@TonyTheLion I used his question as a finger exercise. I still want to make my own grammar aware textobject thingy one day. I love Resharper's 'Extend Selection' (and Shrink Selection) actions, and allthough Vim's text objects are really similar, they're not quite syntax aware
I intend to wire a simple Python parser at first, and perhaps libclang later
It is when you say =i{ to reindent a scope block, and cib to replace a whole parameter list at once stuff like that. yatPP to create two copies of an XML element, complete with nested tags, if any. Stuff like that
@sehe personally i find languages (in general) that have such extreme abstractions rather difficult to understand at times, and that to me makes them harder than c++
@MooingDuck I was actually referring to a broader group. Factor and Lisp would not be considered esoteric, I suppose. I still think their style makes it harder to do 'actual stuff' in it
@MooingDuck I found that C is so simple, it is hard to see how simple it is. I'm slowly growing an appreciation for C over the years (from being forcibly exposed to C projects)
i have an object which contains a sequence container .. every element in the sequence container contains a unique processID. every process a set of questions each having a unique qeustionID and a counter that represents how many times that questions fails ....
which sequence container should i use to store this object as i want to serialize this object at the end of my program and reload once the program runs again
i think i cannot use map as map would not allow something like map<question,counter>
@Collin okay i ran into a problem ..... i declared a variable called counter and initialized it to 0 .... when a question fails, i do map[processID][questionID] = ++counter;
okay ... stupid question .... let me correct it myself and rephrase my question
Hi how do i accept to names from the user and print them back to the screen using arrays
this the code i working with
int array[500];
char array2[200];
printf("Please Enter The number of names: ");
scanf("%d",&num);
for(i=0;i<num;i++)
{
array[i]=0;
...
i can find a key in map by doing iterator = map.find(key) and this would take the iterator to the key position if key is found .... but if my map is defined as map<key1,map<key2,value>> ... how would I further search key 2 after doing iterator = map.find(key1) in order to reach for the value ?
@stdOrgnlDave i want to check if key1 and key 2 already exist in the map defined as map<key1,map<key2,value>> ... if they exist, i want to increase the value by +1 (value is a counter for key2) ... otherwise create insert map[key1][key2] = value
basically i want to store a history of every question of every process that fails ... and when i run my program multiple times ... if the same question for a process fails in the second run, i want to increase the counter so that it shows that the question failed 2 times
@Atif actually, considering what you are doing, I'd go with a vector<QAStruct> where QAStruct contains a vector of Answers, including how many times each one has been... whatever
@stdOrgnlDave let me explain ... i want to create a map of type map<key1,map<key2,value>> .... an insert in the map would be something like map[1][2] = 1; where 1 is key1 and 2 is key2
I run my audit program which audits the processes and questions inside each process .... so in the end i have something like Process1-> Question1 failed ... Process2->question3 failed .... and so on
no wait @Atif I'd love to help but I stayed up late last night helping someone figure out k^4 * n^2 * (N_L ^ d) or something slightly more complex. I'm not up for another night of problem-solving
i want to save which questions failed for which processes and serialize it to a file when my main program exits .... when i run the program for the 2nd time with a new input, i want to load this data from the serialized file ... and if Process1->question1 fails again, i want to increase the counter to keep tract that process1->question1 has failed two times now ...
hence map<key1,map<key2,value>> used as map<processID,map<questionID,counter>>
@stdOrgnlDave no probs bro ... have a good night
@MooingDuck what do you think i should use ... and then off course how
i have a map defined as map<key1,map<key2,value>> .... value is a counter and contains the number of times the pair <key1,key2> is found ... how can I perform this check so that if <key1,key2> occurs for the first time, i set the value as 1 and for every next occurrence, increase the value by value+1
if i use std::map<std::pair<key1, key2>, value>, how would I check the key1/key2 ... the iterator would point me to the pair
how do i check inside the pair
and i mean the syntax to access map<std::pair<key1,key2>,value> ... i can check the element of standalone pair<key1,key2> p by p.first/p.second .... but how to do it once its inside the map
I have a call to GetWindowRect in my program. I get a red line under it in visual studio telling me something is wrong with it. The program still runs in debug mode but in release mode the program doesn't compile (identifier not found for the GetClientRect calls). I have windows.h included. Anyone have an idea what might be the problem here?
Then you just have to look for what things are different in release. #ifdef NDEBUG around the windows include, for example, or different project settings for each build type.
At first I thought it would be 'container implementations use std::less for versatility' (since, you could want different comparers for different containers of the same type)
@GManNickG But I noticed, unique_ptr::operator< is defined in terms of std::less<CT> where CT is the common type of the two pointed-to arguments... Mmm. not really consisten at first sight
I've don't done a huge amount of work with threads, but I am fairly sure that when you start talking about hundreds of threads running on a server, you are probably doing something wrong
surely such vast numbers of threads for a program is going to start hurting performance
meh, not too concerned, it's not what I get paid to worry about
just find it strange that when people are talking about the RAM usage being so high, they try running with a lower thread limit. Which makes sense by it self, but just seems like trying to treat the symptoms
> Hannah Montana Linux is a unix-like Linux Operating System based on Kubuntu. The Package Manager is Debian apt. The GUI is KDE 4.2 with Hannah Montana themes
Flags aren't strong enough, we need a fucking flame thrower