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00:08
int *x = new int;
*x = 55;
int *ptr = x;
delete ptr;
in this program will deleting ptr will delete x as well?
 
12 hours later…
11:40
also don't use new/delete, these are low-level tools, you don't need them
5
in fact, read the entire FAQ section
 
3 hours later…
14:52
Hi um
Question about threads, if I make a thread using a for loop, and join them
Do they execute by the time the loop is done
Or go out of scope/stop?
nwp
nwp
15:23
Depends. If you just let an std::thread that is joinable go out of scope std::terminate is called which most likely kills your program.
@Link If you show the loop it will be easier to talk about it.
@nwp Sure one minute.
vector<string> line;
for(l : line){
thread t(mini, line)
t.join();
}
@nwp So will this execute all the threads that are made, even once the for loop is done making/joining them?
nwp
nwp
no, this will create a thread and then immediately wait for it, giving you the overhead of creating threads without any of the benefits
Okay
How would I go about what I'd like to do?
nwp
nwp
what you want to do is create them all and then join them all
with 2 for-loops and a vector<thread> to keep the thread handles
So er... if I understood that right
sec
vector<string> line;
vector<thread> ths;

for(l : line){
ths.push_back(thread t(mini, line));
}
for(t : ths){
t.join();
}
@nwp Is that what you meant?
nwp
nwp
15:32
yes
Ok so by the time that second for loop ends
My threads will be finished running?
nwp
nwp
except the push_back syntax doesn't look quite right
@Link yes
Ok thanks
nwp
nwp
in an ideal world you could use std::for_each with the std::execution::par_unseq tag, but C++17 is not quite here yet
 
6 hours later…
21:54
Hello guys where is the C room ?
Ven
Ven
ah, I'm not sure about the C room
Can we ask C questions here ?
Ven
Ven
not sure. @milleniumbug @nwp?
I do think there's a C room
I just created an array of char with sbrk(1) and could still put characters until the 4096 index number of this array but when i affect a value on the 4097 one it segfaults, so I dont see the difference allocating 1 byte or 4096 because I anyway the OS will create 4096 bytes
Ven
Ven
why are you using sbrk
22:01
Because I have a school project to recode Malloc
Ven
Ven
ah, un épitekien
I see why
Ven
Ven
as always, accessing an element after the array's size is undefined behavior. it may crash – it may not.
same with malloc
C questions are fine. Just say in the first post you're asking about C or otherwise you'll get C++ solutions and both you and me will waste time.
But I never crashes for me, when i do sbrk(1) I can just put 4096 values and I never crash until I put one more value
Ven
Ven
22:07
this is especially important if you i.e. sbrk(1); sbrk(1);. if you try to consider both are 4096 in size, they'll overlap
No only the first one is 4096 in size
This is what I Want to say
Ven
Ven
that's platform-dependant.
I know it's from the getpagesize() function
Ven
Ven
I'm fairly sure you're not supposed to depend on that :P
can i ask questions about serialization here?
Ven
Ven
22:09
well, if you always allocate multiples of 4096, your malloc will use a lot more space than needed
also don't call sbrk with 1, that's a waste :)
But I don't see the difference of doing sbrk(1) and sbrk(getpagesize()) If i can do the same thinks with it
Ven
Ven
@milleniumbug well...
@Myranova as I showed in my coliru link, it's important when you chain them
even though its in c#
Ven
Ven
@WeinForce no
22:10
no, that's too far away
but its just about the concept
doesn't really matter
what matters is that people here aren't necessarily familiar with C# specifics
Interesting code Ven
thanks
Ven
Ven
bonne chance ;-)
22:26
Merci :)

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