I heard they had servers which step up to respond to requests which aren't handled by another machine (in case for whatever reason, it stops responding)
Sudden breach of topic, feel free to ignore. But what is a good Shunting Yard Algorithm implementation in regards to an expression parser with possible support for user variables? Not asking for help just felt like discussing the Shunting Yard Algorithm and its various implementations, for example what do you think is the best in regards to speed, precision, and robustness?
I tried my own implementation of Converting from Infix to Reverse Polish Notation then evaluating, but (what you think would be the simple part) I must not have tokenized the input right, it only gave me the first token from the expression as the result, I think I ended up breaking it up into single characters instead of only breaking tokens at an operator. And yeah simple precedence modal like that, maybe with ^ as well, I dont think I will mess with condition operatores
@DeadMG Right, on up there on the list of "easiest things a programmer can do" alongside "writing your own database" and "making your own graphics drivers"
@DeadMG And I meant I tokenized the input, added it to the vector, then iterated through that. I can see how that is bad. And that didnt occur to me to use a custom struct thanks
If we're talking about tokenizing input to identify an identifier from an operand, that's simple. But the range of languages you can derive from that is incredibly simple.
And of course, that is one small step in a series of steps that are increasingly complicated
Yeah once I tokenize it I get confused on how to process is, like if I see the operator is '+' with the lowest precedence, i dont know how to apply that to the tokens, because the previous token would only be one part of a number and not the number as a whole
Yes, but I am unsure on how to use the tokens to decide how to process the input, im probably making absolutely no sense
I found an example, c++ version is at the bottom, it uses vector<string> like I was just told not to do, so it is a bad example but, maybe I can learn from it: technical-recipes.com/2011/…
I'm trying to avoid just copying it down though, i want to learn
And for my first like DeadMG said should only use ()*+- operators, and I would have to define operators with precedence, would that count as a grammar? Rules stating one sub-expression must be evaluated before the other?
Maybe this is too complex a topic for me lol. I either over-simply, over-complicate, or just miss a key principal altogether
Actually that would help out alot too because (even though I havent had time to sift through the code and try to understand it yet) I'm not sure what to do with the RPN after that
Yeah I never understood exactly what RPN was. And i notice you used unordered_map's and set's, none of these which the example I looked at provided. Which makes me even further grateful that somebody with actual knowhow whipped that up, so I can learn things the RIGHT way.
Yeah the random link seemed fishy to me didnt click either lol
Lolol, nicely put. Okay well how could you give me an example of a simple Infix expression and its RPN equivelent to get a peek at exactly how "funny" it outputs the expression?
What does the compiler do if I completely implement a class in its header file? A typical example follows:
class MyException
{
public:
explicit MyException(const char* file, int line) file(file), line(line) {};
const char* getFile() const { return file };
int getLine() const { re...
"Hey guys, we made a completely shit game that requires nothing of the player, so instead of changing it so that it's actually fun to play, we'll make the player implement half the UI scripts and call it skill."