is it possible to write something like this?
template<typename U, typename... Ts>
void invoke(function<void(Ts...)> f, vector<U> args)
{
f(args[0], args[1], ..., args[sizeof...(Ts) - 1]);
}
@JohannesSchaub-litb Johannes can you take a look at my update to this answer and see if I pulled of what you were clearly trying to get across to the original answer? I sincerely hope it is accurate.
indeed the change from int** to int[][] made the calculation working. I didn't think that far :)
@WhozCraig removed my downvote. it would IMO be even better if it explained why it won't work anymore with y being int**which the OP was trying to "fix" it with
but i guess your explanation will make them understand the int** case too :)
@sehe After this episode, I'm actually gonna consider dropping another few hundred $ to setup automatic online backups. So I'll have two copies of everything. A nightly synced online backup. And a quarterly manual offline backup.
Offline backups can be in a different geographic location.
@Ell These are all externals. And the sheer amount of data makes things messy as I'd need massive RAID boxes... which are not easy to get through airport security.
Right now, after I'm done shuffling stuff around, it'll look like this: Normal data - Primary -> (2 TB portable) Normal data - Backup -> (2 TB desktop external) Anime - Primary -> (2 x 3TB external) Anime - Backup -> (2 x 3TB external) Digits - Primary -> 3 x 3TB + 1 x 2TB Digits - Backup -> partitioned from 8 x 2TB
Only my normal data is valuable and modified enough to need online backups.
So I'll be pulling out one of my spare 2TB drives to do that.
The problem of accidentally calling std::max instead of your own max is only possible with a using namespace std; somewhere in your own code. We know this is a very bad idea. Shame on you! ;) — FredOverflow13 secs ago
@Mysticial I have a nightly synced offline backup. With a retainment period of 10 days. Besides that, there's full history on the fileserver, but that's onsite.
unsigned int test = 1234567890;
unsigned char a = test >> 24;
unsigned char b = (test >> 16) & 255;
unsigned char c = (test >> 8) & 255;
unsigned char d = test & 255;
Now send a, b, c and d over the network.
unsigned int received = a << 24 | b << 16 | c << 8 | d;
Please note the use of unsigned char instead of just plain char. If char is signed on your platform, you will get strange results.
Say I have something in inches. I measure porportionally that it is some percent of the image size (heightwidth of that object / total heightwidth of image), then I apply that percentage to centimeters on a different picture
Thanks for pointing me out on the right direction. I seriously apologize for writing such an horrible code but i kind of panic when i have to check if an object will be accessed outside a specific function or not. Thanks again. — Felipe Morales6 hours ago
How does using additional, unnecessary pointers decrease panic? lol
I have two images, one in inches and one in centimeters. By getting the return value of the porportion on the inches picture, I can use it regardless of anything else, right?