@A.H. There's some Indian university where the first-years have to do a thing with OpenCV. The lecturer, I guess, links this place as a place to get help, so every year you get a swarm of Indian undergraduates who couldn't phrase a question to save their lives who want help with OpenCV.
flags – Flags of the window. Currently the only supported flag is CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE . If this is set, the window size is automatically adjusted to fit the displayed image (see imshow ), and the user can not change the window size manually.
OpenCV is pretty neat. I tried using it once, to make a bot that would fish for me in World of Warcraft xD I figured if I can train it to find the stupid fishing bob all id have to do is make it click when the sound goes off
Didn't manage to train it will enough though. Would have required compiling a huge database of images
Sphinx is a new documentation tool for Python. It looks very nice. What I'm wondering is:
How suitable this is for documenting a C++ project?
Are there any tools for converting existing documentation (e.g. doxygen) to Sphinx format?
Are there online/downloadable examples of C++ projects that us...
@Rapptz Make an AI that can infer a code's intent by using the names of functions/classes/variables and the structure of it. It should be a fun 2 week project ;)
@CatPlusPlus, maybe more padding between the title, description and buttons would be preferable. And maybe a lighter color for the top so that the :hover thingy is more highlighted.
@chris Sorry -- it's an old SO meme. When programmers are asked how long something will take, most will estimate nearly every job at six to eight weeks, no matter how large or small it is.
this program take inputs for an array having two rows and 5 columns and then add the corresponding elements in each row such as [0][1] + [1][1] and then save the result in another array with five elements. I am facing a logical error in the function filewrite() but i cant figure it out, it all se...
@Ell Ok. So I twas trying out my first networking project. Anyway, I wanted to learn the answer to the question... what to send? I wasn't sure. Then it occurred to me, I could use the first byte as a packet id of sorts, and thus reliable parse the packet because I would know its contents.
@Ell Yes. I think I could also enumerate the ids. So that part, so far, so good. I got a base class which contains said id, the data itself, and some basic functions (get id, get data, get data size).
I got a bit lost after that, though. I am using SFML for this, but it shouldn't really matter. Anyway, I wanted to build on top of it the sockets, so I can do a send()/receive() the packets, sort of.
Yep. I should be able to do that. Anyway, for sending, I can just send the bytes, using the data/datasize. Simple enough. But I am a bit stuck on receiving.
Namely, I want to be able to figure out what kind it is, and get that packet type from it. But I wasn't sure of a clean way to do that.
And yes, I would need to do that.
Oh, I forgot a part.
I had a virtual member function, fromString. In this way, I could make packets construct themselves from sent data - the argument would be the data, minus the id.
the simple fact is, if you're decoding packets from a stream and you want to return one of a number of types, then the variant guys already solved this problem in basically the most optimum way possible.
@Pawnguy7 You want to return a "packet", where that packet might be represented by a number of different C++ types. Variant was intended to solve that exact problem practically word for word. It's not overkill at all. You simply don't understand how complex a problem that is to solve to a high quality.
In this situation, they are. For example, let's say the base is Packet. Imagine we make a subclass, Login. Then another subclass, Message. That is the situation, I'd say.
@DeadMG Good idea. I haven't done a new CPU in quite a while. Hmm...I was just talking the other day about how an implementation of the old Inmos Transputer on an FPGA would be cool. Wouldn't be new, exactly, but still definitely a fun project.
@Pawnguy7 Well, for one, what I'm really seeing is that I can't possibly imagine what useful operation you can perform on a Login command the same as a Message command.
but for two, when you get down to how this stuff's lifetime is stored, the base class is irrelevant, really.
I don't know how it would work, I was just trying to come up with examples of different ones. I haven't really considered what I need yet. Maybe a heartbeat.
I want to ban use of iostreams in a code base I have (for various reasons). Is there a way I can inspect symbol files or force the compiler to emit an error when that API is used?
@Pawnguy7 and besides getting a different, more specific packet, what use is this class? Just think about it - you will only use this base class to get other packet types
but worse, because it's virtual and you wouldn't even want it in the derived classes.
@Pawnguy7 1. Create a class to represent each kind of message that doesn't suck independently. 2. Return variant of these types (since variant does not require any inheritance link). 3. Use variant.