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11:54
@anang What SQL implementation and what error?
 
1 hour later…
12:58
ok
so I'm learning c++ right, and I did what everyone said to do and read Accelerated C++. I've read it twice now and I know quite a bit of syntax, but how do I go from here to actually making something. Should I just do hacker rank exercises? Any project ideas that are basic enough to be doable but complex enough for me to learn something? I need something to keep my motivation up and to help me bridge the gap between someone who knows a bit of c++ and a c++ programmer.
nwp
nwp
@exitcode Be creative. Make a game.
if you absolutely can't think of anything you can go with adventofcode.com but doing something you like is much better motivation than doing what you are told
And I've tried that but I feel like I don't know enough to make a game without following tutorials and then I'm not really making anything @nwp
I'll try making something with just sfml documentation on the site but I feel like I'll get half way through and just get stuck. Also c++ game libraries are a nightmare on windows because I hate visual studio.
I'll give it a go anyway. I'm gonna try reinstalling linux too
@exitcode Does the book suggest exercises?
nwp
nwp
@exitcode Maybe you should concentrate on making the program easy to understand and maintainable. If you get stuck it is probably because you have to keep too much stuff in your head and have no concentration left to progress.
Don't worry about making practice programs "maintainable". Just make them small and to the point. Then they are 'maintiainable' as a side effect.
nwp
nwp
13:12
if it starts becoming a mess take the parts that are too complicated and rewrite them
another thing you can try is ask for feedback on designs you are not sure about or that feel like they should be easier to implement than you did
@exitcode Work exercises from the book. If you get stuck, skip to the next exercise. When you're all finished, look up others' solutions and use it to compare and improve yours, fix your broken solutions, etc.
13:39
@exitcode If you like SFML look at sfgui.sfml-dev.de . It looks learner friendly. Design GUIs for some of the console applications you made during Accelerated C++.
14:25
#include <iostream>

class X
{
	int a, b;
public:
	void print ()
	{
		std::cout << a << " " << b;
	}
};

int main()
{
	X obj = (X)(1,2);
	obj.print();
}
Sorry
I forgot to introduce the question!
small question: I want to intialise a, b but this doesnt work!
obviously
why it dont call the constructor which the compiler defined?
because you're using a C-style cast
i am confused! I dont know C! We were taught this in c++
whats the correct way sir? thank you alot!
also there's no default constructor which will handle initializing these variables
the notation is also totally wrong
14:28
why doesnt compiler do it
dunno how else I can answer the question except "that's how the language works"
i mean why dont compiler create parametric compiler
parametrised compiler
because the moment you've declared these data members as private you've said "this is not a bag of bits, it's an actual type with operations you can call on it"
else why would you hide the data
the compiler in general won't provide you constructors except when it has to
Add a constructor or make the members public and initialize them with the { ... } syntax.
assuming the class has a two arg (int, int) constructor, you can create an object with X obj(1, 2); or X obj = X(1, 2);
(note no parens around the type in the latter case)
14:33
i realise i must create the ctor, but earlier i did thta and compiler created a parametrise constructor for me!
it didn't
i don't know earlier i thought it did
i means compiler only create default ctor or copy ctor when needed, not anything else!
Am I correct?
by default, a default constructor, destructor, copy constructor, copy assignment operator, move constructor, and move assignment operator will be generated, unless something prevents it
 
4 hours later…
18:37
@Brandin Nevermind! I managed to fix the problem myself. thankyou though!
19:29
is there a way to compile c++ in visual studio code on windows?
without using mingw/cygwin
2 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
fair enough
Use MSVC as the compiler? I thought that was the default toolchain when you use visual studio.
visual studio code not visual studio @Aaron3468
"without using mingw" means the only other option is Visual C++ compiler
19:32
What about clang?
Or is there no clang for Windows?
out of curiosity, why not MinGW?
Clang frontend for MSVC seems to be limited currently
I've never managed to setup mingw
@fredoverflow otherwise I haven't tested it much
@exitcode nuwen mingw to the rescue
you download and install MSYS2, run the shell, run pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc to install MinGW
19:35
@milleniumbug Can I compile stuff into windows executables like that or do I have to run through linux as well
what
of course whatever MinGW outputs is 100% native windows code
@milleniumbug Couldn't I compile my program using mingw on WSL (the new w10 bash for windows thing)
@exitcode Have you tried nuwen mingw? It's incredibly simple to install, just a self-extracting .exe and one .bat file or something.
@milleniumbug I wouldn't have to install mingw on windows, just apt get it with WSL bash
19:38
your response to "I can't install this shit" seems to be "I'll install some other shit, that shit, those shits, and finally I'll install this shit"
@fredoverflow no but i will thanks - giving it a go now
i remember libraries being annoying to install and link using mingw and g++
MSYS2
M-fucking-SYS TWO
@milleniumbug wat?
"oh I need SDL" "pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-SDL"
SDL comes with nuwen mingw if I'm not mistaken.
19:42
sure, they pack some libraries, but that's a constant number of libraries
do you need to build some obscure one that has X, Y, and Z as dependency? MSYS2 has got you covered
19:59
wait does mingw nuwen include a cmd prompt
why do you need that
wait so it makes any terminal
like powershell
able to use mingw?
why wouldn't it
I entered .\set_distro_paths.bat into powershell
also: of course, what else did you expect
20:03
what do I do now
dunno, run g++?
I don't use nuwen's mingw
I'm using MSYS2
so all I do is open powershell, cd to the nuwen folder and run set distro paths and just enter g++ commands
i dont think it works with powershell nvm
Can you run a .bat file from a powershell and have that modify your path?
That works from a normal command prompt, but I don't know about powershell.
does git bash essentially do the same thing as msys
no
does it have pacman?
if it doesn't then the answer is obviously
NO
20:13
I fucking hate windows cmd
who tf thought it was a good idea to use \ instead of /
@exitcode most compilers install somewhere[citation needed]. As long as you set the system path to find them in the command line, any other program can find them. Cygwin is a pain, but Mingw and msys2 work well and use gcc as the backend if I recall. Maybe mess around with shell scripts to get a hang of how to glue programs together in an operating system?
36 mins ago, by milleniumbug
your response to "I can't install this shit" seems to be "I'll install some other shit, that shit, those shits, and finally I'll install this shit"
Then it's just a matter of configuring them to link/include your desired path for libraries
@Brandin yeah, shell scripts like .bat usually start in the folder they exist in, but they can use cd to move around the operating system, just like you do in the command prompt.
I might just use msys because I can use stuff like ls -l
You'll only be able to escape not understanding your tools for so long, exitcode. Might as well bang your head against the obstacle now and learn to install a compiler+libraries.
20:21
@Aaron3468 I am but now I can't even figure out how tf to install mingw and msys
I just used the MinGW installer and the mingw-get tool or something and it was fine. That was ages ago, though. I'm sure they must have some newer stuff now. And now there is MinGW-w64, which seems more up-to-date.
why can't they just make it easy and upload a windows installer to github using github releases and then do everything for you
now you're just being whiny
If you don't want to mess with installing tools, install Cygwin and then use that. Everything will just work. It will be Cygwin, though, so it's not a "True windows" experience. You will have to say /cygdrive/c/blahblahblah
I'll repeat, and repeat
MSYS2
20:27
@milleniumbug I finally got the motivation to do some programming and I've spent the whole day trying to install stuff to let me run hello world and I've been here before so many times
you may be confused because each one of us will suggest a different tool because of our own experiences
@milleniumbug I'm trying
dw I'll get there sorry for the trouble
I'll probably just go back to linux then after a month it wont boot or my drivers will break and we'll be back here again
If you don't want to mess with Linux drivers, install Virtualbox on Windows and then install Linux in that. It will just work.
@Brandin yeah but If I'm making a game I won't really be able to test in vm I don't think
Why not
20:32
@Brandin shitty OpenGL emulation
at least on VirtualBox
dunno if other VMs do it better
If your goal is to learn I think it should be good enough. After a while you might have renewed motivation to learn to install the tools on native Windows.
ah fuck sake I can't do anything atm because virgin media fucked my internet and now I get 2mbps because I installed visual studio 4 hours ago
today is not a good day
If you installed Visual Studio then just use that.
@Brandin I hate visual studio with a passion
20:39
So, you hate Visual Studio, yet you just downloaded it (big download as I recall), installed it, and now are complaining about using too much bandwidth...
its not been a good day Brandin I'll be honest
alright I'll have a go with visual studio - I really wanted to use vs code
Is your goal to learn C++. Just start with what you've got now. It's too easy to get lost in tools. For example, maybe you want this or that library. But to build those, you need foo and bar libraries as dependencies, etc. Interesting, but much better to start somewhere.
oh fuck sfml don't even have versions that work with vs 2017 brillianttttttttt
VS2017 doesn't exist yet
the official release is in 3 days
(what you have is a Release Candidate, IOW a pre-release version)
21:19
guys
i need a fast memcmp function,but with small custom part
i need to find the beggining and the end index of a change between 2 blocks(arrays)
Ven
Ven
@milleniumbug
ah, maybe @sehe can cleanup?
i don't want to iterate thorugh the entire arrays as they are,(i tried and it was extremely slow),therefore i'm asking,does the memcmp function in c wrritten anywhere?
i mean it source
@Slashy Well what does the assembly do?
And when you say, "change", what do you mean?
for example two arrays
That tells me not much...
21:22
@Slashy Why? What is your actual problem that you are solving?
So there's only one continguous section of change?
{1,2,3,4,5,3,1,1,1,1,9,8,7,6}
{1,2,3,5,1,2,0,0,0,0,9,8,7,6}
the change actually starts at the 4th value,and stops in the 11th value
14 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
actually it's for image processing project..i need to detecteed a start point and a end point of line in image
@Slashy So are they guaranteed to be different all the way through?
21:25
actually it's for image processing project..i need to detecteed a start point and a end point of line in image
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
yep
Well, in that case.
the change could be only 1 value...
Can it be destructive?
21:25
{5,6,7}
{5,8,7}
like this
what do you mean?
@Slashy What you could do is find the largest primitive you can use, and use a single XOR command to check if all the bits are the same
and then you can compare if it's all 0's
@Slashy Alternatively, you can use a divide-and-conquer method
Ven
Ven
yeah
for example: {0x86 0x11 0xab 0xef}
If you do the XOR on this, you'll notice that if the final comes out:
{ not-0 0 0 0}
You can tell that the change is coming from the left
@Slashy There might also be some GPU stuff out there that can do this much more efficiently? I dunno. Don't know GPU's
@VermillionAzure sorry for being away from the chat , tried to write somthing to demonstrate what i actually mean
a classic function for this could be written like that:
void Difference(void* arr1, void* arr2)
{
	int* ptr1 = (int*)arr1;
	int* ptr2 = (int*)arr2;
	int index = 0;
	int changeStart, changeEnd;
	for (; index < sizeof(arr2); index++)
	{

		if (ptr1[index] != ptr2[index])
		{
			changeStart = index;
			break;
		}
	}

	for (; index < sizeof(arr2); index++)
	{

		if (ptr1[index] == ptr2[index])
		{
			changeEnd = index;
			break;
		}
	}
}
see what i mean?
@Slashy First of all what language is this
21:33
cpp
Do you want to write C++03, C++11, C, or C11?
or c
actually i'm in c11
using CodeBlocks
but what does it matter for the problem?
@Slashy Because it decides the type of idioms you use
void Difference(void* arr1, void* arr2)
{
	int* ptr1 = (int*)arr1;
	int* ptr2 = (int*)arr2;
garbage
Why are you using sizeof(arr2)?
21:35
they are in the same size
@Slashy No but it doesn't make sense
sizeof(arr) == sizeof(void*)
he's just being bad
ohh
@Slashy You're getting the size of the pointer, not the array
my bad yeah
21:36
@Slashy Arrays decay to pointers if you pass them like that, so you need to pass in the size explicitly.
@Slashy find the first change, then stop, iterate backward from the end, find the last change
@Slashy Do you know about caching and memory access patterns?
@VermillionAzure NO
void Difference(void* arr1, void* arr2,int length)
{
	int* ptr1 = (int*)arr1;
	int* ptr2 = (int*)arr2;
	int index = 0;
	int changeStart, changeEnd;
	for (; index < length; index++)
	{

		if (ptr1[index] != ptr2[index])
		{
			changeStart = index;
			break;
		}
	}

	for (; index < length; index++)
	{

		if (ptr1[index] == ptr2[index])
		{
			changeEnd = index;
			break;
		}
	}
}
@VermillionAzure pointers are pointers
21:37
@milleniumbug They decay sorry
@VermillionAzure not much.. i'll like to learn about :)
fixed the function
@Slashy They're extremely important. You're not going to get optimal performance unless you think about it in today's machines
@Slashy What do you know about computer architecture?
almost nothing.. :(
i actually came more from the high level programming languages..(java..c#..phyton..) these low level stuff quite new to me
@Slashy Are you in a CS program? CENG?
what?
oh no..i'm not in learning the university or somthing
21:40
@Slashy High school? Workforce?
just a simple programmer.. :)
this is a project of me and some friends
somthing for learning
about image prodcessing
@Slashy Well the point is, will you be attending?
Because you'll also get it later if you steer yourself right
hmm..not...not soon
i just thought i could access the memcmp function(which works extremly fast)
and to customize it to my needs
instead of returning 0 or 1
@Slashy memcmp is part of the C standard, so...
I dunno.
But if you want to do bit twiddling manually, you'll have to consider stuff like cache structure, data layout in memory, instruction primitives available, etc.
Also, endian is a big one apparently.
22:39
@milleniumbug didn't think there was much point in downloading the previous version when vs 2017 was releasing so soon and the update between 2017rc and 2017 will probably be minimal
i was wrong but nw, I'll get mingw working or I'll use linux
why is mingw so old tho? looks like it hasn't been updated in 5 years
is 0.6 the latest version of mingw
0.6.2
oh nvm it definitely isnt
don't download the mingw.org version, ever
also, did I mention: MSYS2?
yep just realised that
you need mingw for msys2?
dont you
don't they come together
hell no
3 hours ago, by milleniumbug
you download and install MSYS2, run the shell, run pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc to install MinGW
22:45
ok got it thanks so much
btw, why do they use source forge?
why does anyone use source forge?
'"they"?
mingw/msys2 use sourceforge right
I don't see where did you get that conclusion from
I thought Sourceforge injected ads into installers etc., hijacked gimp repo blah blah
oh what
@exitcode that's 3 year old news
also they scrapped this idea long time ago
because of extreme negative feedback
22:47
who scrapped what idea?
oh the ad injection
should i get i686 or x86_64? does it matter if I want to build for both 32bit and 64bit targets?
Get the 64 bit
(assuming you have a 64-bit OS)
the site is much faster than the source forge mirrors
will stuff I compile with msys2/cygwin/mingw perform worse than stuff compiled natively on windows/linux @milleniumbug
no
also
the first rule about using MSYS2: if there's a package X that's named X, and another named mingw-w64-YOUR_TARGET_ARCHITECTURE-X, you install the latter
the latter is a native MinGW package, the former is MSYS which means POSIX emulation
ok - is there a way to search packages, like you can with arch user repository and yaourt or something?
or should I just google exact name of package
pacman -Ss name-of-the-package
22:55
is it normal for packages to be slightly outdated - sfml is 2.3.2 but on website 2.4.2
I see 2.4.1 in the repo
finnf@a;fka;skf; ~
$ pacman -Ss sfml
mingw32/mingw-w64-i686-csfml 2.3-2
A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API for C (mingw-w64)
mingw32/mingw-w64-i686-sfml 2.3.2-2
A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API (mingw-w64)
mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-csfml 2.3-2
A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API for C (mingw-w64)
mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-sfml 2.3.2-2
A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API (mingw-w64)
you need to synchronize the repo with pacman -Sy or pacman -Su (dunno which one actually does that)
I'll just do el classico and pacman -Syyuu
warning: terminate MSYS2 without returning to shell and check for updates again
warning: for example close your terminal window instead of calling exit
yes, you need to restart
23:05
@milleniumbug surely bash on windows renders msys2 useless?
i suppose you have to use apt-get instead of pacman
@exitcode I don't think so
try interacting with any of the stuff on Ubuntu Linux Subsystem from Windows
for example, run an Ubuntu executable from a windows IDE
also all that updates more rarely
also Windows 10 specific
I suppose in order to compile a game say using wsl I'd have to install mingw and compile for windows then run in cmd
so its just the same thing but even more clunky
should I use sfml x86_64 or i686 if I want my game to work on 32 bit and 64 bit platforms? my pc is 64 bit @milleniumbug
install both
tbh, do you actually know people who are running 32 bit Windows?
why don't the mingw team just make a github pages website in like 10 minutes
why does it have to be so ugly and have an installer from 2013
why do you care about a MinGW installer
23:14
no I mean the website wants you to install 0.6
do you use vs code @milleniumbug
does msys come with a compiler @milleniumbug
4 hours ago, by milleniumbug
you download and install MSYS2, run the shell, run pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc to install MinGW
@milleniumbug thanks
eh I did that
g++ doesn't work tho? @milleniumbug
23:33
make sure you're running the appropriate MSYS2 for your MinGW runtime
"MSYS2 32-bit" "MSYS2 64-bit"
I have an msys.exe and a mingw32.exe and a mingw64 - i tried mingw64 and it worked so just use that?
in my 'msys64' folder
so just go for mingw64.exe? @milleniumbug

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