Anybody working on anything cool? I'm trying to make a Qt GUI not look like shit, which is apparently harder than semi-classical electromagnetic, embryology, and deep learning/ML put together.
Last 2 days was awful - had to deal with 5 parties in relation to different issues. Two was to do with people not carrying their duties as they promised. One to do with being over charged (by the thousands), one to do with mitigating conflicting sides and the other with solving problems for someone who is currently overseas.
Days get very depressing very quick when you have to deal with people and their conflicts, especially multiple. When you have problems to solve until mid night, and new ones right after you get up and every hour in between.
2019 was awesome, until the last few days. On the other hand, things are progressing because I am dealing with them. Hopefully I will get back to my super happy state again in a few days time when everything is settled (well).
I'm working on program which shows user some picture that is selected by him. But there is a problem because I would like to fit this picture in QGraphicsView's frame and the picture is really smaller than the frame.
So here's my code:
image = new QImage(data.absoluteFilePath()); // variable da...
I have been thinking, you know that magic carpet blanket in Aladdin? We can make it happen! Like a hard carpet with 4 giant propellers underneath each at one corner. Carpet would have motion sensors installed so it knows when to raise, when to fall and when to turn left and right.
@JerryCoffin It seems like a bad use of binary trees. You would first need to know the depth of the tree. So you would need to visit all the elements O(n). Then you would need to use a queue to flatten it in the correct order O(n).
What benefit is in this? The spatial benefits of flattening a tree in this fashion seem odd. At first, I thought that maybe that the vertical ordering on any branch could be used as an adjacency list for path compression, but BST is already optimized with that in mind. Also, why would you store the data in a BST to only later extract in linear time, when it's built for the purpose of (log n) lookups?
thanks fred! I still couldn't wrap why/how the literal 200 turned into -56(which is negative), if i make the statement as "x=127" then in assembly it will stay as 127
@Explorer_N Did you notice how the numbers are exactly 256 apart? That's because for unsigned numbers, bit #7 has a value of 128, whereas for signed numbers, it has a value of -128.
That's why -1 looks the same as 255 in binary; they're 256 apart.
Of course this only holds for bytes.
For 32 bit numbers, it's not bit #7 that's special, but bit #31
@fredoverflow, in my case the byte is unsigned right? so I can represent 0 to 2^8 -1 values which is 0 to 255..why i should worry about #7? but you are basically saying assembly don't give a thing about types(sign/unsigned)...it can represent values in whatever ways it feels comfortable?
@Explorer_N A byte is just 8 bits. How those 8 bits are interpreted is up to the machine instructions. For example, add, sub and mul work the same for signed and unsigned, but division needs two different instructions, idiv and udiv or something (it's been too long to remember the exact names).
The sad fact of wearing brightly coloured shoes in the mud for 5 minutes because it was a good idea back then spending 15 minutes at home trying to get the mud off and not able.
But I still love nature and wildness, partly because it constantly reminds me how much humans have devoluted in a way - furless, mostly without any skill to survive in the wildness where money can buy you nothing (unless you have reception, then maybe it can buy you a helicopter ride).
Reminds you how humans are like an in an ant hill - once removed, almost not able to survive. We live in an artificial world, far removed from true nature.
Very small part of nature, small part of this earth even - consider 71 percent of the Earth's surface is covered by ocean and we have only gone so far out or inside earth.
I'm doing a winAPI project, and would like to make an up-down control editable exclusively using the arrow buttons, not by typing into the edit field. Is the proper way to do this to prevent the edit from responding to the WM_ACTIVATE message somehow?