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00:59
Hi guys
can anyone help with hashtable for c++
my program keeps on crashing. there is a memory leak I am unable to find
user406009
@Temptemp2 Can you post your source code?
user406009
Preferably not copy and pasted into here but somewhere else.
3 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
I am posting the code on my google drive. give me a second please
@milleniumbug thank you
@fsfh60 you still on this?
@Temptemp2 Surely. Use std::unordered_map or std::unordered_set (or the "multi" version, as appropriate).
user406009
@Temptemp2 Do you have the main() which causes it to crash?
user406009
Or which shows the memory leak?
@Lalaland drive.google.com/drive/folders/… these are all the files required to run the program
@JerryCoffin This
Oh my. using namespace std; in the header file
user406009
01:23
@Temptemp2 My first guess is that all your "if(records[index]->key_.empty())" lines are incorrect. They should be "if(records[index] == nullptr)"
user406009
With your initialization logic correspondingly changed.
user406009
Are you allowed to use std::vector and std::list? That would make your code so much simpler.
@Lalaland no cannot use vector or list
inb4 "hell no" - the goal of the course seems to be to implement stuff from scratch proof superiority of C++ over C by suffering
user406009
Anyways, if you look at the removal logic:
user406009
01:26
else if(records[index]->key_ == key)
{
temp1del = records[index] ;
records[index] = records[index]->Next ;
delete temp1del ;
return true ;
}
user406009
That will result in setting records[index] to nullptr in certain situations.
user406009
Which is totally fine. You should use nullptr to mark the ones which are not set.
01:38
@Lalaland I updated the remove function with comments. I think I did cover all the case. I feel like I am initializing the data wrong
user406009
@Temptemp2 Want to post your updated remove function then?
user406009
I still see the "if(records[index]->key_.empty())" line.
user406009
And your initialization is wrong:
user406009
    records = new Record*[maxExpected];
    TableSize = maxExpected ;

    for(int i = 0 ; i < TableSize ; i++)
    {
        records[i] = new Record() ;

    }
user406009
01:42
You should remove the for loop.
user406009
Keep the records[i] nullptr when they are not being used.
user406009
That's not causing your crash though.
@Lalaland if I remove the forloop the program crashesh at update function
user406009
That's because your update function also has the "broken" "if(records[index]->key_.empty())"
user406009
You need to change all of those to null checks.
01:47
@Lalaland I changed them all now. but still the same issue
user406009
Want to post your updated code?
user406009
Well, when it's nullptr, you have to allocate a new Record. The same way you allocate a Record in line 410
user406009
And your update function is plain broken in other ways as well.
user406009
It doesn't check at all if the item is already in the hash map.
user406009
01:56
Here would be my fixed update:
user406009
template <class TYPE>
bool HashTable<TYPE>::update(const string& key, const TYPE& value)
{
    int index = std::hash<string> {}(key)%TableSize ;

    Record** currentPtr = &(records[index]);

    while (*currentPtr != nullptr) {
        Record* current = *currentPtr;

        if (current->key_ == key) {
            current->data_ = value;
            return true;
        }
    }

    *currentPtr = new Record(key, value);
    return false;
}
user406009
Oh oops, that is hilariously broken.
user406009
I forgot to update currentPtr.
user406009
You just need "currentPtr = &(current->Next);" at the end of the while loop.
I can't get over how slow that stuff is performing
user406009
02:04
@sehe You can just provide it 0 0 as two command line arguments and it is instant.
user406009
./a.out 0 0
What the hell is it not doing then?
So. You can make it be fast by not doing stuff. Yup. That's about what I meant by "how slow that stuff is performing"
@Lalaland I tried the function you posted above. same issue it's still crashing
@sehe I've found that all programs never run slow as long as you don't run them at all.
Ok. It looks like it's doing linear search and a whole lot dynamic allocations/dispatch
in Lounge<C++>, Oct 16 at 20:04, by sehe
@Morwenn I find my program consistently runs fastest (on any platform) when __builtin_unreachable is the first thing in main
02:09
lol
@sehe I guess that probably works too (with the right compiler, of course).
user406009
@Temptemp2 That's because it's crashing in another place.
user406009
In your destructor, you need a != nnullptr check:
user406009
if(records)
    {
        for(int i = 0 ; i < TableSize; i++) {
            if (records[i] != nullptr)
                remove(records[i]->key_);
        }

        delete[] records ;
    }
@Lalaland agree
user406009
02:13
Also, you can save yourself a lot of effort by using a debugger to track down the crashes.
Ahaha. Growing by 1 element at a time. And doing the reallocs. Something tells me the performance is as designed.
The thing that bugs me about this the most is this: there's zarroo reason to abuse C++ here. Unless the goal of the course is to show that bad algorithms won't perform in any language.
02:33
I've been learning more about C++ :D
I'm trying to be less noobish with it
I am having trouble with the compilers though, mostly with linking, API (Windows API to be exact), etc.
I get the basic concept of linking but I'm having a bad time trying to actually link things such as WinSocket and OpenGL
user406009
Yeah, linking on Windows always tends to suck.
I think I finally get the concept of pointers and references as well
the pointer points to a specific object in memory, doing *thePointerVariable gives the actual object, thePointerVariable returns the address of it. It is possible to change the address of them, thus changing their value with functions. To convert a reference to a pointer address, simply use &theReferenceVariable
^ That is how I believe they work so far, is that accurate?
user406009
Yep. The main tricky part is using them correctly. And keeping track of lifetimes so you don't leak memory or use things after they are freed.
11:12
Hello, I've got a question
I'm trying to read the number of words from a text file.
There is a website link in the text file. When I read it in C++ as fileHandler >> word, it reads each part as a word. As in, www is a word. org is a word.
I don't want that.
The whole website should be a word
2
How would I do that?
8 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
11:29
@ShahlinIbrahim read line by line (std::getline) and split it however you like
pls?
@ShahlinIbrahim When I type c++ read who then google autocompletes to "c++ read whole line from file"
All that's required is, basically, pressing enter.
 
7 hours later…
18:38
@ZachThompson Did I kill you?
 
3 hours later…
user6845426
21:36
Hi all, are there any members here with experience working with OpenCV?
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
@F.Bar See the top starred message on the starboard
user6845426
-Apologies

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