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user142019
21:00
Also std::array<std::vector<std::vector<std::string>>, 4>.
user142019
Also vectors of vectors are terrible unless you want a vector of vectors.
@Zoidberg'-- well afaik, you can't do vector[index] if the vector doesn't have that element
and the only way it is going to have it is if you push_back stuff on it
@Tuntuni What are you trying to make?
user142019
I.e. std::vector<std::vector<T>> is not a multidimensional array, it's an array of arrays.
isn't that a md array?
an array of arrays
user142019
21:01
no
o.O?
my whole life ..
i don't even
@Tuntuni You can certainly put a vector into an array, if that's what you mean. Beyond that, "safe" is open to a lot of interpretation.
it's more generic than a md array - it can be jagged
user142019
A multidimensional array is an array where the index of an element needs multiple numbers.
user142019
An array of arrays is an array that has arrays as its elements.
21:01
ah that, ok
user142019
In 2D space, for example, a coordinate is two numbers.
they may "function" in similar ways based on what you're doing, but the data structure itself is different
user142019
Likewise, in a 2D array, an element has an index consisting of two numbers.
Ell
Ell
@Tuntuni IMHO, I would use it as a multidimensional array and just ignore the others :P
@Zoidberg'-- ya
@Ell hahah ;D
Ell
Ell
21:02
unless it becomes a performance problem, just use vector<vector<t>>
IMHO. but then again I suck :P
so what i'm doing is
or vector<pair> if it applies
i have this game FAQ
but it isn't organised
i.e. the "chapters" aren't in correct order
Ell
Ell
or map<pair<int, int>, T>
and there's LOTS of it
21:03
then grow some balls and do all the chapters.
@DeadMG manually? f no :D
i already did the coding and it works
i just wanted to ask if having an arrays of vectors is ok
@Zoidberg'-- your terminiology is confusing. An array of arrays is a multidimensional array. But a vector of vectors is suboptimal
user142019
No.
21:04
@Zoidberg'-- sure it is
@Tuntuni It's fine
I totally agree he wants an actual multidimensional array class though. or a vector of arrays or something.
@MarcusStuhr ok so then this would be ok "std::vector<std::vector<std::string> > my_vec_array[8] = {}"?
it's 3d i think
user142019
That will create eight empty vectors.
array, vector, vector
21:06
@Tuntuni yes, but it's probably a bad idea. you probably want an std::array<> in there somewhere
just what i need
@MooingDuck ah, i'll look into it
user142019
And you will get the very nice array-to-pointer decaying you've always wanted.
@Tuntuni how big is the 3d array?
user142019
Potato.
@MooingDuck not that big i think, the whole array has 8 elements, and the number of vectors varies
21:07
@Tuntuni both other dimensions are variable?
yes
it goes like chapter -> photo -> lines
there are 8 chapters
user142019
template<class T, std::size_t Dimensions, std::size_t... Sizes>
class multidimensional_array;
rest varies
user142019
^ I want.
user1182183
I actully tried once to create such a big vector:
user1182183
21:08
typedef vector<int> intVector;
typedef vector<intVector> int2dVector;
typedef vector<int2dVector> int3dVector;
typedef vector<int3dVector> int4dVector;

intVector   Section1(256, 0);
int2dVector Section2(256, Section1);
int3dVector Section3(256, Section2);

int4dVector IPS(256, Section3);
user1182183
:P
user142019
And I want my_multidimensional_array[1, 2, 3]. :<
user1182183
yeah that won't initialize
@Zoidberg'-- just use std::array
user142019
I should probably call it tensor.
user142019
21:09
And I want to be able to do maths on them.
@Zoidberg'-- Just use mapel, or whatever's modern these days.
user142019
folk!
foo!
@Zoidberg'-- Maybe Maple is even modrnerer
user142019
21:10
@CaptainGiraffe but that's not fun!
multidimensional_array<int, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10> arr;
array<array<array<array<int, 10, 9, 8, 7>>>> arr; //not much savings
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- boost!
user142019
Boost has a tensor class?
@MooingDuck add "std::" ;)
Ell
Ell
it has a multiarray class :P
user142019
21:11
That's not a tensor. :P
@MooingDuck no savings obtained, requires shavings
@Tuntuni using std::array; (in the function of course, not global scope)
could someone tell me why a space is necessary between the '>'? e.g. in vector<vector<T > >?
@Zoidberg'-- Do you want a one-form or?
@MooingDuck hehe ^^
21:13
oh I got all the > in teh wrong spots :<
user142019
@Tuntuni otherwise it would be the >> token. It's "fixed" (ugly hack) in C++11.
@Tuntuni it was overlooked in C++03, fixed in C++11.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- what is a tensor? is it very mathsy?
oh, how did they fix it?
@Ell yes
21:13
@Ell Quite mathsy
user142019
@Ell basically a generalization of scalars, vectors, matrices etc.
@Ell i like your "mathsy" :D
martinho has a simple multidimensional array class, but I can't find it. Use boost.'
user142019
Scalar is 0th-order tensor (I think?), vector is 1nd-order tensor, matrix is 2rd-order tensor.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- okay. At the minute I can't see that being useful, I guess I need to research it though
@Zoidberg'-- ohh right
21:14
how did they fix the > > problem?
user142019
You can have 3rd-order tensor. That could be visualized as a 3D grid of numbers (like a matrix is a 2D grid of numbers).
Ell
Ell
Got you, that seems simple enough :P
@Zoidberg'-- I was looking in my book on general relativity to find the first real use of tensors. So I'd have to say quite mathsy.
user142019
@Tuntuni by saying >> is either >> or > > depending on the context.
First real use for me that is.
21:16
@CaptainGiraffe Nah.
user142019
@Ell it's a nice excersice (or however the fuck that word ought to be spelled xd) to implement in C++, especially the operators. :^)
tensors as a general concept may not be so useful without general relativity.
but matrices and vectors.. pretty useful things in general.
Ell
Ell
and scalars are definitely useful ;)
user142019
lol
user142019
I could make anything in Zoidlang a tensor. xd
21:18
@Ell <perl>$scalars?</perl>
Ell
Ell
@CaptainGiraffe ...I don't get it :P
@Zoidberg'-- I think if I was inventing my own world, I'd concentrate more on relaxors than tensors. :-)
Ell
Ell
I'm sorry I still don't get it >.< Sorry for being unworldly :p
user142019
@Ell In Perl $ denotes a scalar and @ denotes a vector (array), and (unrelated), % denotes a dictionary.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- ohh right :L
21:20
@Ell Lets not forget <id>.
user142019
$foo = 42; // $foo is a scalar.
@bar = (1, 2, 3); // @bar is an array.
@Zoidberg'-- And how do we denote the number of elements in bar? Perl grammar rock!
user142019
template<class T, std::size_t... Sizes>
class tensor {
public:

private:
    std::tuple<std::array<T, Sizes>...> elements;
};
user142019
Would that work?
user142019
@CaptainGiraffe do I know. I never use Perl.
user142019
21:23
Perl is a terrible language.
@Zoidberg'-- I think you actually would appreciate perl for the kind of stuff you are attempting here. BTW bar as a scalar is the arrays length.
The syntax/shortcuts (I imagine) you are looking for are not avaliable in c++.
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- I heard you need perl to parse perl. Not sure how true that is o.O
user142019
yeah
user142019
They say that. xd
user142019
Perl 6 is ridiculous.
user142019
21:28
I would never even want to write a Perl 6 parser.
user142019
It's a hell.
Ell
Ell
I've never seen perl code really
@Zoidberg'-- no
Ell
Ell
Only perl regexs which are powerful :3
user142019
> For some syntactic purposes, Perl distinguishes bracketing characters from non-bracketing. Bracketing characters are defined as any Unicode characters with either bidirectional mirrorings or Ps/Pe/Pi/Pf properties.
user142019
21:29
> Embedded comments are supported as a variant on quoting syntax, introduced by #` plus any user-selected bracket characters (as defined in "Bracketing Characters" above):
user142019
> any user-selected bracket characters ಠ_ಠ
user142019
So you can use Japanese brackets, [], {}, (), other mathematical brackets, or whatever the fuck you want. xd
arg, why can't I do this (python) func(**dict1, **dict2)?
user142019
To make it even more complex
user142019
you can use any combination of brackets and they must be closed in reverse order by matching brackets.
21:31
Is it just me or did they just change the way the search results look?
o.o you're back
@Mysticial I call that regress.
Not really. I'm in a hotel at the end of the day.
user142019
In Perl 6, this is valid: $foo = #`««({{([[ Hello, I'm a fucking comment! ]])}})»» = 42;, but this isn't (mismatched brackets so comment is never closed): $foo = #`««({{([[ Hello, I'm a fucking comment! ]]}})»» = 42;.
@Mysticial Then it is just you. Hotels make you feel that way.
Ell
Ell
21:33
wat
You might be able to turn those into using or typedefs, but I'm doubtful
user142019
Ah okay.
oh wait, typedefs
user142019
Is typedef of any use except for backwards/C compatibility in C++ or is it redundant?
I think it's redundant
21:35
tbqfh
I think that's how std::array should be done.
@Zoidberg'-- Redundant now.
user142019
Oh okay.
although to be fair
@DeadMG tbqfh - to be quite fucking honest?
I'd say it's in for C++03 compat, not C compat.
yes
@Zoidberg'-- bam, it is an array. No additional functions needed.
21:37
@Collin What are you trying to do?
user142019
@MooingDuck I want to provide mathematical operators. :P
@Zoidberg'-- oh, then use my first version then
user142019
And I don't want to expose the array. Oh well.
user142019
I'll do this tomorrow.
@Zoidberg'-- Please sleep on it. I've tried and beyond simple matrix stuff it was extremely difficult to get any cohesion.
21:41
@MooingDuck Really no need for typename there.
user142019
static std::size_t constexpr order = Size + sizeof...(Sizes);
user142019
:P
main.cpp:5:55: error: type/value mismatch at argument 1 in template parameter list for ‘template<class _Tp, long unsigned int _Nm> struct std::array’
main.cpp:5:55: error:   expected a type, got ‘tensor<T, Sizes ...>::type’
@DeadMG guess you do
@DeadMG oh right, that typename. Oops
21:45
lolages
C++11 got rid with quite a few typename requirements
i need to definitely update the "dependent names" faq with the updated c++11 semantics
Ell
Ell
ugh silverlight sucks
user142019
I agree.
user142019
It's almost as terrible as Flash.
user142019
I don't see the point of it when used in web apps.
user142019
21:53
Use fucking HTML and JavaScript that every person on the world can run.
Ell
Ell
It's worse than flash
use html & js or flash as a fallback
user142019
@Ell exactly.
everyone else would do the other way around
flash is the cool thing
user142019
Mobile Flash is already deprecated. \o/
21:55
My wife didn't have a car, so her mother gave her a car in June that we paid her $400 for. We immediately put about $1500 in repairs in it, and two months later it's undrivable. So her mother sold her a $800 car, which we put $1000 in repairs in. Then by bad luck both cars got towed: $1800. We finally got the second one to a garage, and they said they can fix the important current problems for about $1900. Hooray.
user142019
I'm not aware of anything Flash can do that HTML 5 cannot.
it has been a very expensive and unhappy year.
user142019
Heck.
user142019
HTML 5 even has OpenGL.
@MooingDuck Ouch.
21:56
also now we have too many cars and are violating the renters agreement so one or both might get towed again.
user142019
I have no car.
@Zoidberg'-- want two? They're free!
user142019
I use bicycle and public transport.
Ell
Ell
I use public transport & families cars
user142019
Public transport is free except in weekends.
user142019
21:57
And bicycle is also free.
user142019
Car is never free.
@Zoidberg'-- wow. public transport here is $2 for 2 hours, $3 if it's busy.
user142019
It's because I'm a student.
@Zoidberg'-- and European
Ell
Ell
@Zoidberg'-- bus is £1 per journey for me
user142019
21:58
HBO and university students get free public transport. MBO students get free public transport when they turn 18.
user142019
HBO, MBO and university are three levels or however that's called in English.
user142019
Education system y u no fucking world-wide standard.
user142019
T_________T
user142019
(HBO has got nothing to do with movies. xD)

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