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00:09
@Schbabako This sounds a lot like the real problem is Eclipse (which I find almost as surprising as the sun rising in the morning).
 
2 hours later…
01:58
I will just use my visual studio version..... Eclipse is killing me. I spend more time fixing eclipse issues than actual programming
@JerryCoffin
@Schbabako VS isn't the only alternative; just about anything is better than Eclipse.
what are better alternatives, maybe even free softwares?
Codebloxx exists
cLion
can you recommend something else?
@JerryCoffin
02:21
@Schbabako I'm not recommending anything in particular. On Windows, I primarily use VS (with Visual Assist). On Linux, I mostly use juC++. It works on Windows too, but I generally prefer VS.
02:46
I'm working with SFML's library, they have their darn draw-function which is constant, and since my professors insist that I can't use protected but only private for member variables, I had to make get-set functions. Making the get-functions const obviously, and I had to make them return a reference so the actual object is drawn out and not a copy of it that has no shape or texture assigned to it, but now I have to use a member function from the SFML library called "move" on certain objects,
and that changes them, so I can't use the "getRectangle()"-function anymore since it's const. I get this error: "2 overloads have no legal conversion for 'this' pointer"
While at the same time I can't undo the "constness" of the get-functions because they need to be in order to be used in draw later.
I'm out of ideas.
Ah, and the structure goes like this:
Drawable(SFML's class) <- GameObject(a class I made, inherits from Drawable) <- otherClass
 
3 hours later…
05:33
Hello
In a function, i opened a file stream
is it necessary that i close it ?
or will it be closed automatically
06:05
@MaxPayne I reckon it'll close itself sooner or later since the program ends and the destructors have to be called at some point.
I could be wrong.
06:31
@MaxPayne If the stream object is local to the function, it'll be destroyed (which closes the file) when execution leaves that scope.
 
7 hours later…
user1593881
13:04
After covering the Meyers "Effective C++" from 2005. and that other one titled "Modern Effective C++" I intend to focus on Linux and embedded. Would "Advanced Linux Programming" be a sane approach?
user1593881
Probably not the best of questions but that books guide SO post says little about Linux sorcery.
user1593881
Eer, scratch that. I just found this SO post on the subject.
14:21
hello, i have the following version of gcc 5.4.1 20160904 and when i try to compile a program that uses the c++ thread header the -std=c++11 flag is not enough and i need to include -pthread flag too.Shouldn't i be able to compile only with the -std=c++11 flag?Thanks in advance!
14:31
@theVoid No. It's perfectly normal that the extra flag is required.
 
1 hour later…
15:42
@JerryCoffin ok so it is not that i have an outdated version of the gcc, but i have seen on some older posts in various sites that -pthread is not required could you explain me why?Also because i started using c++11 <thread> for my University will i be ok if i compile all my multythreaded programs with g++ other flags -pthread ?
@theVoid they could be wrong...
(as in, it's not like I've seen the sites you mention, so I can only guess)
@theVoid Yes, you can compile all your programs with -pthread and not worry about anything
@milleniumbug Well i could be wrong because i was reserching the topic for quite a long(i even went on the second and third page of google search results lol) so i maybe was confused or something but i have an other question.When should i update my compiler because i am using the une that ubuntu 16.04 lts built essentials provided me.Thanks again :)
@theVoid preferably you should be using the latest one
Run g++ --version to see which version you currently have
i provided my version on my first comment here
15:52
here 5.4.1 20160904
i guess it is outdated huh?
since gcc 6 is out am i right?
it's one major revision behind, which isn't too bad
if you had a 4.x version, I'd urge you to update now
so am i ok?
you could try updating if it's not too difficult for you
well because i am new to ubuntu and c++ in general since i used only java and python in the university i am afraid to do it because i might "break" something and i need c++ and gcc for my assignments :P
it should be enough for anything your uni throws at you
16:04
@milleniumbug well i know i am planning on updating in the summer or after the current semester, but because i really love c++ i was asking just in case,well, thank you again i am gonna leave you in peace now i have to study assembly :P bye
user1593881
@milleniumbug What is the salary of mediorish c++ developer in Poland?
user1593881
Or is that off topic...
@RawN Not sure, I haven't done C++ programming for money
I could check it by looking up on the internet, but that wouldn't give you much more info over what you could look up yourself
user1593881
@milleniumbug I see.
user1593881
My search yields result of about 8 - 12k pln
16:15
that seems to be fairly generous offer, I guess you could get this if you have 2-3 years of professional experience
user1593881
I squandered 10 years with Delphi. Switched to c++ one year ago.
user1593881
Opened up a world of possibilities.
user1593881
And pain. ;)
What is "self-assignment check" in an assignment operator? It seems pointless if it is what I think it is.
if you implement your copy assignment operator with "copy-and-swap idiom", you don't need it
also note that concerns like "handle copying" should belong to a different class, which is an application of Single Responsibility Principle
16:31
My professor said I didn't add it and wants me to add it, but it feels like a trick question or something - to actually check if "it is what it is"???
So the line would be something like "if(this == original){ std::cout<<"They are identical!"; }" ??
@JackOfBlades does your assignment operator not crash when you do a = a;?
I didn't try lol
also:
3 mins ago, by milleniumbug
if you implement your copy assignment operator with "copy-and-swap idiom", you don't need it
I've read through about the copy-and-swap idiom, I'm not using it I suppose.
Does the self-check only need "if(this != &original){...}"? Or am I missing something?
And I tried making an object, then assigning it to itself later on, it only crashes if I do it when I declare it, regardless of the self-assignment check.

Object o = o; //this crashes

Object o;
o = o; //this doesn't crash
So the check doesn't seem to do anything.
16:57
@JackOfBlades the former is a copy constructor call, the latter is a copy assignment operator call
no one ever checks for self-copy-constructing since this is always a bug and compilers usually warn about this
Nov 29 at 17:38, by milleniumbug
PSA: Enable warnings in your compiler if you haven't already (in gcc: -Wall -Wextra -pedantic)
@theVoid Well, almost by definition every compiler is outdated by the time it's released. :-) But 5.4 is new enough that you're unlikely to encounter problems with it (or see any real improvement from 6.x or 7.x) unless you're delving deeply into template metaprogramming, or something on that order.
@JackOfBlades not to mention, self-assignments can often happen by accident, but self-copy-construction rarely does
17:16
I've got it now. Thanks.
Also, what's the proper etiquette for initializing a string? NULL, "", 0 or something else?
From what I've read, it shouldn't be NULL. I usually initialize them with "".
17:32
@JerryCoffin Ok thank you very much once again :-)
17:47
@JackOfBlades Proper etiquette for initializing a string to be empty is to define a string: std::string foo; foo is now guaranteed to be an empty string.
And for default arguments?
@JackOfBlades Use overloading instead. :-)
Seriously, I'd use "".
That directly expresses the intent of an empty string. 0 or NULL (the two are equivalent) express it only indirectly at best.
 
3 hours later…
20:31
Hi guys! I'm designing a simple game, and at the moment I have a serious problem...
The game is basically a board game, a Board object has Tile objects, which can hold references to other objects such as Players, Traps, Barrels etc.
Now what I can't figure out is this: When a player wants to step to another tile, it first needs to check what kind of other objects are there, because it can step on an empty one, or a trap, but can not step on a barrel e.g.
But checking it with instance of is considered bad oop practice.. but so far I can't figure out any other way.
In other words, a Vechicle type object is passed to a Person, and he has to act based on its type, he can drive a Car but can not drive a Truck. Is the only solution is instance of? What is a good oop way to this?
3 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@Tigris Not everything needs to be OOP. You will probably need to implement some sort of rules/collisions table and look up in it with a pair of item that wants to move into a tile and those on it already.

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