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05:24
hi, i am using boost function "write_some" to send message to a server but iam not able to read the return message from the server using function "read_some" , can anyone please help me.
 
5 hours later…
10:25
@sumitkang If you had posted an SSCCE it would make finding the problem way easier
Hi
I am using visual studio 2015
for compiling c++
3 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
RIP
@sumitkang But let's play along: have you checked the return values? Have you checked the connection is actually created between two programs?
But a simple program causes 2500 errors
Sounds like c++.
nwp
nwp
10:29
what is the first error?
But you misspelled "causes" (did you mean "has")
#include<cstdio>
using namespace std;

int main()
{
printf("Hello World");
return 0;
}
Severity Code Description Project File Line Suppression State
Error (active) cannot open source file "corecrt.h" Project2 c:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\VC\include\crtdefs.h 10
cannot open source file "stdio.h"
Pls help me
your compiler config or build system got derped
Might as well reinstall VS (or "repair" it)
I have repaired it
But the same error
10:36
or manually add the include path in the settings
5
Q: Visual studio 2015 gives me errors upon creating a simple test console program

HarpoHere is the code I am using. #include "stdafx.h" #include <iostream> int main() { std::cout << "hi"; return 0; } When I create simple c++ console application and try to build it, this error occurs: cannot open include file 'stdio.h': No such file or directory Why? Shouldn't stdio....

I have this path
C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\8.1\Include\um
But still there is no stdio.h file
I have checked it
@milleniumbug Really Appreciate your response but i have solved it.
Thanks a lot
nwp
nwp
10:52
@sumitkang what was it?
@SagorAhmed IDE?
oh sorry seen it
did u try changing the architecture?
How can I do that ?
right to the debug/release drop down menu
i guess its x64
I have found debug menu
Then what to do ?
11:13
@nwp boost::asio::io_service ios;
boost::asio::ip::tcp::endpoint endpoint(boost::asio::ip::address::from_string(host), port);
boost::asio::ip::tcp::socket socket(ios);
socket.connect(endpoint);
boost::array<char, 128> buf;
boost::array<char, 128> ret;
std::array<char, 4096> bytes;
std::copy(message.begin(),message.end(),buf.begin());
boost::system::error_code error;


socket.write_some(boost::asio::buffer("0 RENDERER*TREE*$Main*SCRIPT*INSTANCE*iYaw GET"));
std::cout << "client wrting\n";
size_t len = socket.read_some(boost::asio::buffer(bytes));
@SagorAhmed not the debug menu. the dropdown menu. saying x64 like i guess. - change it to x86. or do it thru the config manager
But my pc is x64
11:36
@SagorAhmed okay, then better dont risk it? Sorry, i was just trying to figure out ur problem.
nwp
nwp
11:50
There is no risk. Intel's and AMD's x64 processors run 32 bit code just fine, that's why you can run 32 bit programs on a 64 bit processor.
But changing to 32 bit is unlikely to fix visual studio.
You can try here what VS is supposed to do. If it it doesn't do that then an uninstall + install is the easiest way to fix it.
12:21
Can i ask a C Problem here?
Most probably the same code for C++
@nwp OFC it wont fix it. but its a nice indicator in case the problem comes from the project properties like the runtime libs or the charset used
@Dsafds dont ask to ask just ask
@c0pyc4t this is a C++ Questions and Answers room , i was wondering if a C Question is acceptable. Ok anways
I have this struct in BoneOS :
//Keyboard Driver Handler
struct device_driver KBD_DRIVER =
{
   .name = "8042 Keyboard PS/2 Driver",
   .init = &init_kbd,
   .uninit = &uninit_kbd,
};
All works fine but as soon as i do this:
KBD_DRIVER.inialized = initalized_ps2_kbd;
Gives me error :
           ^
drv/driver.c:48:11: error: expected '=', ',', ';', 'asm' or '__attribute__' before '.' token
 KBD_DRIVER.inialized = initalized_ps2_kbd;
My Struct Definition is as follows :
struct  device_driver
{
  char* name;
  void(*init) (void);
  void(*uninit)(void);
  bool initalized;
};
and around that line that gives the error? it sounds like something earlier is missing
@ratchetfreak Seems like i got it
Is it really inialized in your code
12:31
You cant have direct assingments outside a function must be a simple initalizer
13
Q: expected '=', ',', ';', 'asm' or '__attribute__' before '.' token

Rasmi Ranjan NayakCould not able to solve this.. I am implementing a queue. After writing the complete code I had the error listed below: expected '=', ',', ';', 'asm' or '__attribute__' before '.' token Then I wrote a simple program, but same problem persists. Couldn't able to understand how to solve this. I ha...

well duh
@milleniumbug I have much more code.. go look at github.com/Bone-Project/BoneOS .. And not my code
that's what the named initializer is for...
@Dsafds No I mean inialized is a typo
@milleniumbug Oh yeah, i fixed that.. Sorry i didnt know you were talking about that
 
2 hours later…
14:34
Can anyone help with a memory allocation question in C?
user6845426
Hi all, has anyone here worked with the neural network framework Caffe?
@F.Bar It's a deep learning framework
Regarding: http://pastebin.com/2dvnWhth
A few question:
1. When I use malloc, I initially allocate space by:
Pokemon newPokemon = malloc(sizeof(Pokemon*));
to the entire structure.
Then, I allocate memory for the char*.. my question is, what's the proper syntax to allocate memory of PokemonMove* array (i know the max size).
user6845426
@ProblemSlover apologies. I'm having trouble trying to download and install with OSX
15:13
@Osh24 no that's broken
It won't even compile
Pokemon* newPokemon = malloc(sizeof *newPokemon);
^ this is how you allocate for a single element
So if you want an entire way, the obvious way is to multiply the size of a single element by the number of elements
But there is a typedef
With asterix
oh, yes there is. Don't do that, it's bad style C
...and it means your code is broken twice
Since you allocate too little memory even for a single element
The blame is on the course teaching assistant :P anyway, I'm getting " Invalid write of size 4" (valgrind). Meaning that I'm trying to read somewhere outside of the array?
No memory leaks though
15:29
@Osh24 malloc returns a pointer to a chunk of memory which has the length of which you passed to it. You're passing it the sizeof(struct pokemon_t**), but you actually want sizeof(struct pokemon_t)
and then, you treat this pointer to this waaay too small memory chunk as if it was a pointer to the struct pokemon_t, and you get invalid writes beyond the allocated memory
Pokemon newPokemon = malloc(sizeof(*newPokemon));
Is valid?
yes, this is pretty much what I posted here
13 mins ago, by milleniumbug
Pokemon* newPokemon = malloc(sizeof *newPokemon);
except you take care of the fact that Pokemon is actually a pointer type
OK. Thanks. My next question: Now that I have the struct allocated, I have to allocate the pointers inside, yes? (the char* and the PokeMove*)
similarly, PokemonMove pokemonMoves = malloc(length * sizeof *pokemonMoves); will allocate enough memory for an entire array
yes, now that you have the pointer, you have to fill in the values since they currently hold garbage
@milleniumbug Do I have to iterate over pokemonMoves and allocate space for each cell now? (pokemonMoves[i] = malloc.....)
15:35
since the PokemonMoves are actually pointers, then yes, you have to fill them too
...at this point I'd stop using the typedef to pointer
I'm confused from these typedefs and asterix.. but that's what they want us to do in this course
They brought us the .h file, we can't change it
:(
 
3 hours later…
18:40
Just want to confirm a classification... A vendor that provides hosted wordpress installations (they install WP/Perl, I simply log in and write articles). Would that be considered Platform as a Service (PaaS) or Software as a Service (SaaS)?
1 message moved from bin
19:35
Porting from MFC ... Anyone ever seen "CString xyz(unsigned char)"? Cannot find doc for it, but it looks like xyz.GetLength() is used,
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
@dougM I do not think there is such a ctor, you probably wanted to say CString(const unsigned char *)?
no, it's as asked, not a pointer. It is a little weird.
^^ there's a TCHAR constructor, which means they can dispatch to either char or wchar_t version
19:40
@milleniumbug But that would be unsigned short if wchar_t is defined that way. I still don't believe it is actually unsigned char without pointer.
@dougM As asked, it's a syntax error. Or a function prototype
here's code:
int len = s.GetLength();
CString v1((BYTE)len);
it's VC6
If TCHAR happens to be unsigned char then it's just the second overload: CString(TCHAR ch, int nRepeat = 1 );
the code looks very suspicious
^ yes
19:43
I couldn't agree more, but thought I would run it by you all. Thanks.

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