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00:31
Chack out my 'random' library. It's provide a high convenient wrapper around C++11 random classes. You can do almost all 'random' things with a simple 'get' method.

Examples:

1. Random number in a range

auto val = Random::get(-10, 10); // Integer
auto val = Random::get(10.f, -10.f); // Float point

2. Random boolean

auto val = Random::get<bool>( ) // 0.5% to generate true
auto val = Random::get<bool>( 0.7 ) // 0.7% to generate true

3. Random value from a std::initilizer_list

auto val = Random::get( { 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 } ); // val = 1 or 3 or...
 
1 hour later…
01:45
@IlyaPolishchuk That's... not a question
Are you looking for a code review or sth
 
8 hours later…
09:20
is it recommended to suppress warnings like (comparing signed int w/ usgined int) when you are doing a string comparison (first condition is that the value of the int is not std::string::npos and second is that the int value +4 will be equivalent to the string's length

Sample
int posFind;
...
posFind = tempfName.find(SEARCH_STRING);
std::cout << ((posFind != (signed)std::string::npos && (posFind+4) == (signed)tempfName.length())? tempfName + "\n" : "Not a file with .php\n" );
or you can make sure the types match the signed that they need
isn't npos supposed to return -1?
when fail
npos is 0xffff_ffff_ffff_ffff, on 64 bit,
so really you should make posFind a size_t
however looking at that code properly all you really want to know is if the string ends with .php
there is a simpler way: tempfName.compare(tempfName.length()-4, 4, SEARCH_STRING);
09:31
ah never thought of that, thanks
your code also fails with "foo.php.php" erroneously thinking it doesn't end with it.
you meant the existing?
the one you posted
because of the posFind+4 == length() i suppose?
yeah
doing an rfind would have fixed that
but doing the match against the proper substring is better
09:38
hmm that's true...
10:29
Hi

I was wondering whether someone could give me some feedback on the overall architecture of my first multithreaded software:
This is a scheme showing how the different threads relate to each other.
Basically the main thread, which is responsible for the GUI starts the camera interface thread. Afterwards if a user presses a button on the gui the Computer Vision Thread (CVT) is started. whenever the CVT obtains a result it passes the result to the camera interface thread which then passes it to the main thread to display the results on the GUI.
Meanwhile the Camera Interface Thread (CIT) continuously passes imageframes to the TCP/IP thread for live streaming and to the main thread for a live display in the GUI as well.
What feedback could you give me on that? Any type of feedback is more than welcome.
* it is the CIT that starts the CVT after receiving a signal from the main thread
codereview.stackexchange.com is a good place for this kind of requests as well.
(but I am not sure)
There is nothing wrong with this structure as long as you have no dead locks and race conditions and can handle all errors.
I have no information about your hardware but copying uncompressed frames around might hurt your performance, you might want to have one queue (defined in GUI thread and passed as argument to other threads) which cleans up frames as soon as they are consumed by every thread or by timeout, for example. Avoid unneeded optimizations though.
11:38
@NickyHFE I'll answer the original question: your posFind should be of type std::size_t as that's the type of std::string::npos and also the return type of std::string::find
@EuriPinhollow Qt's Pixmap does lazy copy-on-write so the copying isn't that big of a deal
11:51
@milleniumbug I was slightly confused when I read somewhere npos would return -1 when the ops fail and that unsigned shouldn't contain values <0 sinze size_t is unsigned integral type (perhaps different from unsigned int type)?
12:03
@NickyHFE cppreference does have -1 in the initializer. Yes, this is true that unsigned types can't store negative numbers. So npos doesn't actually store -1, but since unsigned types use modulo arithmetic, the maximum possible value is stored instead
ah, noted thanks @milleniumbug
 
1 hour later…
13:07
@Mgetz how often and how quickly or maybe after how many lines do people review each others code?
13:57
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn we do reviews once a day, but you can also use a system like reviewboard (full disclosure I know and am friends with one of the founders) to do every commit (this is probably better but requires atomic commits).

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