So, basically you have` std::vector<claim> claims;` and need to use std::count with a predicate to count the number of elements that match your condition
findCell actually ends up having side effects, but I guess I can still return early
and std::count would help if I had all the cells in a continuous vector, rather than a set of them, which I guess would be better for readability anyway, doing the counting only after I'm done with calculating
hopefully I'm missing something about how these can be used
huh, apparently the pointer at line 57 is always the same value
not sure how to fix that
I'm guessing the temporary variable just gets deleted at the end of the function because nothing is holding an actual reference to it
First off, its a collision detection problem so you build a quad tree, and then evaluate potential collisions between neighbors
Basically, build the structure using CGAL, then query for neighboors, and then collisions in neighbors. Should be about 10 lines of code and 10 lines of CGAL typedefs :-)
Kicked 2 members. I need people who are as intelligent as quants and as good with hands as tradies. Not some fake accounts who are likely to spam at some point in time.
Hey, new to C but really just need confirmation: I) Does pointer always points to a type? II)) Does a pointer always has a type because of (this answer)[https://stackoverflow.com/a/9802673/6799340] ?
How am I too dumb to format links? I can't even edit it anymore, so generations to come will be able to make fun of this :)
I actually haven't used or come across function pointers yet. Will have to read up on them. Do they point to the memory address, where the function code starts?
@YvetteColomb I have deleted the member from the group a few hours ago. There were 5 similar fake accounts, all carrying banner pointing to some porn website on their profile pictures.
@RaisingAgent C is a statically typed language. If pointers weren't typed, the compiler wouldn't know the type of *p, and it wouldn't know how much to add in p+1. The only exception is the void* type, it can point to anything. But then *p and p+1 won't compile.
@fredoverflow ...with the minor detail that some compilers (e.g., gcc/g++) don't conform in this regard, and allow p+1 to compile (acting roughly as if a void * were actually a char * in this case).
Hey everyone I'm really interested in learning C++ from scratch for my next semester and I think I've found a perfect course for it. Can someone help me download it?
@Ian Oh my. That's a long time ago. Good spot, and none of that code would pass my own code review today. I updated the answer to be a little bit better :) — sehe13 secs ago
Udemy sounds like a disease
@BartekBanachewicz Actually, I'll just buy it just to check it out
Those prices don't inspire a lot of confidence, so my expectations are low. I'm always ready to be surprised though