Hm. I have a std::list on a class. An instance of that class, in one of its functions, is going to operator= the list into another list declared on the stack. None of the things involved are const.
@DeadMG Ouch! You need to find a job where the surroundings have better access. When you look for a flat, keep your priorities straight: 1) fast pipe 2) roof to keep computer dry 3) enough room for a chair next to the computer 4) Everything else.
I remember reading about Chernobyl emergency workers, and they're all dying of horrific exposure, and they're having a "How much of a radiation overdose did you get?"
I guess that dick-waving is just human nature
@Rapptz The pain is definitely worse, but it tends to last for less time, and occurs a lot less frequently.
I don't really need shared ownership, unique_ptr does what I want it to do in terms of ownership, but I want to take that list, put it all in another temporary list, then clear the original list. Ownership should only happen once, which is why I went with unique_ptr in the first place.
You want move constructors to be noexcept most of the time -- that is something a lot of people agree on, and a lot of types will fulfil that. However using std::move will not guarantee that a move constructor is used.
@LucDanton I'm not all that sure what you are doing with the std::move stuff there. I just can tell you that the lock/unlock pair there is at least correct. That is there are no deadlock/race issues there.
For now I think you should just use template<typename Functor> void Add(Functor functor);. Have you tested your additional Add overloads that take more than one arguments? I can't imagine that they work.
@DeadMG DispatchBase is a abstract base class with one call: Invoke (and soon I think I'll add a BeginInvoke for launching work from a Dispatcher onto another thread or into a ThreadPool). Anything that derives from DispatchBase just has to do whatever it needs to do in Invoke() .
@LucDanton It's a work queue. For example, my FileSystemWatcher has a separate thread blocking on an API call, waiting for changes to happen to a file system (it's NOT FindFirstChange*); I need to be able to send notifications that the file system has changed back to the user of the FileSystemWatcher for my game, on the main thread. The reason is, when I load a new resource or respond to a FileSystemWatcher event that indicates a file change, I don't want to start kicking the resource when I know
that it might be in use. So, I decided to have something on the main thread that owns all these resources to have a DIspatcher - a variable-work queue that will dispatch work related to what's supposed to run on it. A message queue, a job queue, whatever you want to call it.
@LucDanton It's meant to mimic a regular application in its while loop. If it explodes, then the application explodes. I have no expectations for the rest of the work.
@LucDanton I don't think the manager thingie can really do much else as it really has no clue what kinds of exceptions can come out of the Invoke call. I guess if anything else, it can look for out of memory errors and attempt to free some memory.
Not that modern operating systems ever throw std::bad_alloc, they tend to overcommit instead.
I have an assignment to do and part of it does not make sense to me. Can anyone help me understand exactly what is required? This is what i was asked to do...
Recursion Problem2:
Adapt the triangular spiral program done in class to make a
more usual spiral made up of straight line segments.
H...
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wasn't aware the std::function runs anything other than what was necessary to store and preserve the call that its supposed to be making.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yea, well I was specifically mentioning std::bad_alloc in my example of something you could handle specifically (instead of catch (...) { ... }.
Then I realized that most environments won't actually give you a chance to free up RAM. x)
This is following my apparent success at translating 27k LoC PL/SQL -> 2.7k LoC C# the other time; The code has seen vast performance improvements and doesn't require scarce PL/SQL expertise* (*_expertise_ being a slightly funny choice of word for the codebase)
@nixeagle You should see the 'functional specs'... 121 pages of hairy mess. Sadly don't have it (digitally) now, so I can't quote for proper fear-instillment
This is my personal tool to get 'some' overview of the major components. Now at least I know what was dead code (it's not in the picture) and what the complex blocks are
You know, I'm going to need to slap a number of hours on it somewhere monday/tuesday
@nixeagle the grey boxes are actual public services (callable from external software components on the self-proclaimed service-bus - kinda sorta).
The black box is a Business Rule. Meaning: a very very well hidden call to an internal function right from a database trigger. All that is leaning on Oracle TAPI/CAPI with Headstart (which is rather arcane, from where I'm sitting)
Note als the RED box (FH2050) which is a function, that is actually dynamically 'engaged' but doesn't exist in the database - I wonder when it will get hit :) That's a guaranteed production problem report waiting to happen
@LucDanton I'm trying to flatten calls with variable arguments using std::bind, but as far as I can see when reading the docs and some examples, std::bind tells you to use placeholders and then supply the real arguments when calling the actual std::function. Is there a way to have std::bind also wrap the arguments as well?
@Crowz for color1(mapped from <0,0> to <n,m>) and color2(mapped from <0,0> to <n,m> ) in both images { if (color1 == color2) {match++} else {nomatch++} } total = match + nomatch; accuracy = match/total.
@nixeagle Ah clever maan. I should also adjust it to compensate for the fact that they'll never be THE SAME... also I need to adjust the images to the same size beforehand
some idea of "if it is close enough"... for example say you use black to mean the "line", as long as there is black within say... 3 or 4 pixels of the black in the human drawn image, put it in the "match" bin.
@Crowz You might want to look at something like the SIFT algorithm. Not sure how it'll do on sketch vs. picture, but it's frequently used for things like computer vision and finding overlapping areas when creating stitched panoramas.
@JerryCoffin that would let him stretch the image to the required size. Still needs a decent comparison function.
@Crowz you basically have to do a pass to change the image into the correct size for comparing, then have an algorithm similar to the "simple" one I put above. But the algorithm for comparing probably ought to be "fuzzy", as in accepting "close enough" for some value of "close enough" as a match.