@sehe well what I want is to generate a hash of a tuple consisting of a int32, int16 and int8. So I have to put them together somehow... and not just their text representation, otherwise (1,11,0) would be the same as (11,1,0)
The boost::hash_combine template function takes a reference to a hash (called seed) and an object v. According to the docs, it combines seed with the hash of v by
seed ^= hash_value(v) + 0x9e3779b9 + (seed << 6) + (seed >> 2);
I can see that this is deterministic. I see why a XOR i...
as you can see they replaced your 'concept' of streaming bits with the more rational approach (rotating bits), since you'll be folding down to size_t anyways
I already have the hash algorithm. how about this, would it work ? int32_t i = 0; int16_t j = 1; int8_t k = 2; char* res= new char[32+16+8]; memcpy(res, &i, 32); memcpy(res+32, &j, 16); memcpy(res+16, &k, 8);
@bob You are doing an XY problem here. You shouldn't be trying to compose one 'large' blob of the constituent parts (it doesn't scale anyway). Use a standard, classic hash combiner.
@sehe I was thinking that but I didn't want to go onto the discussion of "compilation/interpretation is a property of the implementation not the language"
You know what I still find strange? The fact that nothing shows up when I type a password into a terminal. Not even asterisks, which is what I would expect.
@Maxpm It's old as hell. I don't remember exactly where I first saw it, but it has been popular in quite a number of scripting languages. Hell, even MSIE will display toe-curling ascii arrows like that when it fails to render/parse an XML document
@Maxpm Well, in general, nothing precludes visual feedback. Many apps do have feedback, but usually only when they specialize for full-featured terminal environments anyway (e.g. ncurses applications)
hey, does anybody here know how to concatenate a here document and a text file with a single command in Bash? The following doesn’t work, it discards the here document:
@sehe What’s “SO./SU”? I’ve tried it on Mac and Linux now, doesn’t work in either
@sehe What you’ve posted above (the subshell) actually does work, but just because you haven’t used a here document! With a heredoc instead of a string for the echo, it doesn’t work any more
You were almost there; this works:
std::stringstream sstr;
std::transform(
input.begin(), input.end(),
std::ostream_iterator<std::string>(sstr, ""),
ConvertHexToAscii);
But unfortunately this instantiates quite a lot of string streams, which is inefficient. Ideally, the Conve...
With OpenMP 3.1, it is possible to have a reduction clause with min:
double m;
#pragma omp parallel for reduction(min:m)
for (int i=0;i< n; i++){
if (a[i]*2 < m) {
m = a[i] * 2;
}
return m;
Suppose I also need the index of the minimal element; is there a way to use the reduction ...
> All words are capitalized except for certain subsets defined by rules that are not universally standardized. The standardization is only at the level of house styles and individual style manuals.
can someone take a quick look at my ChaMessage (pastie.org/4165141) and PlayerJoinMessage(pastie.org/4165136) ? The latter works, the former has a compile error - I don't know why, they are pretty much copy & pasted so I think I've just missed something obvious. (Boost::serialize stuff)
@Als not really, I don't think so. It's not about concurrent access, but rather about sleeping so as not to use cpu. Basically I have a queue that I only want to read from and process when it's not empty (and the one adding to the queue is in charge of calling the one processing it) rather than continuously and regularly trying to read from it
@Als well if you're blocked on a mutex, you are probably regularly trying to hit it until it is free, right ? I mean I don't know how mutexes are implemented, maybe they're smarter than that ? Do you use cpu when you're blocked on a mutex ?
@ManofOneWay I will shut down my machine now, and then put into it this new, bigger HD, onto which the admins have already installed last weekend's backup of my system.
but I am only used to using mutex for mutual exclusion. How can I make it so that a mutex blocks (makes it sleep) one particular thread, until unblocked ?
wouldn't it be simpler to just have a member thread.sleep() and thread.wakeup()
Basically I have a queue that I only want to read from and process when it's not empty (and the one adding to the queue is in charge of calling the one processing it) rather than continuously and regularly trying to read from it
well that's what I want @jalf, to make it go to sleep until awaken by another thread
because I think that it's more efficient to make the thread sleep between every two reads of the queue, rather than deleting and recreating the thread everytime, right ?
under the hood, they're really all the same. The difference is just in the api they present to the programmer. In the standard lib, you create a mutex, and then create a lock object around it to lock the mutex
when the lock object is destroyed, the mutex is released
in my case there are only two states, either you're the queue is empty or isnt. It's not like there's 5 threads accessing the same variable, and there's a need for keeping track of how many are using it at the same time
@Als There is no way to force the consumer thread to start when the producer unlocks the mutex. The producer can sit spinning unlock/lock and the consumer never runs at all. So, a single mutex is insufficient.
everyone, can somebody please explain the principles of condition variable in synchronization of the processes of operating systems, thanks in advance
P.S. please be as simple as possible, I found some info using google but I'm not satisfied
@bob Emphatically not. Multithreading is about correct synchronization, everything else follows from that. There is no way to write a correct program using sleep.
@bob I think the problem here is you are trying to learn concepts on teh internet and a chatroom, You cannot do that you need a good book for that.You can and should only ask specific doubts and problems in forums or a chatroom
@als no, I do have the concepts, it's just been a while so I've forgotten about them. let me read the info you've all given carefully and I'll come back to you. Thanks