« first day (64 days earlier)      last day (3013 days later) » 

00:12
How man I'm having problems properly dequeueing my queue. From my perspective, @sehe when I do q->head = q->head->next; that I'm having head point to the next node after it and that when I return q; , I expect q to only have reference to all elements starting from then on. Here is my code with three main functions paste.ofcode.org/KCf5RNUw2RMNF2UeUrLsrD I know I should be checking if malloc but I want to get my generic queue to work first.
@J.doe No, that's silly. Because 100 is not the address of an int. coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/16156f4baa8d4558
On the difference between int const * and int * const (or even int const* const see isocpp.org/wiki/faq/const-correctness#const-ptr-vs-ptr-const
@LuisAverhoff (what makes that generic?) - also this really needs to be on either Stack Overflow or Code Review
@sehe well making the queue accept any data type is what usually qualifies for a generic data structure and you use void pointers for that.
@sehe I dont think I can put it on code review seeing that it is not completely functional.
To give you some context, here are the struct definitions paste.ofcode.org/3q9QBv5X4yNZbHsY9R3vgh
 
2 hours later…
02:05
@LuisAverhoff Assuming you're trying to write C++ rather than C, consider something more like: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/9cd22727e8d8194a
@JerryCoffin Well I come here because I see no active C room where I can share my code and I enjoy coding in C so I would rather try to accomplish this in C.
@LuisAverhoff In that case, ummm, I think I'll leave you to do your worst (i.e., sounds boring to me).
@JerryCoffin The problem I having is that my dequeue is not functioning properly.
@LuisAverhoff Sorry to hear that.
Well see you later. :)
02:17
@LuisAverhoff Later.
 
6 hours later…
08:27
    #include <bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;

int main() {

	vector< vector<int> > adj;
	int n;
	cin>>n;
for(int i=0;i<n;i++)
    {
    int a,b;
    cin>>a>>b;
    adj[a].push_back(b);

    }
	return 0;
}
for input
1
0 1

why runtime error
nwp
nwp
because adj is empty and you try to access the non-existing first element when you do adj[a] where a is 0
vector< vector<int> > adj(n+1);
then will work ?
nwp
nwp
adj(n) should be enough
08:57
65
Q: Why should I not #include <bits/stdc++.h>?

Lightness Races in OrbitI posted a question with my code whose only #include directive was the following: #include <bits/stdc++.h> My teacher told me to do this, but in the comments section I was informed that I shouldn't. Why?

09:10
in python we have if (1 not in list):
similarly in vector if we have to search in c++
if(std::find(vec.begin(), vec.end(), 1) == vec.end())
(#include <algorithm> to use std::find)
nwp
nwp
09:33
I thought one could use std::any_of, but that is just more awkward.
there should be an overload for any_of that takes a value instead of a predicate.
Hmm, but you wouldn't know if you were supposed to call the last parameter or compare with the elements in all cases
guess that's why
meh
it would be better if it was named std::contains
10:32
coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/2eb8c92278fa98ac ,I so confused about references and pointers - why can i pass the variable a and variable b to the method swap , if they are not references . swap takes two references as its arguments
nwp
nwp
because values are convertible to references under certain conditions
like passing 5 to a function taking a double
ok just for clarity I will define two references one to 'a' and one to 'b' instead
nwp
nwp
10:53
that is probably not a good idea
why? I mean i could just set int &aref =a, and , int &bref = b
nwp
nwp
yeah, but that makes it look as if you are swapping the references and not a and b
@J.doe There's no practical difference between int a = 5; int& ra = a; and void function_that_takes_a_reference_to_int(int& ra) { } int a = 5; function_that_takes_a_reference_to_int(a);
(by "practical difference" I mean in how these are assigned/created, of course there's a difference the latter declares a function and the like)
11:40
ok so what is the reason to send a reference to a method instead of just sending the underlying variable itself
is it inefficient ?
I mean is it inefficient in some sense to send the actual variable instead of the reference
well try it
I mean in general
ok let me try
it didn't work :)
when i sent the actual varibles
compare int a = 5; int b = a; and void f(int b) { } int a = 5; f(a);
with the above
12:05
@milleniumbug Iam reading in my book and it says : void fcn(const int i) { /* fcn can read but not write to i */ }
further its says : top level const on parameters are ignored
so you can send an both an int and a const int
and the reason is clarified with an example: const int ci = 42; int i = ci ; top-level const is ignored
But I don't get the connection
int a = 5; const int b = a; and void f(const int b) { } int a = 5; f(a);
passing as a parameter makes a copy of the top level type (after promoting/decaying to it) which can then be made const without affecting the original variable
 
2 hours later…
14:10
@JerryCoffin Yo man, I was able to solve my problem with dequeue not function probably. Here is the whole code if you want to see it.
*with my dequeue not functioning properly.
 
4 hours later…
18:20
my book arrived
accelerated C++
looks really good so far
covers a lot quickly
I'm going to just read it from the start even if I know most of the beginner stuff because there's still stuff to learn
18:31
@milleniumbug do you by any chance have a spare keybase invitation?
if so and you don't want it I'd quite like to try it out
19:01
@exitc0de sure, to what email address should I send an invitation to?
 
1 hour later…
20:08
@milleniumbug [email protected] thanks :)
@exitc0de check your inbox
@milleniumbug thanks got it
20:23
what is the primary purpose of keybase?
apart from just using PGP keys to send stuff?
identity verification
ah ok
@exitc0de if you need more than 1 :)
Commands don't work on windows yet unfortunately
o.O
That's. Damning for the general adoption
20:30
I should probably do something with the invite that @milleniumbug sent me... over a year ago?
I don't think they work anyway
people can just use bash on ubuntu anyway
or the web browser /gui
its alpha so it'll be fine
*ubuntu bash on windows
 
3 hours later…
23:59
Hi there, can somebody help with me run-time data algorithm (big o)

« first day (64 days earlier)      last day (3013 days later) »