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07:02
should i be worried if i get a SIGTRAP during debugging? Compiled with minGW 4.9.2, debugged with GDB/CDB? I clicked on continue debugging after SIGTRAP and the program is able to run with no obvious signs of breaking down (CodeBlocks 16.0.1)
 
3 hours later…
09:41
@ratchetfreak I do not have any information about software part either, I said that it MIGHT hurt.
 
1 hour later…
11:09
Hi
Writing a very small testprogram for transferring images via UDP
this is the receiver part:
MainWindow::MainWindow(QWidget *parent) :
    QMainWindow(parent),
    ui(new Ui::MainWindow)
{
    ui->setupUi(this);

    udpSocket = new QUdpSocket(this);

    udpSocket->bind(QHostAddress::LocalHost, 5000);
    connect(udpSocket, &QUdpSocket::readyRead, this, &MainWindow::readPendingDatagrams);
}
void MainWindow::readPendingDatagrams()
{
    QByteArray buffer;
    buffer.resize(udpSocket->pendingDatagramSize());

    QHostAddress sender;
    quint16 senderPort;

    udpSocket->readDatagram(buffer.data(), buffer.size(), &sender, &senderPort);

    QImage imageFrame(400, 400, QImage::Format_Indexed8);
    qDebug()<<"received smth";

}
I can see in wireshark that this laptop receives UDP packets from my other laptop
yet the slot of my connect never gets activated
what does your main function look like?
nwp
nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Why UDP over TCP?
because it is faster. I learned many years ago that for example to stream videoframes from videogames UDP is used.
Here the scenario is almost identical
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn not by that much once the connection is set up
#include "mainwindow.h"
#include <QApplication>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QApplication a(argc, argv);
MainWindow w;
w.show();

return a.exec();
}
in case you may ask:
#ifndef MAINWINDOW_H
#define MAINWINDOW_H

#include <QMainWindow>
#include <QUdpSocket>
#include <QByteArray>

namespace Ui {
class MainWindow;
}

class MainWindow : public QMainWindow
{
    Q_OBJECT

public:
    explicit MainWindow(QWidget *parent = 0);
    ~MainWindow();

public slots:
    void readPendingDatagrams();

private:
    Ui::MainWindow *ui;
    QUdpSocket *udpSocket;
};

#endif // MAINWINDOW_H
nwp
nwp
11:15
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn TCP is slower than UDP because it does more, things like error correction, ordering of packages, retransmissions in case of data loss and so on. It seems like you need all of those features. If you implement them in UDP it will be slower than just using TCP.
@nwp does this really matter in my case you think? I mean the enf goal is just some sort of surveillance system. I was thinking about just streaming via UDP and sending some commands via TCP.
your code should work... though there should be a while (udpSocket->hasPendingDatagrams()) around the body of the readPendingDatagrams slot, but that shouldn't affect whether it got called
@ratchetfreak it never ever prints "received smth"
while I can clearly see in wireshark all my packets arriving
I guess there must be something with this code
I ll try adding the loop...
    void MainWindow::readPendingDatagrams()
    {
        QByteArray buffer;
        buffer.resize(udpSocket->pendingDatagramSize());

        QHostAddress sender;
        quint16 senderPort;

        while (udpSocket->hasPendingDatagrams())
        {
            udpSocket->readDatagram(buffer.data(), buffer.size(), &sender, &senderPort);

            QImage imageFrame(400, 400, QImage::Format_Indexed8);
            qDebug()<<"received smth";
        }

        /*if(buffer!=NULL)
        {
            imageFrame = imageFrame.scaled(ui->label->width(), ui->label->height(), Qt::KeepAspectRatio);
same result
check if your firewall isn't blocking things
 
1 hour later…
12:44
@ratchetfreak if my firewall would block this, I wouldn t see my packages in wireshark. Right?
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn depends, wireshark may get a blanket allow while your application may get blocked
completely turning off my firewall gives the same results
ie my slot is not executed
ok got different results after successfully disabling my fw
wireshark shows 'port unreachable'
sorry folks but htat sample code provided (including some part of their explanation) in the Qt docs is pure crap
it now works, but I had to do something different from what they described
 
4 hours later…
17:24
my recursion works but always fail to remove that one last tab char found in between

sample input : "\t\t\t\tfunction\t\t\th"
post processing : function\th"

Full code here : https://pastebin.com/mi1Rhh9F
I assume this is an exercise and not to be used in a real application because it's very inefficient
sort of, for my own..i noticed copy pasted codes are around...was thinking of a solution of that and i've just solved the problem...but still as you said
not efficient
and my tools are limited to what gcc 4.9.2 can provide as my luck with boost (if boost has any tools to help) isn't helping
17:45
what's the expected output anyway? is the function supposed to remove all tab characters from the string?
arg.erase(std::remove_if(arg.begin(), arg.end(), [](char x){ return x == '\t'; }), arg.end());
as for why your function is not removing, well, you're checking for the tab character, and it's there, but none of the inner branches are hit (counter is not equal to 0, and the character after that tab is 'h')
your line of code has lambda?
yes. gcc 4.9.2 supports C++11
yeah enabled
18:14
As chat is less stricly than main site, could I ask for an opinion? I had job interview and the person that interviewed me said rather controversial thing, IMO, that really bothers me.
Is it C++ related?
Yes, ofc, C and C++ related.
then shoot
Do you thing someone can be rather good in C++ (have a good grasp on STL, good practices like RAII, OOP, basic exceptions handling, experience with such important libraries like Boost; had a few projects), but at the same time be rather amateur in C (knows the basics, because that's how teaching C++ looks in Polish, by teaching C-style, but don't knows any good practices, done no projects in it, only tasks from tutorials, university, etc)?
Dec 12 '16 at 22:41, by milleniumbug
uni assignment? oh well, universities being bad at C++, as usual
in Lounge<C++>, Mar 2 '16 at 22:09, by milleniumbug
@ADG Most of the time what universities call "C++", they actually mean "C, but with some addition of arbitrarily chosen features of C++ because we can't actually explain how C equivalents work. Also there's no way in hell we'll explain the features that don't exist in C, that would require significant changes in the course we didn't change in the last 10 years"
@Toreno96 sorry for that, I'm actually attending my last year of IT at my uni (PG ETI), so I wanted to respond with "I know, right"
18:33
@milleniumbug I had a really big luck to have teacher, that tried really hard to guide me (and other students) to learn more about good C++, not uni's "C++". Which motivated me to learn more by myself.
Never stop learning by yourself, even when you're attending uni
there are different styles of teaching, and most older books (symfonia C++, thinking in c++) tend to favour the bottom-up style where you focus on language features as if reading them from a feature list on wikipedia
I do not plan to stop :) I talked about uni's teacher. I'm not sure how to shortly name in english language the person, which leads laboratories ^^'
like, here are arrays, here are pointers, here's where the C++ specific features start, function overloading, virtual functions, templates
But it wasn't my question. What I'm asking is, if someone would tell you that he is good at C++, but amateur at C, how would you react?
I wouldn't be particularly surprised; I mean, you do know the C++ specific idioms, you've done some projects, but you haven't done much C language programming <- basically me
18:42
Because my interviewer was really surprised how I can say such thing. And the arguments I said (similar to yours) did not work.
"Okay, so, if you wouldn't had classes, you couldn't write program?"
did you know that in C, if you declare a struct like this: struct A {};, you must declare a variable like this: struct A a; and not like this A a; // C++
^ if I haven't looked up "how C and C++ are different", and/or tried writing a C program, I wouldn't know that, and I would be basically a total amateur in C
most likely the company you've tried interviewing in is actually using "C with classes" style
That's why in my opinion I'm good at C++, but bad at C. Because different good practises, because beign used to OOP, RAII, STL and overall beauty of C++.
Yeah, I fear it's possible.
even if you know the basic idea of how to program doesn't mean you are expert in all languages, isn't that is how the view of anyone involved in programming/development?
I mean, I read this quote you've posted as "C++ is C with classes and objects"
because clearly "classes" is the first thing they associate with C++
Well, if they employ me eventually I will have chance to see for myself. After all, it's just one-month internship, and I really need work experience and money (they pay really good, for an internship).
I have good idea. I could look at open source projects of this company and see for myself even without employment.
 
2 hours later…
21:18
in any case anybody in here is familiar with sending MMS's from software in cpp, feel free to reach out to me
didn't even know that was possible as the cellular network and the internet network are two distinct things as far as I know
21:34
*text message is fine enough
as long as its free
 
1 hour later…
22:36
@Ron stole your rep :/
Apparently I can't yet vote to undelete answers
23:04
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn If you Google for "send mms from computer" (or similar) you should get quite a few hits. AT&T (for one example) has an address where you can send email, and it comes out the other end as a text message.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn They're not nearly as distinct as you might think. In fact, when you talk on a 4G/LTE phone, you're really using VOIP going over an IPv6 network, using most IP kinds of things (e.g., most cell networks use Diameter for authentication).

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