What is the most efficient std container to use if I need both efficient random access to element and need to frequently remove elements from "random" indices in the container? In my case, the platform the code will run on, and the amount of data I need to process, make even small improvements important.
I was looking at this: webcache.googleusercontent.com/…, however it seems that there is no container that is "efficient at both", according to this resource.
well you have two options, either you define the full class before you use it by value. Or you don't store it by value, but use something like a unique_ptr to it instead
The API that I need to call is defined in a public project(I should not modify the related code indeed). And the declaration of the API is something like this: int inner_error(const char*, ...).
Why this code snippet does not work either, what's lie behind "..."?. int fooPrint(const char* fmt, ...) { printf(fmt); return 0; }
The rules are that if the std::string you call .data() on is const (that's what the second const refers to) then it has to use the first, otherwise it uses the second.
In practice you don't really need to care since the designers tried to make it intuitive.
const std::string s{"Hello"};
*s.data() = 'M';
This fails to compile because s.data() returned a const char * here, but it also kinda makes sense, you can't modify a const std::string.
When making your own functions try to have all overloads do "the same thing" so that it doesn't matter to the user of the function which one is called.
I've been given a task I don't really understand. It's about QT and network. I understand the basics; we use QNetworkReply class and it's method readAll. The task is: if the mime type of the file (that we are getting through reply->header(QNetworkRequest::ContentTypeHeader) ) is textual, then we just write it to plainTextEdit. I've done that part. However, if the mime type isn't textual, we are supposed to download it through temporary file and that copy it into chosen file (I'm assuming he meant directory) from File Dialog. It says: "For generating the name of the temporary file use the Q…
And I don't really know what to do now. Nothing makes sense.
Okay, good news: I've figured it out. Most part.
Still the part I don't get is how to use QDir class for copying.
what I meant was the non-static version of QFile::rename, if you use a version of rename that just takes a string of the filename, it's not going to update the QFile instance
file.rename(basename); is about the only version that will update the actual things inside the file
If I have this in my class, am I guaranteed that each created object has it's own unique id? Because right now I get two objects with the same id and it doesn't make sense to me:
int MyClass::id_counter_ = -11;
MyClass::MyClass() : id_(id_counter_--);
It is copyable, atleast I do copy it, but I didn't implement the = operator, I guess it's using the default = operator, I thought this doesn't even work and I have to write a = operator myself, but I just assumed maybe c++ did some progress
I know them, that's what I'm using for the id. The thing is getting a, b, c, d is a lot of setup and a pain. And I'm not sure that's easy to do in an initializer list
Container::Container(x,y,z){
a, b, c = do_stuff(x,y,z)
MyClass foo(a, b, c, d);
foo_ = foo;
}
I basically have this, and do_stuff defines variables and calls other functions to go from x,y,z to a, b,c so doing that in an initializer list seems cumbersome. If that is out, is the above the right way to define foo_?