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14:47
hi I am new to c++ and I do not know why this returns me an error
std::string path1 = "C:\Users\Peter\movie.stl";
@JohnDoe2 I guess `` is an escape character
nwp
nwp
@JohnDoe2 wrong room, go here.
it says Wrongly formatted universal character name
@JohnDoe2 Probably because unescaped backslashes. Use double backslash.
14:48
@JohnDoe2 escape your backslashes
how would the string look like if I escape them
:34968374 Showing two backslashes here is PITA. :D
like this ? std::string path1 = "C:\\\Users\\\Peter\\\movie.stl";
@JohnDoe2 Just two.
14:50
ah I see thanks
it works :)
nwp
nwp
@JohnDoe2 Maybe like this is better: std::string path1 = R"(C:\Users\Peter\movie.stl)";
20 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@nwp What does the R mean in that case
\\
@wilx pressing strg+k works for easy double slashes
nwp
nwp
14:54
@JohnDoe2 en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/escape take a look at that
e.g. a string has as the last character \0
what does the " = 0 " mean in this function:

virtual bool_t encode(const char_t* path1, const char_t* path2) = 0;

is that like a shortened else
 
1 hour later…
16:02
How can I call this function in my main properly

class Encoder: public utdev::Reference
{
public:

virtual bool_t encode(const char_t* pInputFile, const char_t* pOutputFile) = 0;

...
}

// I tried to call it in my main.cpp like this
std::string path1 = "C:\\Peter\\movie1.stl";
std::string path2 = "C:\\Peter\\movie1.mpg";
utdev::builder::Encoder::encode(path1, path2); // -> here I get an error with following message: A non-static member reference must be relative to a particular object
nwp
nwp
@JohnDoe2 something like Encoder encoder; encoder.encode(path1, path2);. It is complaining that you don't give it an Encoder object.
I get this after doing that An object of type .. :: .. :: Encoder of an abstract class is not allowed
you are going to need a class that inherits Encode and implements encode
then you can call encode on that class
nwp
nwp
Or find another class that already does that.
Maybe there is a class SomethingEncoder : public Encoder somewhere.
or a function that returns Encode& or Encoder* or a smart pointer to an Encoder
16:14
ok thanks alot I will have a look
I get following error if I try to declare a char: A value of type "" const char * "" can not be used to initialize a const char_t * "" entity

const char_t* test = "test";
nwp
nwp
what is a char_t?
I am actually not quite sure the function in the api holds that parameter: virtual bool_t encode(const char_t* in, const char_t* out) = 0;
a variation of char I guess :)
char_traits?
nwp
nwp
16:30
If you are using an IDE you can try CTRL+click on char_t and it may show you where it is defined. The header name would then give you a hint where it is from.
CTRL+click does not do anything, but if I just hover on it, it shows me following: typedef wchar_t char_t
nwp
nwp
wchar_t is from windows somewhere, wide character. You can either prefix that string with an L or use I think T("sometext") to have the option to change to non-widechar mode.
Although you probably never need that, so L is probably better.
hmm
how would that look like?
char_L ?
nwp
nwp
const char_t* test = L"test";
wow
worked
thanks
 
7 hours later…
23:49
Hi :v
hello
if you have a question, just ask it, no need to introduce yourself
I wonder if anyone knows cocos2d in C ++?
I do not speak English well :p
Don't ask whether anyone knows X, just ask a question and if someone happens to know X they'll respond.
23:57
Ok bro, I just wanted to know if anyone knows how to "deform" a sprite or terrain in Cocos2d-x, I only have this: youtube.com/watch?v=bAEBqjc8xwU I'm just starting out but it's in Objective-c . Is there something similar in C ++?
If people don't know X, you've not gained any time by not typing out a question because you'll need to do it anyway if you visit another chat or forum

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