@TonyTheLion k, I'm here, and I have NO idea what you guys are talking about
winkwink
@IntermediateHacker placement new is a expression that creates an object in a buffer that you specify, instead of allocating memory and creating there.
I had a look at this stackoverflow.com/questions/456042/… and decided to try the first answer. It seems to work the first time and then from the fourth consecutive call. So 1 ok, 2 and 3 empty results, 4 an on ok.
Sometimes it's nice to start over. In C++ I can employ this following simple manoeuvre:
{
T x(31, Blue, false);
x.~T(); // enough with the old x
::new (&x) T(22, Brown, true); // in with the new!
// ...
}
At the end of the scope, the destructor wi...
@RMartinhoFernandes I like pictures, but I would have preferred if the "automatic" variable had something around it to suggest a stack, with the "dynamic" obviously not part of it. As it is, the pictures do not clarify why some get cleaned automatically
@RMartinhoFernandes also, you have automatic, dynamic, dynamic later in a row, which suggests they are either all different or similar. They need a line at least to seperate automatic/dynamic. EDIT: I misread.
@Grizzly Kinda? I realized the pros and cons are different than I had expected and accepted that. The vector was faster for creation/insertion/deletion, but slower for lookup
iterator find(const key_type & x); Returns: An iterator pointing to an element with the key equivalent to x, or end() if such an element is not found. Complexity: Logarithmic.
oh hey, just found coliveira.net/software/raii-is-overrated. Seems intersting :D Blatently misinformed/misinforming, but amusing to me. "When a system has a large number of objects with virtual destructors, which is a common case on object oriented systems, the result is that destructors are called all the time for no good reason."
@Grizzly in some cases they can, but not the normal case. They can only inline/elide if they know the most derived type the whole way through. Which means it must be allocated in the same TU, possibly the same function depending on your compiler.
@DeadMG My code at work has one such resource. We use temporary files, and once a virus scan or something prevented it from being erased/destructed properly
Resource deallocation failure is a doomsday scenario. All you can do is convince the nearest interesting member of the opposite sex to spend the world's last 15 minutes doing it.
@RMartinhoFernandes well, it's not the OS's fault, my predecessors put the temp file in the same folder as the user's file, and I haven't relocated it yet.
@MooingDuck I've put breakpoints all over the place, I confirmed that the elements are getting deleted from the list , but it never hits the breakpoint in the destructor
Anyway, that made me go to YouTube and watch Nick Cave perform Hard On For Love. There's many videos of it there, but few of good quality. This one isn't exactly good quality either, but it has a lot of spirit, and comes with a great dedication. :D
Hmm , I can see your point (no pun intended :D ) Is there any real reason for that though ? Its basically not trusting the user to check their pointers , or is it something deeper ?
@RMartinhoFernandes I think all I really need to do is change from bullet* to std::unique_ptr<bullet> and I should be good to go ? Given that I can still use the * operator to pass arund references to elements of the list ?
@Grizzly :D Why is it levied on the poor customers though ?
Alternatives are boost::ptr_list<bullet> (it's a list of pointers that destroys upon removal) or simply std::list<bullet> (if bullet is not polymorphic, you can just store them directly).
@RMartinhoFernandes Hmm , might look into that later :) deadlines
@Grizzly That's the problem .. how would you know :D For all you know your bank software was designed by an incompetent programmer :) Lots of those where I work :D And we actually make a banking software
If I use unique_ptr , can I do this ? bullet *currentBullet = *bulletArrayIt; Where bulletArrayIt is of type std::list<std::unique_ptr<bullet>>::iterator bulletArrayIt