I think that the constructor should try to restrict it self to as little as possible to make the instance valid. This sort of ties in with lazy instantiation, the idea that you do not create instance of member objects until you actually need them. You get faster initial creation, but slight slow downs as member objects get created on the fly
mm, say i have a class having a std::vector<T> class member. would it make sense to have an init function to fill the vector in a given way? or could i do it directly in the constructor?
@CatPlusPlus, The rule is: after exiting constructor, object must be ready to be used., thanks a lot! it couldn't be much clearer than that. I'll have now your suggestion in mind, when defining the onstructors.
@CatPlusPlus yeah, but at some stage you might have a matrix that for what ever reason you want to make identity. so you where passed in a reference to a matrix, and under certain conditions, such as the operation can't be done or the matrix gets made invalid, you need to set the matrix to identity
@CatPlusPlus, so in the issue pointed by @thecoshman you're then suggestion having say the definition of makeIdentity() as the content for the default constructor and the definition of makeZero as the content of a param constructor? is that it right?
@CatPlusPlus have you got any good articles that talk about the reasoning behind this. I understand many of the arguments, but I still don't think they are that great an idae
to handle identity matrix by matrix(T value), would it be different than handling zero matrices by matrix(T value), right? because identity matrix has ones in its diagonal, but the rest is zeros.
Oh. Has the robot decided, after @Alf's frightening prognosis for the day, to spend the rest of it in bed? @RMartinho, I meant to tell you that I love the hybrid suspend mode in Windows. Thanks for pointing it out!
There was once a case where a radiation machine in the hospital exposed patients to too much radiation. The company defended its machine by saying that it had no moving parts so it's impossible to misfunction.
@CatPlusPlus The rule is: after exiting constructor, object must be ready to be used. I was thinking, and what about when an object gets constructed by its default constructor. Is the object also ready to be used?
@CatPlusPlus When I left home this morning, I put my laptop into suspend mode. and put it into my backpack. When I arrived at work, it took <10secs to allow me to login. This is a 8GB RAM machine, and takes a min or two to wake up from suspend-to-disk mode, when I have 250 FF tabs open, three instances of VS, and a lot of other stuff. Reviving it in less than 10secs is spectacular.
@sbi My desktop PC at work boots faster than it wakes up from sleep modus. But that is probably because it never manages to wake up from sleep modus at all.
@CatPlusPlus Once pulled out my laptop from my backpack and it was freaking hot and its coolers were blowing at max power. Ever since then I don't trust sleep modus any more and just turn it off.
@CatPlusPlus If you want to refactor repeated constructor logic, then use either a base class .... so usually when we need refactoring, we might need at the end inheritance, right?
@thecoshman I used to have a desktop machine at work and one at home (the latter sometimes sponsored by the company I worked for). I thought I wouldn't want a laptop, because they are less powerful, and compiling takes processing power. Then, for one job, they gave me a powerful desktop machine plus they asked what kind of laptop I wanted to have, a light one or a powerful one. I chose the latter, and hardly ever turned on my desktop after it arrived.
Since then, bargaining for a powerful laptop is part of every interview I have, and meanwhile I don't even want a desktop machine anymore.
@StackedCrooked That happened to me, too, a few times, when I was in a hurry and closed the lid before it had gone all the way to suspend mode. I have since learned to wait and only close the lid/stow it away, after it did.
@CatPlusPlus I have been lucky maybe half a dozen times. Is that coincidence? OTOH, mine is more of a mobile desktop than a laptop, and certainyl can take some heat.
In case of MacBook; pulling out a usb device when the lid is closed wakes it up. Which is useful when you want to use an external monitor only. But dangerous also.
@thecoshman Yeah, in one company I worked for we used IncrediBuild for VS. Compiling on 30 cores across the network put the fun back into hacking at templatized string handling used all over a several MLoC codebase. :)
@thecoshman I always set it to suspend-to-RAM. But it initiating suspend-to-disk, and getting a suspend-to-RAM signal somehow seems to screw it up sometimes. So I learned my lesson there.
@thecoshman Shrug. Maybe we should set up a Pointless Optimizations FAQ entry with such an answer and then close all such questions as dupes of that one? :)
@thecoshman I'd envision an entry that lists lots of such questions with links to the actual questions closed as dupes of it. Most of us here could contribute answers to this, giving it a lot of weight. Then ruthlessly close every POQ as a dupe of that.
Sounds a bit harsh, though. What does the rest of you lot think?
@TonyTheLion Hey, I came out with the idea to turn it into an FAQ instead!
@thecoshman I'd rather wait for the rest of the regular gang here to have their say to the idea. @Xeo? @jalf? (He'll be against the idea, but that counts, too.) @RMartinho? @Luc? @Alf? @Fred? @Dead? (Whom did I forget?)
@thecoshman No slacking there! You got work to do! Take your hands out of your pockets! Back straight! Turn on the light in your eyes! Now, there's a fine lad. Now get going, search good candidates for questions to list, and formulate the list! Present your findings here after lunch. After that, you are free to create your own answer to it.
@TonyTheLion Everybody agrees with these lines, but nobody agrees over what "simple code" is. I have heard programmers prefer hand-written linked lists to the STL on the grounds that they are simpler.
@TonyTheLion Ah, that. Frankly, I hadn't known either, but I suspected it to happen.
@thecoshman Why? There should be lots of those out there, some with real good answers. If you search the answers of high-rep users in the c++ tag, you are bound to find exemplary questions.
I mean, I've been trying to understand this "simple" code written in C for a while now, and I'm still not sure how it works. can't possibly be that simple
this, is a bunch of nested loops, that ultimately decodes 8 x 8 pixels of a jpg images, now I don't get what the ssx, ssy loops are doing. I understand, so far, that it is looped over by the outer loop in terms of components, but ssx can be 2 for example, does that mean there's two 8 x 8 matrices per component?
@CatPlusPlus Educate me .. in reflections you can query for methods and member variables and add them at runtime. as to my understanding... what is dynamic typing ?
Adding new things to types at runtime is not related to reflection. Dynamic typing is typing discipline where usually only values are typed, and types are resolved fully at runtime.
@CatPlusPlus think I got it now, we need to come up with a slow running C++ interpreater that we can compile and get massive speedups in performance when we compile it
Does anyone know any available code for "mean-shift segmentation of images" available in C++, java or matlab?On the net there is some source code in C++ but it doesn't seem to work prperly.
After compiling I get this error:
1>e:\terebes\gui\bgimagpgm.cpp(24) : fatal error C1083: Cannot open ...
@sbi Hmm, what is the purpose? Just to point fingers at people who fall into the optimization trap? To discourage questions about optimization? To feel powerful by closing lots of questions as dupes? Basically, how would it add value?
@CatPlusPlus I had this same discussion with my house mate in uni. In theory, you could take C++ and use it as a scripting language just like JS. He thinks that as you are no longer compiling your code it is no longer c++ equally, if you did compile JS into an EXE, it would no longer be JS.
@Xeo but isn't that self-defeating? The only sane answer to any optimization question is "it depends". So how can one single global answer ever be useful for every optimization question?
a useful answer to a question about optimization will have to be tailored for the precise context
unless you're only going after the "bad" questions
@sbi so wouldn't it be more interesting to try to improve on that kind of questions? Work with the OP to specialize the question into a form that's useful, rather than simply closing as dupe because the generic "profile and then act on the result" answer was already written
Also consider the message it sends. Newbies tend to be turned off somewhat by having their question abrubtly closed as a duplicate.
@thecoshman and that is why I'm saying it'd be better for everyone if you left a comment on the questions telling them how the question should be improved
@jalf I must have written such answers dozens of times, exhibiting very widely varying patience and quality. The point of FAQ entries is to have a single, patiently written, high-quality answer. But you know that already, since we've been over this dozens of times, too... :)
I fully agree that the generic "how do I make my code fast" question is useless. But for a lot of people, it's the best they can do, and it's a starting point at least
@george it's not very nice to dive into a room and post a link to a question you have just asked. Most users here are watching for new questions any way.
@sbi Well, I feel the same way about it as I do about all the other FAQ questions. I'm against the FAQ as a whole, but if you're going to have it, putting an entry on optimization in it makes sense
I'm just concerned because of the tone I've seen here on the subject. People tend to mockingly talk about "pointless optimization", and I don't think that belongs in the FAQ
The frequently asked question is not "how do I waste my time doing pointless optimizations", but "will X speed up my program", or "how do I make my code go fast"
After all, questions like "is a for or a while loop faster" are pretty frequent
@jalf No, neither do I want such a tone in that entry. As I had written, I'd like one that makes it clear why theirs is a dupe, by listing and linking to the many similar questions.
but one more point to consider might be to simply refer to the FAQ in a comment, rather than closing the question. I can think of a lot of questions where the OP would benefit from this general optimization advice, but where it's not enough, and doesn't provide a satisfactory answer by itself
Few days back, I was asked thsi question for a job interview, out of three questions this was the most tricky one.
Here is the question:
Two integer variables L and R are given. Their initial content is 0 and 1 respectively and it can be manipulated using the following unfold operations:
o...
The guy who came up with #SOPA is a copyright violator: http://www.vice.com/read/lamar-smith-sopa-copyright-whoops. Now, who'd have thought that could happen to anyone?
@Xeo Alice doesn't produce routers. You need to find out which router is actually inside the Alice wrapping. You will then very likely find the docs on the web.
The first is ok
*++p1 = *p2++ // p1++; *p1 = *p2; p2++;
the second is UB with C++ because you are modifying what is pointed by p1 twice (once because of increment and once because of assignment) and there are no sequence points separating the two side effects.
With C++0x rules things are diff...
Nevermind, increment followed by assignment, got it.
@DeadMG the worst case is you are so revolted by the taste that you projectile vomit your self a near death state and have lie in it until some one is able to revive you
Of course it's well-defined.
It doesn't matter when the assignment p=arr takes place. You aren't evaluating p[0], you're subscripting the result of (p=arr), which is the pointer value which is being stored into p. Whether or not it's been stored yet doesn't change the value, and the value is k...
@thecoshman Usually it's only the bottle that smells (presumably from the cling-ons in the lid). Once you have it in your cereal bowl, it's fine.
I can only shake my head about the attitude to throw away food after the date stamped on the package. At least here in Germany, it's the date the producer guarantees the product will still be fine ("Mindesthaltbarkeit"). That doesn't mean the product will turn bad exactly the day after, it only means it's not guaranteed to still be good then. Yet, people throw away perfectly fine food just because of that date. That's hilarious.