized std::string
@Collecter yeah, probably. Only problem is that the team responsible for such general library changes (me and two others) are fairly busy for the next couple of weeks
@jalf i see. if you have been using this old string library for years, it should be fine for the next few weeks though. unless you guys need the optimization right now?
@Collecter yeah, it's no rush really. They just noticed some performance problems in a new module being developed, so we took a quick look at what might be done
I am going to ask this here on the offchance someone might know. Does anyone have any experience with spring in java? My boss threw a bunch of files at me and left. I have to figure out the URL mapping.
@jalf that sounds like a triple win
Something non C++ is mentioned and the whole board dies
@MartinhoFernandes I was working for TARDEC. Most unoragized place I have seen. Took them a few weeks to get my laptop. Then they need to ship it to virginia (i live in michigan) to install a piece of software. Then to hook it into their database the guy who had the clearances wasnt around until the last week i was there. It was terrible -.-
> These are not bugs in STL, but in the way another programmer called it incorrectly, or possibly the STL is just there hanging around the actual bug which is in regular C++.
I have this device which records a person's soul.... in a repeatable image... where they are doomed to make the same mistake over and over..... we call it.......................... youtube.
Yeah, but meanwhile (for an appropriate definition of meanwhile), you could be living a great life in the future (for an appropriate definition of future).
Because, you know, to take all that credit, you need to learn all that.
@MartinhoFernandes Just print the papers out and bring them back in time with you, because you already did so anyway. In fact not doing so would collapse space time.
yes it has. If I really wanted to I could try to do it throughout history. But yes it would be difficult
thought question
If i was 30, and went back in time and gave myself at every birthday a time machine, would there be multiple me's running around through space time? If so would it be the same timeline/world or multiple ones?
Say I have a bunch of code for all controls, yet I need subclasses that interact with my software suite to use those common methods. I really want my subclass to derive from the control, not the class with the common code. (A MyEdit should derive from Edit, not from MyControl). Also, the suite interacts with controls using an interface which MyControl derives from. In order to do this in C++, I would use multi-inheritance like so class MyEdit : public Edit, public MyControl.
However, I suddenly discover that I shouldn't use multi-inheritance if I want some controls to be in another language which doesn't support multi-inhertiance.
Does this work???? MyEdit : public MyControl<Edit>; MyControl<Type> : public IControl;
Convert the common control stuff into a template, and give it the type of control I want to derive from.
Say I have a bunch of code for all controls, yet I need subclasses that interact with my software suite to use those common methods. I really want my subclass to derive from the control, not the class with the common code. (A MyEdit should derive from Edit, not from MyControl). Also, the suite in...
@Collecter That would mean violating the first law of thermodynamics.
Thought experiments based on that tend to derail pretty fast.
Because if, instead of sending yourself back, you sent some power source, and you ended up with multiple copies of it, you could generate as much power as you wanted.
If you end up in some kind of "parallel universe", what about the "you" from that universe?
that would be assuming that the two points of space time were not connected. in order to time travel, the points would have to be connected, and energy would flow through that connection
> When I was in university we did some Prolog assignments. One of the first bits of feedback I got for my code was something like: Syntax error in line 1. Operator expected.
> The "operator expected" bit scared me. I thought the local SysOp would come running into the room screaming "Who here had that syntax error?!"
:)
Anyone here knowledgeable enough to identify this fish?
Do you know whether hash_combine is part of the standard?
It's this 5-line function...
I just copied it from Boost, and I implemented a generic hasher for pairs and tuples from it. Boost also uses it for range-hashing, so you can hash entire containers.