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13:38
prob a trivial question, but how do i end a bunch of statements and values and then start afresh with new empty ones, for example
int a = 5
a = 7
end here
string a = "hello"
a = "world"

if i do this without some sort of clearance or end, it will error as a is an int origionally ?
i mean is this possible to do without defining seperate functions using these values ?
enclose each in their own scope
{
   int a = 5;
   a=  7;
}
{
    std::string a = "hello";
    a = "world";
}
im still learning, could you explain their own scope ?
ah sorry i see
the curly braces denote a scope, things inside a scope can see the parent scope (recursively) but not the other way
man i should have noticed that as i see it all the time in others code
thanks
though it's often easy enough to just think up a new name for the new variable
13:46
yep i think that would be a lot easier, i think i am not following the book properly sometimes
 
3 hours later…
16:59
Hi Guys. I'm trying to crosscompile with clang for arm. for some reason clang invoke local x86_64 assembler (/usr/bin/as) which fails due to -mfloat-abi=soft flag. How could I solve this problem?
 
3 hours later…
19:47
Hi, in my .h file i have something like this (dont worry about COLS and ROWS they are define which I did not show): static char m_keys[ROWS][COLS]; And in my constructor, I am trying to do this code: MyKeyPad::m_keys[ROWS][COLS] = {
{ 'D', 'C', 'B', 'A'},
{ '#', '9', '6', '3'},
{ '0', '8', '5', '2'},
{ '*', '7', '4', '1'}
};
But i get an error: cannot convert '<brace-enclosed initializer list>' to 'char'
definitions go to namespace scope, not function scope
i.e. if you have this code inside your constructor, it's 100% wrong
I'm sorry, I did not understand why?
I mean, why is it wrong if it is inside my constructor (which is)?
because you're declaring a static variable, which belongs to the class, not to the constructor
also syntax doesn't allow this
So, where shall I put the code I just put in constructor?
I am doing this because, I saw this post: stackoverflow.com/questions/28228369/…
nowhere the accepted answer said to put it inside a constructor definition
also having it inside the constructor would make no sense anyway
@Siliproksi outside of it
19:53
So anywhere in cpp file outside constructor?
Ok, because I do not really know C++, how can I write this divided into 2 files. i.e. .h and .cpp
Because, this is all in one file. main.cpp I guess.
declarations go to the header, definitions go to the source file
A.h: class A
{
static int lolz;
};
A.cpp: #include "A.h" A::lolz = 42;
Is this valid?
As i understood.
yes
don't forget include guards
19:58
"guards"?
What is that?
14
Q: Why include guards?

ximusI'm learning C. Include guards, as defined here, are used to prevent loading the same code twice at compilation. Why can't my compiler (GCC) detect that it is loading the same code twice and have a sensible default behaviour?

Oh, thanks for that. I am using them.
By the way, is this happening at compile-time? The: " A::lolz = 42; " code.
happening = exectued :)
@milleniumbug
this initialization may be done at compile time, but it's not guaranteed en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/constant_initialization
Im sorry, I failed at compiling the code. Here is my .h file: pastebin.com/aQsjS0fB and here is .cpp file: pastebin.com/LNL9cfHS
The error: 'm_colPins' in 'class MyKeyPad' does not name a type MyKeyPad.cpp
Getting same errors for: m_keys and m_rowPins
20:15
there's no type there
So I must write "static byte" before it?
before the "MyKeyPad::m_keys[ROWS][COLS] = {"
Oh, I did not see the int. And by the way, when I correct it (add "static byte") then I get this warning: 'static' may not be used when defining (as opposed to declaring) a static data member [-fpermissive].
don't add static
there's no static in the code above
Ok, I see now.
Thanks.
20:21
static is not part of the type, it's a storage duration specifier
Alright.
Thanks for the help. You saved me a lot of time.

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