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09:30
i have a csv with 2 strings and 1 int in total 3 columns and need to read it into a map... i used std::map<string, std::pair<string, uint64_t> > myMap , how do I read values from file to map
nwp
nwp
what part of it is not clear?
you just read the values from the file into variables and put them into the map
 
3 hours later…
12:38
im trying to read some columns from csv into a map where value is a structure
`struct MapFileInfo {
int32_t orderID;
int32_t trig_seq;
string orderType;
} StudentInfo;
std::map<string, MapFileInfo > myMap2`
`int main()
{
std::ifstream data("/tmp/my.csv");

std::string line;
while(std::getline(data,line))
{
std::stringstream lineStream(line);
std::string cell;
std::cout << line << std::endl ;
while(std::getline(lineStream,cell,','))
{
//std::cout << cell << std::endl ;
//std::cout << "===========" << std::endl ;
// I can get cell values but I need to pass values in the row to myMap2
}
}
}`
nwp
nwp
May 5 at 13:41, by Szymon Marczak
user image
@pythonRcpp did you manage to read the data into a MapFileInfo?
@nwp no I;m stuck at the point of passing data into my map
nwp
nwp
There are 2 parts to this. First read the file and fill StudentInfo with the data. Second put StudentInfo into the map. Is the first part done already?
or maybe not StudentInfo but some other MapFileInfo object.
read file is almost done (just that comma separated things are to pushed into structures)
nwp
nwp
12:54
then you can just do myMap2["some_string"] = StudentInfo;
it might make sense to add a std::istream &operator >>(std::istream &is, MapFileInfo &mfi) so that you can just write MapFileInfo mfi; lineStream >> mfi; myMap2["s"] = mfi;
13:39
Hi. Im trying to build box2d on visual studio 2015, it now uses premake5 any clue how to make a 32bit projet? now the project it generated only has x64
I cant find any relevant option
std::istream &operator >>(std::istream &is, MapFileInfo &mfi) what does this exactly do
this is operator overloading i think
2 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
781
A: Operator overloading

sbiCommon operators to overload Most of the work in overloading operators is boiler-plate code. That is little wonder, since operators are merely syntactic sugar, their actual work could be done by (and often is forwarded to) plain functions. But it is important that you get this boiler-plate code ...

ok, let's continue here. well, first and foremost this is a test task, and i use it to learn some testing via boost test as well, probably doing more than the company wants.. but anyway
one version of the algorithm works on stl::forward_list<T>, the other one on a makeshift singly-linked list
obviously, the test cases are identical, as is the testing logic
so.. i'm thinking if it makes sense and in what way exactly to merge them
nwp
nwp
14:06
@iksemyonov Why would you want to merge them? It seems like the similarity is accidental and not by design. Changing the behavior of the singly linked without changing std::forward_list seems reasonable which means they should not be tested by the same test cases.
@nwp my logic is as follows: we are testing the algorithm, which should behave identically on both data structures, since they are two different implementations of the same concept - a s.l. list
@nwp the algorithm is reverse_interleave_shuffle<T>()
nwp
nwp
@iksemyonov in that case define the interface of the list that the algorithm works on and use only that interface with templates to merge them
although I'm not sure if you are testing the algorithm or the compliance of forward_list with the interface that the algorithm requires
@nwp i mean to test the algorithm. what gave you get the impression that i'm testing the interface? (for correcting that)
@nwp paste.fedoraproject.org/paste/… is where i've started
nwp
nwp
@iksemyonov if you are testing the algorithm it doesn't matter if you use your singly linked list or a forward_list as long as they comply with the requirement of the algorithm, therefore there is no need to merge anything
@nwp but isn't the current situation a duplication of test code and data? imagine if i'm asked about that, actually
nwp
nwp
14:14
Just delete one of the test cases. They are redundant.
uhm, how so? i mean, the algorithm for the two different list implementations is implemented in two physically separate functions
nwp
nwp
Ok, let's go back to the beginning. You have an algorithm that is supposed to work on different data structures by specializing for them and having the same behavior. So far correct?
yes, with the exception that "specializing" here doesn't mean "template specialization", but two unrelated functions
nwp
nwp
And you want to test the algorithm for both lists which naturally leads to the same code, except that the data structures are different and therefore you need different code.
yes, again with the little exception that both DS can be initialized from std::initializer_list<T>
which i've done on purpose for the DIY list to (a) better learn std::initializer_list<T> and (b) to simplify list initialization for myself
nwp
nwp
14:25
it looks like if you write a compare function that takes forward_lists you can merge the code
nwp
nwp
the implementation would be trivial, not sure if boost test cases are allowed to be templates
@iksemyonov I'm not seeing it. I suppose you could rename equal to compare to do it, which is probably a bad idea.
@nwp i intend to use equal<T>() as the compare function, whereas compare<T>() is the function defined for my DIY list, in the corresponding file
nwp
nwp
well the point is that you use the same function for both so you can merge
whereas std::forward_list<T> has an overloaded operator==() already
@nwp well, sure, i understand, but i miss a few points. in particular, how do i declare global data for a test case? and, should there be two "test suites" or not. things like that, regarding boost::test mainly
nwp
nwp
14:36
The first should be unnecessary and possible to search for. Usually there is an init and teardown function that sets up the test environment for every test.
I'm also unsure about if there should be 2 test cases or not. Technically they are 2 different algorithms with the same name and the same logical effect. I lean towards 2 tests.
The deciding factor would be if changing the algorithm would induce the same change to both test cases.
@nwp i'm not sure if we're both calling the same thing a test case: i have about 5 in each file
 
1 hour later…
16:07
hi guys, could someone please help me with this: i am trying to create a proxy function for LookupAccountSid. If i use it directly i pass a pointer to a wstring for the output (like &wstr[0]). In the proxy i defined the parameter as wstring *wstr but LookupAccountSid now does not accept wstr[0] as parameter. probably some noob error so i´d be grateful for any comments
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
Did you mean wchar_t? Not wstring. Also you wrote wstr[0]; did you mean &wstr[0]? You got it right earlier in your message.
@Paul With wstsring *wstr, wstr[0] has type wchar_t (or something like that) rather than being a pointer. Try passing just wstr instead. Oh, and if this is an output parameter, you probably need to define an array to hold the result, not just a pointer.
@BoundaryImposition LookupAccountSid normally takes LPWSTR but that did not work out for me so i use a pointer to a std::wstring as described which works perfectly fine
@JerryCoffin i think i know what you mean but it wont take just wstr either
basically i want to call my proxy method and just give pointers to the wstrings that should be modified inside the proxy, for what would i need an array?
if i create temporary wstrings in my proxy and then use ->assign on the pointer it works but that seems unnecessary
@Paul if it works perfectly fine what's the problem?
your question is unclear.
16:21
@BoundaryImposition yea sorry english is not my main language, let me rephrase
if i create a wstring in the same scope and pass &wstr[0] to LookupAccountSid it works
if i pass wstr to the "wstring *wstr" parameter on my proxy and then try to pass that to LookupAccountSid it doesnt work
does that make it more clear?
doesnt matter if i try &wstr or just wstr or any variations of what i pass outside of my proxy
wstring and wstring* are two different things. I don't understand why you expect to be able to just swap them without changing anything else
you should construct a mcve so that we know what you're really asking
ok i will put some code on pastebin. wstring* is a pointer to wstring or no?
so wstring *wstr should be like &wstr or not?
nwp
nwp
@Paul Don't just add random & and * until it compiles (because that will succeed but not do what you want). You need to know that LPWSTR is a wchar_t * and that &wstr[0] is also a wchar_t * and what you actually want.
1 min ago, by Paul
ok i will put some code on pastebin. wstring* is a pointer to wstring or no?
yes
nwp
nwp
@Paul not precise enough
16:28
1 min ago, by Paul
so wstring *wstr should be like &wstr or not?
I don't know what this means
don't just add random * and & everywhere without understanding
I think you should start talking in words instead of broken code ;)
well i will just make the pastebin then it will probably be obvious where i went wrong
@BoundaryImposition ok here we go pastebin.com/GXbxjavN
a few imports to much but otherwise minimal :P
95 lines isn't minimal
where am I supposed to be looking?
so you're taking a pointer to a wstring (std::wstring *userName) - don't know why, but whatever
then &userName[0] is wrong. You have to dereference the pointer first
it would be &(*userName)[0] - yuck!
nwp
nwp
if you remove the C casts the compiler will tell you that the types don't match
16:38
I propose you pass a wstring& instead so as not to confuse yourself with all these pointers
and yeah stop hacking around with C casts - all you're doing is masking the type errors
ok first thanks that worked :) as you probably have noticed my code is not the cleanest, i am learning on the go
yea thanks i guess i am going to read a bit about pointers and references now :P
nwp
nwp
17:02
There is a little trick you can use to make the compiler tell you the type of things. There are different versions, but at the moment I have this:
template <class T>
void type(){
	static_assert(sizeof(T) == 0);
}
to be used like type<decltype(*wstr[0])>(); for example
in the error message you should see something like
> error C2607: static assertion failed
main.cpp(13): note: see reference to function template instantiation 'void type<wchar_t&>(void)' being compiled
from which you can see that the type of *wstr[0] is wchar_t& /cc @Paul
type<LPWSTR>(); might also give some insight
17:21
would someone be able to check some code and tell me if i am doing what the question asked in regard to a double value, i am trying to learn c++ ?
read an int rather than a double. Note that sqrt() is not defined
for an int so assign n to a double and take sqrt() of that.

cout << "Please enter aan int value: ";
int n;
cin >> n;
cout << "n == " << n
<< "\nn+1 == " << n + 1
<< "\nthree times n == " << 3 * n
<< "\ntwice n == " << n + n
<< "\nn squared == " << n*n
<< "\nhalf of n == " << n / 2;
cout << "\nPlease enter a floating point number for n";
n == double (n);
cout << n;
cin >> n;
cout << n;
cout << "\nsquare root of n == " << sqrt(n);
nwp
nwp
@Ambush If it is not much code and you are happy with just general advice you can post it here or a link to ideone.com or coliru. If you want a proper review that discusses everything you might want to go to codereview instead.
you can't change a type of a variable this way
declare a different one with different type
aha ok, i had a feeling that i was doing this wrong thanks !
and thanks for the links @nwp
nwp
nwp
@Ambush Whoever wrote that assignment seems to be confused. sqrt actually is defined for ints since C++11 and C++ supports implicit conversions from int to double so you do not need to make a temporary double.
It seems like your education facility is not very good. Unfortunately there seem to be very few that are good, so you will just have to suffer through people talking about things they don't know enough about to teach.
ok that could be possible, the book is from 2014 - programming principles and practice using c++
17:34
4260
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...

obligatory
nice !
i will give a look at the others as well, maybe i will find some a little easier to follow, it certainly shouldnt hurt at least
17:58
gentlemen, am i right that since template instantiation happens before overload resolution, it's possible to have an overload like this one:
template<class T> void f(vector<T>);
template<class T> void f(list<T>);
this doesn't qualify as any sort of template specialization, does it?
blech
just template instantiation and consequent overload resolution?
is it just me or do you only ever ask C++ stuff in here?
uhm.. "you" as in me or?.. anyway bb in a while
who else would I be talking to?
18:00
@ikse think so
5 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
4 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
yes, this is your regular overloading
great, ty
 
2 hours later…
19:45
hey I get lots of errors (possibly because of UDP?) in files not related to my code directly imgur.com/a/1Qcti what are your thoughts?
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
the first error is rising from generateHeader (const pcl::PointCloud<PointT> &cloud, const int nr_points = std::numeric_limits<int>::max ()); which is not part of my code directly but my code uses it. Severity Code Description Project File Line Suppression State Error C2589 '(': illegal token on right side of '::' OpenARK-SDK C:\Program Files\PCL 1.8.0\include\pcl-1.8\pcl\io\pcd_io.h 281
It doesn't tell which line in my own code has caused it so I am somewhat lost. If you could guide me I really appreciate
<windows.h> is being a piece of garbage and "helpfully" does #define max(a,b) ...
do #define NOMINMAX before including any of the headers
20:04
Hello guys. Is there a way to workaround somehow the case, when there is different cmake generators used for the same lib (for example from different IDE) without manually wiping cmake data all the time?
do out-of-source build, and run generators in their each directory
like this
that's will require manually change dep's cmake files =(
?
mkdir ninja_local_build && cd ninja_local_build
cmake -G Ninja ..
cd ..
mkdir vs2017_build && cd vs2017_build
cmake -G "MS Visual Studio 2017" ..
cd ..
there is already a code in dependent lib (like libsvm which defining their internal folder structure)
I could change those scripts, but they are from remote sources so it will broke update flow in future
@milleniumbug thank you, defined #define NOMINMAX on top of main.cpp and the problem was solved
 
1 hour later…
user1593881
21:24
If one had a template function with two parameters one of which is meant to be a container and another a value like: `template <typename C, typename V>
void someFn(C& container, const V& someVal){...}`
user1593881
Then how does one call this with a vector of ints and an int? Is someFn<std::vector<int>, int>(myVec, 123); correct way?
deduction should work here
someFn(myVec, 123);
user1593881
I see...
^^ should have the same semantics if myVec is std::vector<int>
user1593881
Can I rely on deduction to do the job or is specifying the exact type safer approach?
21:31
you should rely on deduction
user1593881
Thanks.
however, sometimes it may deduce to the "wrong" (as in wrong to the callee) type
for example, with your someFn declaration
you can call someFn(myVec, 42.0)
which means C will be std::vector<int> and V will be double
which may not be what you expect
user1593881
I see.
if you want to limit to "value type of the container", you can use template<typename C> void someFn(C& container, const typename C::value_type& someVal) { ... }
user1593881
Pheeew. Awesome.
user1593881
21:40
@milleniumbug Where did you personally put the focus on? Books or online resources?
user1593881
While starting with C++, that is.
I started with books, then read some online resources to correct some mistakes, but it wasn't enough really
I've learned the most things by reading SO answers and Lounge
in general, I like to familiarize with a thing by finding the tag on SO, and then reading the most upvoted questions
user1593881
Appreciate.

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