BYTE &vector[0] return access violation because the first value is 0. i know that byte of 0 is null terminator, is there a solution to this beside using an array byte?
can someone explain this line of code, i know what the code does, i need to know the name of this operation. MENUITEMTEMPLATE* mitem = (MENUITEMTEMPLATE*)MenuTemplate;
MENUITEMTEMPLATE is struct pointer and we use it to fill the data of MenuTemplate(array of bytes)
this way we can fill an array with multiple different structs with different datatypes. but what do we call this operation?
so when we instantiate mitem->mtOption with a value, this value is automatically inserted into the array. I havent seen a code like this
That is straightup undefined behavior. You are not allowed to access objects that do not exist. There is no MENUITEMTEMPLATEHEADER anywhere in the code, so you cannot access it.
Also it's not that hard to make it defined behavior. Replacing MENUITEMTEMPLATEHEADER* mheader = (MENUITEMTEMPLATEHEADER*) milist; with MENUITEMTEMPLATEHEADER* mheader = new (milist) MENUITEMTEMPLATEHEADER; should make it guaranteed to work instead of just accidentally working.
Because thats what you wrote. You point to the array with mheader and set a value to 0 which it writes into the array. What else did you expect to happen?
when we do new (milist), it points to the first address of the array right? then when I run this code if I run this code mheader->versionNumber =0;mheader->offset =1; the first 4 bytes ARE 0 0 1 0, the rest are not defined
how did it now that it should write the 1 at the 3rd address of the array
The compiler knows what MENUITEMTEMPLATEHEADER looks like, what data members are inside of it and what the offset and size of each data member is relative to the start of the object.
The start of the object is known via the pointer mheader, so it knows the location and size of versionNumber and offset.
now it make more sense to me a bit, it was really confusing to understand what was going on when i debugged part of their code, the value of were written then overwritten, thanks again
3 1 2 5 4 6 7 8 9 i am sorry i know it c chat room but i dont find room for c++ basically i want to create vector<vector<int>> vec please can anybody help
@Mgetz actually that handler should be better named onTimeout since it won't be called from destructor, but from a boost::asio::steady_timer, but thanks for the finally implementation anyway, need to use it in other places ^ ^