@oorosco: Do you have the code for the line the error occurs on? Those usually occur when you haven't properly escaped a character. For example \ should be '\\'.
@oorosco: Also, thank you for a prime example of the incredibly verbose error messages of the STL containers. I was just reading about it a little while earlier.
@oorosco: What else? No idea without seeing the code, to be honest. Skim through, look for any @ and \ in your code (ctrl+F will supply this functionality). I'll take a look.
@oorosco: I tested your function. No apparent errors. Looks fine. I'd tack in the suggestion to make the second argument take a default parameter (which would default to std::string's internal size).
@oorosco: You have a couple of issues. Make int unsigned so a user cannot supply negative numbers, and also, if the string contains no data, and the user supplies a number higher than 0, it will cause the application to crash. Two ways to solve it: check string isn't empty (empty() function) and make sure int is equal to or less than string size.
This is an internal substring thing, no one but myself uses it. The siize 0 thing is a good idea though since that is possible from the calling method.
@oorosco: It's okay if it's only you, but believe me, it will save yourself a lot of hassle in future to have fail-safes/catches for issues. I have it so if anything breaks intended behaviour, the code yells at me. For example, a function might accidentally pass an empty string (which is supposed to be a valid one containing data), and having the catch will intercept a bug earlier on.
@oorosco: You could also optimise the function by resizing the vector to match std::string's size, so you don't have to keep pushing and potentially reallocating. But that's just me.
@HostileFork: Back. I'm curious about user-interface because I want to be able to write classes that have a user-friendly, intuitive interface (more intuitive than the STL containers where possible - IE doesn't require weeks to figure out). But that's just me.
My other question is how on earth stackoverflow can even run despite not apparently having a business model of sorts?
@SSight3 "intuitive" depends on who's reading the code. A non-programmer won't find any class interface intuitive. But a serious C++ programmer will find STL containers much more intuitive than your home-brewed variants
@SSight3 SO has a business model, they have a better career site positioning than monster.com or dice or whoever...there's some advertising, there's tag sponsorship
Also, I think there is a certain amount of "going for broke" of pro-future people who are throwing their hats into the ring with the idea of a new economy based on whuffie or whatever. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whuffie
@jalf: Whilst fairly true, new users do have almost universal expectations. Like being able to append char arrays to each other. One recent SO question was why a char array would append to a string literal. I know this makes coders divide, but this is just merely an example. Somethings you just... instinctively do.
@HostileFork @jalf Makes sense. It's the same kind of suspicion that strikes me about wolfram alpha, which also has self-referencing ads and an odd seeming business model.
@jalf: Whilst ignorance on it's limitations is a reasonable point, why is it so many new programmers make that exact same move/mistake?
The interesting thing about the STL's interfaces is that they are designed to guide the programmer. Operations that you shouldn't be doing aren't part of the interface
you can't use the += operator on bidirectional iterators because you shouldn't. Because it's an expensive operation. You can't use [] on a list for the same reason
"The Matrix" -- as it were -- which leads people to believe in the green pieces of paper or whatever that are freely printed, are supposed to be based on the good faith of the government issuing that. It's not because green paper has intrinsic value.
People who have no clue what they're doing might expect to have those operations available, and so a good library is one that tells them "No! What you're trying to do is a terrible idea"
So basically, StackOverflow is just another institution of some amount of good faith, and the belief that can be traded for accomplishing what one wants.
@jalf: I am not saying all classes have functions. In-fact, an iterator with += behaviour with another iterator I'd argue is risky and even counter intuitive. += with a number would seem valid but I'd still be cautious.
@HostileFork Is the 15:22 thing a reference? But it's good enough, but with profiteering in the world, and no such thing as a free lunch would lead me to believe there has to be a cost somewhere.
@jalf I had a complaint a dynamic array class I had didn't support iterators. But I always felt they should only be supported by list-like classes (and integrated to it at that). Arrays 'iterators' are, of course, pointers, so to speak.
@jalf Because pointer operations already supply that functionality. If you can access the array pointer, and it's size, then you have access to the end of it etc. If iterators are really needed, they should be implemented seperately.
@SSight3 Well as the saying goes, "just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you". I generally gripe about crowdsourced systems that make their user community do the work and then monetize it. But it's a spectrum, and the more value a system provides and the more it embraces free content licenses you go "okay, this is not so bad"
And I think most people would say that for an interface to be intuitive, it should, as much as possible, behave like other similar interfaces. So saying "list can have iterators, but array shouldn't" is about the most unintutiive thing you can do
@HostileFork: Well, crowdsourcing can have it's advantages in that knowledge gets passed along quicker. But the problem is, herd behaviour directs the first person to answer generally influences the rest - if someone dislikes my question, for example, a flame-war would likely break out and the question nay get answered.
@SSight3: There generally seems to be an order of magnitude more credibility behind Joel and Jeff than like, GoDaddy or the DNS system, so I think it's about choosing your alliances. (I know some people who worked for Steven Wolfram and do not consider him or his intentions trustworthy / virtuous, but that is hearsay, so I wouldn't put much stock in it without evidence.)
@SSight3 because other containers have begin and end functions, and I'd raher have to remember the two functions begin and end, which I can use on all containers, than have to remember the special rule that "oh, but for dynamic arrays, you have to use GetArray() and GetSize() instead
but if you want to talk about intuitive interfaces, and still give dynamic arrays an interface like that, please step away from the keyboard right away and don't write another line of code
@jalf If you're using iterators, then you probably already know how to use the +GetSize() thing already. Why get the iterator if you have no idea what to do with it?
@SSight3 What are you talking about? You're assuming that I'm using iterators, and therefore I don't know what to do with an iterator, and also know howto use GetSize?
@SSight3 So you, the person saying the STL is no good because it is not "intuitive" enough, are arguing that there is no point in having a common interface for multiple classes?
Please think carefully before you answer that one, if you don't want to go on the ignore list
High-scorin' folks who know the ins and outs of the C++ spec far better than I: Do you stand a better chance at improving the world because a really important programmer with a really important problem logs into SO and asks it, and you solve it, world gets better...
Or are you an order of magnitude more likely to impact the world by helping someone new to programming, perhaps as new as you once were, before you knew much of anything?
I think that some of what I know is perhaps outdated. For example, as a student I found that my program to compute PI to umpteen digits, got much more CPU time if I stuck a match down beside the Return key so that it appeared that the process was interacting with a user. This was under MPE/IV on a HP3000 mini, and it was very effective: the other users got 0 processor time, he he.
That's what gets me so twisted watching these questions and these chats, is because I look at some of this and I go "I know this person who is answering the question is not 12. I can tell you, for a fact."
"But they have no idea who they're talking to and they're taking it out in a sick posturing thing that they should be bigger than."
@HostileFork: If a really intelligent person asks a really good question, out of experience, anyone unable to get it, cannot answer it, and therefore the question would slide into oblivion.
And professional programmers...we're talking mature adults, who worked for Bioware or whatever and know what they're doing...were dismissing StackOverflow as the sort of environment they did not enjoy.
@AlfPSteinbach Compiler isn't coded to support it. Implying there are variations in the standard implementations of even the most basic functions, which might also imply STL isn't as standard as hoped.
fine, given two iterators, first and last, I can do something like std::find(first, last, 42), or std::transform(first, last, foo), or std::sort(first, first + 10)`
But you guys are being abusive, not conversational. I don't care how much you know. And you're not listening to me because you do this every... damn... day.
@TonyTheLion I'm still trying to figure out those "pointers are better than iterators" and "it's better to not have common interface on containers" bits.
I watch it and I want it to change, because I'd like people I actually respect as programmers to think it was worthwhile to log into this and use it, 'cause it's cool
@jalf Then why do I need to supply iterator operations? You have demonstrated the user knows how to use pointers and ergo iterator operations would not simplify for those not knowing about pointer issues.
@SSight3 because then I can call `std::find´ the same way whether I have a linked list or an array. Is that not more intuitive and more convenient than having to remember a different syntax for each container type?
If I can do std::find(mylist.begin(), mylist.end(), 42) and also std::find(myarray.begin(), myarray.end(), 42), that is a lot more intuitive and simple than if the array version looks like std::find(myarray.GetArray(), myarray.GetArray() + myArray.GetSize(), 42)
Look, I guess I care more about the noobs than I care about washed up old egomaniacs trying to put people down before those people get a chance to learn programming.
@SSight3 please click on the right message when replying. It's really hard to follow the discussion when you just click the arrow next to my last message, while writing a reply for something I said 5 messages ago
@jalf Well, imagine a linked list is A <-> B <-> C where-as an array is contiguous. In order for the iterator to move consistently, it has to work uniquely under the covers (as A isn't consistent spacing).
And I remember how harsh words on FidoNet or whatever hurt a lot. Sure, it was nothing to jaded old guys having a beer and using the channel more as their personal venting angle. The people who click down down down vote on an ESL 13 year old here instead of just going "hm, do you mean this?" It's easier to edit a question than to downvote it.
@AlfPSteinbach but if you write f() outside class , you will write something like : template<typename T> void DD2::foo(){} , and also you will instantiate DD2 like DD2<int> etc
@HostileFork I'm glad I have the good sense not to be angry
and I'm still not sure what you're so pissed about. Do you feel we're being meanieheads towards @SSight3 or is there something else going on I've missed?
@HostileFork what the hell have we ever done to you? You come in here and rant that we're assholes and all sorts of crap, but you haven't said what it is we did to YOU to make you angry?
@jalf It is likely he notices the hostility posters of SO show to newbies? It seems I cannot post a 'correct' question to anything - even if I am quoting other SO users who gave me such inperinent advice in another SO question.
@jalf For example, I inquired about #include and whether inclusion at the end of the file or anywhere was valid (I.E. acceptable to coders), but it got attacked by a poster (I don't name names) for being duplicate, which spanned into a 20+ comment flame war between both coders defending and opposing, then the question got closed.
@MrAnubis no, not at all. there's just so much noise here right now. i cannot concentrate. it's like IRC but without the underlying threads that tend to weave through IRC messages.
@SSight3 I still don't really see the relevance. Yes, the implementation of a list iterator will be different from the implementation of an array iterator, but that's the entire point. It makes the API more intuitive, because you have one concept (an iterator) which looks the same to users, and does the same "logical" operation, regardless of the underlying container. A list iterator behaves like an iteratr, and an array iterator behaves like an iterator, at a conceptual level
even though in the actual implementation, the array iterator will just increment a pointer when you increment it (or simpler still, it'll be a pointer), where a list iterator will look up the next node in the list, and point to that
but I might say, I don't really see how someone coming here to vaguely rant and attack and insult everyone, like @HostileFork is apparently doing, is an improvement