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Rob
Rob
02:13
pastebin.com/bGNmAYgM < Any thoughts on this?
 
5 hours later…
nwp
nwp
06:48
@Rob You take a function pointer but pass a capturing lambda, so the types don't match. Either make the capturing clause empty to allow decay to function pointer or use std::function as the parameter type.
 
2 hours later…
09:01
line 54
tail = (tail -1 + len)%len;
why do you need the +len there?
its crucial because without you get an overflow
nwp
nwp
To make sure it stays positive.
but ints can be negative
nwp
nwp
tail-1 can be negative.
why does it need to be positive?
nwp
nwp
Probably because it's used as an index later. Or the algorithm needs it to be.
09:03
why cant you have negatives indices in c++?
its definitely this option
nwp
nwp
You can, but you'd need a pointer to somewhere in the middle of an array. It's rather uncommon.
ah ok
not in python its not haha
nwp
nwp
But the code uses res[(tail-1+len)%len] where res is an std::vector which has the requirement that the index must be >=0 and <size().
ok thanks a lot
nwp
nwp
In Python negative indexes have a different meaning. There it just means you index from the back. C++ doesn't have that.
09:06
yeah
 
2 hours later…
11:12
Hey fellas, is there any function for product of elements in a vector, the way there is for sum?
Like product equivalent of std::accumulate?
use accumulate with std::multiplies ?
std::multiplies? Hmm... Will have to see what that is
just std::accumulate(begin(a),end(a),1,std::multiplies<>())
Ah.. hmm nice idea...
Thanks :)
 
2 hours later…
13:33
Any library in C++ which can handle the following number?
126917762658127856597194601780786375868905422678681249006326433795052099084662129275648613369356034819179296752455487902520484752057008017793450744182532521375825492793816664473
88339115762158491416273325637571936961512896469965210681441089257655369591338044934848941013057339547276110123888282686737735942974265879563077449216667897527337970048501676217
5522520164940795101302928449795102587894137512527176956965916171263360517637179357713928412269156340446851912897783985932707253427530346215257029204892608901559369093242421248
This is one number
not 3 as it seems
Had to break it as it was exceeding the message limit
14:27
for(Object * o : objects){ objects.removeOne(o); delete o; } I am trying to do something like so, which occasionnaly creates an invalid pointer, is there something wrong with what i am doing ?
Object* O
is wrong
objects is a list of pointers
you instead go for reference
Object& object : objects
Because if objects is a list of pointers, o needs to be a double pointer
Which I stopped using in 2015
@d4rk4ng31 ? what are you talking about
@PeterT, Am I being stupid again?
14:29
Note that we are in Qt and objects is a QList of pointers, if that changes something
@d4rk4ng31 I just don't see how what you are saying relates to the issue
Oh Gosh, I thought this was proper C++😅
I'm not sure it changes anything, it's similar to std:list
the issue is probably the iterator invalidation
I was thinking the same but my knowledge on the matter is limited, could you elaborate ?
14:33
for(Object * o : objects){

pretty much does something like

for(auto it = begin(objects); it!=end(objects);++it){Object* o=*it;
so if you invalidate the iterator by deleting the element then the "++it" can just be wrong
so it will eventually reach outside of the list ?
@PeterT, Does the for each loop in C++ get converted to a normal for loop at the back-end?
@d4rk4ng31 it doesn't have to be, the standard just says it has to do thing so the "observable side-effects" are the same. But it doesn't have to literally output c++ code to do that
@colin not necessarly outside, just undefined behavior, can crash, can work fine
Thank you for the help @PeterT !
15:23
anyone mind looking at my codeforces code? (in python)
Yeah sure
Correct the link
And please don't ask to ask
Okay, so what is the problem? I suggest we create a new room
15:24
ok
it fails the tests
despite passing the visible ones
Hmm.. Create a new room please
how do i do that?
@Permian That's common. Happens with everyone
15:52
need help understanding it
0
Q: embedding a numeric constant in a string using the octal notation

beta_me me_betaIt is hard to read these to understand whether to consider a letter a part of \ or string literals, for example, //example from TC++PL char v1[] = "a\xah\129"; // 6 chars: 'a' '\xa' 'h' '\12' '9' '\0' char v2[] = "a\xah\127"; // 5 chars: 'a' '\xa' 'h' '\127' '\0' char v3[] = "a\xad\127"; // 4 ch...

you can always look up all the escape sequences here: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/escape
@PeterT question is about separating string literal's components
> Octal escape sequences have a limit of three octal digits, but terminate at the first character that is not a valid octal digit if encountered sooner.
> Hexadecimal escape sequences have no length limit and terminate at the first character that is not a valid hexadecimal digit.
That explains the issue
@PeterT thanks got it

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