« first day (180 days earlier)      last day (2897 days later) » 

user4651282
00:01
@Chetty you will need to clarify the issue.
@Chetty there's a github link to the project. there you can find the part which is responsible for what you want to do. afterwards you can find it by looking up the C++ documentation
the relevant functions and classes should have similar names
ok, thanks...
 
7 hours later…
07:34
Definition : given two spanning trees T1 and T2 of G, we say that T1 and T2 are adjacent if it is possible to obtain T2 from T1 (or vice versa) by only moving one edge

so According to it : Let G = (V,E) be a connected graph and let V' the set of all spanning trees in G. Further, denote by E' the set of spanning tree pairs that are adjacent . Show that the graph ˆ G = ( V' , E') is connected
@Mikhail thx
2 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
Is anyone here can help me?
 
2 hours later…
09:23
You. And your prof. Get a grip.
10:15
Hi,
how can we get the size of the string with no '\n' at the end ?
int main(){
ifstream in("SpaceCount.cpp");
string line;
int Count;
while(getline(in, line)){
getchar();
cout <<line;
for(int i=0; line.size();i++){
getchar();
cout<<line.at(i);
if(line[i]==' ') Count++;
}
}
cout <<Count;
}
like here when in for(..;line.size();..) is going in infinite loop as getline() function only gets the string without '\n'
Sorry for adding the code snippet directly..
nwp
nwp
10:28
@krishnakant std::cout << line.size();?
10:43
@n
how will it help ?
@nwp here i am just finding the space in the file.
i have added the "Using namespace Std" on the start.
nwp
nwp
you could look into std::find
ohk.. That should do the job.
 
9 hours later…
19:38
no
it doesn't
there is nobody in there
no
I don't figure things out in an ad hoc manner
no time for that
says 1 person is in there
someone posted something 4 days ago
how can i put your comments in there?
please help
im banned for asking questions
can only answer
because i asked an assembly question
hi
14 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
can someone tell me what jmp <$40 means in asm
please
i know it means to jump somwheres
prolly relative jump, subtract 0x40 from IP
What are you doing with a disassembler if you don't know how to use it
so what do you guys program in c++ ?
I only know c
:(
is that what <$ means?
woldn't that be jmp $-40
My guess.
19:47
I never said anything about disassembler
Would it not be `JUMP CURLABEL -/- HEX(40)?
@marshalcraft I did.
I'm making my own motherboard
:)
We can tell. Because it doesn't make much sense to write any relative jumps. To be frank, I only remember the funky > or < notation from OllyDbg or IDA
it does in firmware before UEFI
cause start at 0xFFFFFFF0 and you have to jump
ikr
19:50
if you change the code segment you are permantantly below 1Mbyte until switch to protected mode
oh well I will probably just program the flash with an arduino spi pins and write the firmware in binary
I know you don't have to jump
you have 16 bytes
oh well im going to price chopper to get some frozen barritos
o7
7 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
 
2 hours later…
21:46
Hello
ok
For some reason stdio doesn't seem to be included when I build my c++ program
it pops up in intellisense
but when I build it says cout is not a member of std
what's your code
i'm using Visual Studio
yes we know
21:49
#include <iostream>
#include <SDL2\SDL.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include "stdafx.h"
#include "profile.h"

int main()
{
	std::cout << PHI << std::endl;
    return 0;
}
as simple as that
PHI is defined in profile
I put stdafx before iostream
now it says unresolved externals
so now the problem is with your code
you should remove irrelevant parts and try to compile the simplest hello world
the simplest program ever that will only write a string to std::cout
no other stuff
yes it seems to be a problem with SDL
I just wanted to make a hello world to test if it compiles
and it doesn't
Severity Code Description Project File Line Suppression State
Error LNK2019 unresolved external symbol _main referenced in function "int __cdecl invoke_main(void)" (?invoke_main@@YAHXZ) Physics C:\Users\Adrien\Documents\Visual Studio 2015\Projects\Physics\Physics\MSVCRTD.lib(exe_main.obj) 1
23
Q: Why SDL defines main macro?

TibiAfter having some trouble setting up SDL, I found out that SDL defines a macro that replaces main: #define main SDL_main // And then extern C_LINKAGE int SDL_main(int argc, char *argv[]); This can also create compilation errors, if the main function doesn't have the argc and argv parameters d...

Uh
I tried changing main and calling SDL_Init but it calls an error too
Same Unresolved Externals here
I struggled to install SDL so I'm not sure if I misinstalled something
well you need to link SDL in your project
22:05
I put SDLmain.lib and SDL.lib in the Visual Studio Input tab
and it recognizes the SDL files
I mean headers
yes that's what you need to link
I did it
Additional dependencies : SDLmain.lib;SDL2.lib;kernel32.lib;user32.lib;gdi32.lib;winspool.lib;comdlg32.lib‌​;advapi32.lib;shell32.lib;ole32.lib;oleaut32.lib;uuid.lib;odbc32.lib;odbccp32.lib‌​;%(AdditionalDependencies)
...and?
When I compile it gives the error : Severity Code Description Project File Line Suppression State
Error LNK2019 unresolved external symbol _main referenced in function "int __cdecl invoke_main(void)" (?invoke_main@@YAHXZ) Physics C:\Users\Adrien\Documents\Visual Studio 2015\Projects\Physics\Physics\MSVCRTD.lib(exe_main.obj) 1
nwp
nwp
22:23
@PearlSek There is a chance that it has something to do with the VS system setting which may be set to "windows" as the system instead of "console" which uses WinMain instead of main.
Where do I find this setting ?
SubSystem : Console
I tried winmain but doesn't work either
Yes I found it, doesn't solve my issue, but thanks anyway
nwp
nwp
did you define a main function?
and does it have int argc and char *argv[]?
yes
#include "stdafx.h"
#include <iostream>
#include <SDL2\SDL.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include "profile.h"

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
	std::cout << PHI << std::endl;
    return 0;
}
sbi
sbi
22:40
Hi.
I have a std::list of objects. I need to find those objects that satisfy a certain criterion (I have a predicate for this), pass them to a function, and then delete the objects from the list. What would be the best way to do this, preferably employing algorithms from the std lib, rather than writing my own loop?
Caveat: C++03. :-/
std::list::remove_if?
sbi
sbi
Then how do I pass them to the function before they are removed?
sbi
sbi
Should I abuse the predicate for this? (Would this be std-conforming?)
as far as I understand it, as long as you don't modify the elements, it should be fine
I'll look up the quote
sbi
sbi
22:46
Note: I have looked at std::partition() and it seems it doesn't help me, as it scrambles the order of elements. My elements are ordered, and I need them to stay that way.
nwp
nwp
maybe std::find_if + run predicate + std::list::erase is an option
sbi
sbi
What's a "run predicate"?
nwp
nwp
not predicate, the function to run before the element is supposed to be removed
sbi
sbi
That would then be the manual, loop: run find_if(), invoke a function on its result, list.erase() the object, and run find_if() again beginning at the result of list.erase(). I was looking for something easier to digest than that.
sorry, can't find the wording
will the function modify the passed in elements?
sbi
sbi
23:00
I wouldn't modify the objects. The objects are pointers, and I will free the memory they point to, but won't change the pointers.
another option would be to write something like for_each_if and then use it, and afterwards use std::list::remove_if
sbi
sbi
@milleniumbug That would be two passes over the sequence. While I have a lock.
yes, that could be a problem. not sure if the compiler would be able to optimize this
sbi
sbi
23:19
0
Q: Can I abuse a predicate to perform operations on the elements before remove_if removes them?

sbiI have a std::list of objects. The list is sorted and must stay that way. I need to find those objects that satisfy a certain criterion (I have a predicate for this), pass them to a function, and then delete the objects from the list. It's not too hard to write a loop that calls std::find_if(),...

@sbi I've added the tag
sbi
sbi
@milleniumbug I just saw that. Thanks!
Anyway, I do need to go to bed now. I'll just look tomorrow if this brought up something.
Good night!

« first day (180 days earlier)      last day (2897 days later) »