This is supposed to detect whether a point in 3-space is moving in any of 6 directions (up, down, left right, in out) using vector math (I can post the header and the vector math library it uses if that helps) but I don't know how yet
I need to see if I can figure it out to the point where I can save some time and build it in my own environment rather than c
@jamesson I suggest you simply review the basic concepts of analytical geometry and you're perfectly good to go. There's nothing fundamental there about c++ really, it's just a few vector operations.
While spelunking through the code of a new project you recently joined, you find the following factory function declaration: JG Question 1. What’s wrong with this return type? Guru Questions 2. What is the recommended return type? Explain your answer, including any tradeoffs. 3. You’d like to actually change the return type to [...]
@Xeo I came up from C - I'm used to passing length after pointer. Yes, possible source of bug, ugly, but what is less ugly in C++(pre-11) for passing an array, other than a template?
@Xeo (Concerning the answer you brought up earlier....) Well that was embaressing. :) Fixed it; surprisingly, nobody had provided an actual answer. Better late than never, I suppose.
Anyways, since you're coming from C, here's a good advice: Wipe C off your mind, forget it completely, and learn modern C++ from ground up. You'll be surprised at how little similarity there is, if any. After that, if you need the low-level knowledge, remember it again.
@Xeo I have learned modern C++ "from the ground up." I should say I came up from C years ago and just wondered what the big deal is - some people are pretty adamant about how evil they are. I'm one of those weird people who have seriously never, ever had a serious problem with pointers, but I also learned to be pedantic with them early on, and avoid being a 3-star and almost always 2-star programmer.
so, with all this established - and yes, std::vector should have been fairly obvious to me - other than the potential for shooting oneself in the foot, are you of the mind that a "safer" method is always a better method? What I mean to say is, do you think C++'s ways are always so much better than decent C that we have to abandon them?
For instance, template instantiations that cause errors or bugs can be a pain to debug, sometimes worse than pointer errors, though not always
Also, after a few dozen errors, you start to see a pattern for your compiler and I don't really find them all that bad anymore (which doesn't mean they aren't horrific)
If you want a compiler with really awesome error messages, try Clang
It also got the best C++11 support IIRC, and is faster and has less memory footprint than GCC
(And of course, I'm talking about the current revision of the repository, since the latest release is Clang 3.0 and that is ages old in terms of features.)
Oh, how are the concurrency features coming along in Clang? the support page seems really out of date; I can't happen to...*gasp*...ditch Boost yet, can I? (to be fair, nothing against Boost, except that the documentation tells you how to go to the moon when you want to take a walk around the block)
@Xeo yes, GCC just pretends everything is single-threaded and std::async promises (futures? late at night) are only evaluated when called, unless you schedule it manually yourself of course
I just wish that MS didn't have that delicious, mouth-watering IDE and extremely awesome debugger...sigh...it spoils you. I'm writing some Linux (well, cross-platform but mostly deployed on and meant for Linux) code in MS, when it's way too big to just SSH with vim.
I'm going to have to do some serious std::vector benchmarks, I'm about to enter into the pixel cup thingy and the graphics I'm doing in software are seriously, seriously, seriously intensive; 5% could be a huge problem
if there's one thing I haven't applied modern C++ to before it's bare-bones graphics algorithms
@soandos Because it's better to have safe, working code that automatically deletes and doesn't leak in the face of exceptions. :) you can also use std::unique_ptr<int[]> to have a dynamic array that doesn't resize for minimal overhead while maintaining safety and correctness. If it's not available it's still better to use std::vector.
But anyway, given that, the correct way to delete is just delete [] inputArray.
I though that the following line was syntactic sugar for that: int* sourceArray[3] = {createInputArray(10, rand()),createInputArray(10000,rand()),createInputArray(100000,rand())};
@soandos Yup, but sourceArray is still automatically (stack) allocated, so it goes away on its own. The individually allocated elements need to be deleted though.
All this headache goes away if you use std::vector! (Or RAII in general.)
@soandos You probably have an uninitialized variable. If you don't initialize left to null, for example, the check will pass, even though its value is garbage.
But that check can't fail, by the way. The reason I asked is because in Release optimizations often make it impossible for the debugger to point at the correct and exact location where the error is occurring.
So even though it points at that check, it's probably a little bit before or after that, depending on inlining and whatnot.
@IntermediateHacker, and everyone else: my code basically creates three of the following (all of different sizes) linked list, array, binary tree, and conpares the timings. Thats it.
You really need to follow the rule of three. You can't just bank on "well I think I never copied any...". If you want, just enforce it at the most basic level: ake the class noncopyable.
Then at least you can be confident in saying no copies are made.
In C++03, you just declare (never define!) the copy-constructor and assignment-operator in your class in the private section. In C++11 you can write = delete after it.
Wow color me pissed. I'm using Notepad, the simplest possible text editor, hit Ctrl+S to save my progress on some little things I'm writing to myself...and the window literally just vanishes (probably crashed silently). Arg.