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The only way to directly index into the storage of the codepoints would be to allocate a full 3/4 bytes per unicode character and then index directly into that.
even if I have C UTF-8 codepoints in the sub-buffer, and they are all maximally sized, and I try to access the last one, I will only have to read C-1 codepoints to find the last one.
I am using a std::deque for storing a large collection of items.
I know that deques is implemented as a list of vectors. The size of those vectors cannot be set but I wander what is the algorithm for choosing that size.
so even if I try to access the last one, I will only have to search three preceeding codepoints to find it.
and if you ask me for the Nth codepoint, I can access the N/4'th subbuffer (accessed in O(1) because it's a vector) and search there, searching an absolute maximum of 3 codepoints.
Hi I have done a program that send a screen capture over a socket. Well, it works if I take the screen capture in the mac and send it to the windows pc, but if i want to take the screen capture in windows and send it to the mac it just send part of the file... Here is the client
public class En...
well, it might not be illegal, because you know, double-ended instead of single-ended, but that merely involves special-casing the first subbuffer, so it's a bit of a detail.
So in the end you'd have to count the maximum number of codepoints in any subbuffer, keep that information, and then index into the subbuffer based on that.
If you're upper-limiting the number of codepoints with array<T,N> or keeping track of it manually and using vector<T>, sure you can fast-index into it, at the cost of excessive amounts of memory as the string gets bigger.