the sample result of this code should be "7 5 3" but it shows:"3" just.
what is the problem?
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
class Link {
public:
long info;
Link *next;
Link *prev;
Link(long i, Link *ne = NULL, Link *pr = NULL)
: info(i), next(ne), prev(pr) {}
...
it is the wrong size of the array. You need to implement functionality so you do not have empty places at the end of the array. This is my question? Can you fix this mistake? cheek this code careful. i need an answer buy tonight. — Mebara7 mins ago
@VermillionAzure So, how did I do? No keyboards other than my PC one were harmed in the process (I even moused on Soundcloud!) paste.ubuntu.com/16854990
@6502 why would that ever happen (also, very little wrong with that choice of EDSL syntax. %= is quaint, but so are its semantics; no reason to use it here at all) — sehe1 min ago
Can't you um, not use pointers? An STD vector can hold the actual objects right?
The only time I've had to use a std::vector of smart pointers was when they pointed to hardware device addresses and had some vendor specific destruction procedure.
I use pointers for polymorphism. But, comparing storing raw pointers to smart pointers, both methods are equally exception safe aslong as they are stored in the vector?
I mean, there's some clusterfuckery with surrounding namespaces and shit.
I still don't understand why the version I have settled on for my variant's get works, but the other ones don't (and by "don't work" I mean "break in one of the compilers I want to support).
@sehe Nope. The algorithm is iterating over value_type. (You need to know: bool value_compare::operator()(const value_type& x, const value_type& y) const {return comp(x.first, y.first);}.)
@sehe Oh, right, it doesn't necessarily return end() when it failed. Ugh.
@sehe We're on an embedded platform with limited memory and CPU. It took lots of fiddling to find the optimization settings resulting in executables small enough to be even loadable on that platform...
What would be faster when inserting a range of elements into such a sorted vector: finding the right spot to insert for every element or just appending all of them and sorting then?