but really, you'd probably do yourself a favor by avoiding pointers as much as possible. Whatever you're trying to do can almost certainly be done without using pointers. So do that.
@shookees if you indeed got that error, then whatever they point to has an invalid copy constructor. More use of std::unique_ptr and std::vector will fix that
gah. unresolved external symbol _COMMUNICATIONNOTIFY_RPCServer_ICommunicationNotifyRPC_v1_0_s_ifspec. But that word isn't in my 1.7GB source anywhere. Hmm
@MooingDuck Static linking puts the library's code into the output. Sure you can do some optimizing and not include dead code (if that can be determined), but the code you use lives in the output: you can delete the static library. When dynamic linking, the code lives on the library, and the output keeps only references to it.
for future reference, it'll be a lot easier to get others to help if you try to write your code in english. It's so much easier for us to understand your code when we understand the variable names
Try stripping it down to a minimal example. Do you get the same problem if you remove the if, and just do *parkai[2]=*parkai[0];parkai[2]->mazintiKainas(12); for example?
@wilhelmtell not really. qi::skip is a socalled parser directive which modifies the parsing context for the contained expression. The directive is constructed using (optional) parameters. In this case, the parameter is another parser expression
@shookees No, instead try to narrow it down to the simplest example you can, and then post the complete example. Including class and function definitions. Something we can take home and compile and try for ourselves
@jalf, now when I'm thinking there might be a problem with copying one object with the other. You see inside them there's another dynamic pointer array, whereas there might be difference in size
@KianMayne Oh. Well, this room is rather straight-forward in word choice. I am sorry that locks you out, but please blame your school for this idiocy, not us.
@jalf Only the Casual Chat room has their own bin (because apparently, someone was unhappy that they could not chat in the "bin"). The "bin" is for everyone.
@shookees that would explain it. Unless you define a proper assignment operator, it'll use the compiler-generated one, which would just copy the pointer to the array, rather than the array itself. That is why I suggested you should avoid pointers. The standard library comes with a very nice dynamic array already. Use that instead
@RMartinhoFernandes well, I searched for 'bin', and that was the only one that seemed the least relevant. If an angry admin/janitor comes around to complain, just tell them I did it and it won't happen again. :)
@shookees if you indeed got that error, then whatever they point to has an invalid copy constructor. More use of std::unique_ptr and std::vector will fix that
@wilhelmtell well, text is qi::rule<Skipper> -> the attribute type is qi::unused_type, you can hardly expect operator+ to work on that, no matter how lazily evaluated
@sehe maybe i should say what i want. i want to ignore all input, leave it exactly as is, but when i read << iwant to recognize that and what's follows until and including >>