Hey everyone, I'm following along a tutorial demonstrating how to use Direct2D and in the dude's video, everything works, but I've followed very closely, but he doesn't get a syntax error I'm getting
I'm getting a syntax error that looks like so:
error C2143: syntax error: missing ';' before '*' when declaring a pointer. The declaration looks like this: ID2D1HwndRenderTarget* renderTarget;
So, I tested TensorRT. The performance matches my theoretical calculation 1 to 1. If you can get this stuff out of the box, what am I going to do for a living :-)
@JerryCoffin It's not that simple. Conversions from one type to another is not possible in C++. You can create a new object with a different type and a similar value, but nobody defines when the new value is similar enough, so that doesn't help in defining what a cast is.
There is no agreed upon definition when Type(arg) is a cast and when it isn't. "Value-preserving" is the most common one, but it is ill-defined.
hey, sorry, unrelated question, I'm obviously very new to C++ and I've got a small problem: I've got a bunch of node.js bindings in entry.cpp and one of those bindings is supposed to set a value that I'll use in a function defined outside of entry.cpp, so I've created a store
but when I reference the header in entry.cpp and the file I want to use, I get a duplicate declaration error
@Rick Use a smart pointer. Then you don't need to manually delete. Arguably, manually new is also a mistake, but less of one as you can immediately place the result into a unique_ptr
@nwp Of course there's an agreed-upon definition--the one in the standard. The only room for disagreement is what wording you use If you want to be pedantic, the standard uses the phrasing: "Explicit type conversion (functional notation)" (see §[expr.type.conf]). Note that although you're correct that this creates a new object of a specified type, the standard still uses the phrase "type conversion" to describe it.
is there a nice pattern for walking as you add to an iterator. This is the only thing that works that imitates that pattern. However, I find it lacking