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02:12
@Electrical_engineer_student Why wouldn't you use a single .csv file with two columns, one for the words, the other for the definitions?
 
5 hours later…
07:14
How to quit a std::thread that might be waiting on a std::condition_variable?
07:48
The only way possible by standard means is to actually signal that condition variable. All other methods are platform dependant as far as I know.
08:10
If I understand you correctly, I have to check the `quit_thread_flag` every time when `conditional_variable.wait()` returns, e.g:

//consumer thread
while(true)
{
std::unique_lock lk(mutex);
cv.wait(lk, [&](){return data_ready_flag})

if(quit_thread_flag)
{
//begin to release resources and quit thread.
break;
}

//process data.
}
@John Instead of cv.wait, use cv.wait_for, with a time limit of N seconds. When it returns, check whether it timed out or got signaled. If it's signaled, do your processing. If it timed out, check your exit_thread_flag. It that's set, terminate the thread. Otherwise, repeat the whole thing again. Note: even with an N second time limit, it can take more than N seconds for the thread to run. But usually not a lot more.
08:27
Jerry Coffin, thank you. One more question arises, should I signal the condition variable when trying to quit the (consumer) thread if I use `cv.wait_for` other than `cv.wait`?
In my opinion, whether signalling the cv or not are both ok if I use `cv.wait_for`. Am I right?
08:39
yeah, sure you can just wait for the timeout as well
assuming that you are just joining all the threads
09:00
So there are two methods now, one is to singal thecv.wait(), another is to use cv.wait_for. How to make the choice? Under what condition, I should use the former or the latter one?
well you use wait_for if you just want to wait for a limited time and .wait() when you want to wait for a signal pretty much indefinately
09:16
I see, thanks to both of you. My understanding of this matter is at a different level with your generous help.
 
1 hour later…
10:16
a condition_variable is a pretty low level primitive. You can often increase the clarity a lot and reduce code if you use other synchronization primitives like std::barrier, latch or a semaphore where applicable
10:52
PeterT, std::barrier and std::*_semaphore, need c++20 support, which is not supported by the compiler(i.e. g++5.4.0).
 
1 hour later…
nwp
nwp
12:13
You need to upgrade your employer (or the compiler version, whichever is easier). But seriously, yes: you have to replace all the modern C++ with crutches. Not fun: godbolt.org/z/c6v4ed1d8sehe 27 mins ago
That was just posted in the lounge. It seems strangely fitting.
12:27
@JerryCoffin I downloaded the .csv files from the internet that's just how the files were.
12:42
If it's just about the synchronization primitives, they're just library stuff, not language level features. So you're free to grab implementations for them from boost, POCO, Qt, whatever you like

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