« first day (415 days earlier)      last day (2662 days later) » 

00:04
@Will This is a matter of style.
@wilx Personally, I think gadget_t *gadgets, size_t gadget_c looks a bit better than the argc/argv order...
@Will counter variable? That's bound to be span<> or *_ref<>
But if there were a convention, I'd like to stick to it... but I suppose there isn't really?
@sehe I guess that's where C++ is different from C :p
@Will The C convention would be T* p, size_t n
You know, this is Lounge<C++>
@sehe I added a disclaimer about that below my question...
00:06
> below
That was too late. I had already answered
And yes, C++ is very different.
@sehe AUTOBOT REPORTED SEHE. std::vector SHOULD BE USED THIS IS THE FIRST INFRACTION.
14 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@sehe Not that I'm doubting you, but if that is C convention as you say, can you link to any source substantiating that? Thanks...
@sehe Not any more it isn't... :-)
@Will Just read C code. Compare it to c++ code that you also can read.
00:17
@Captain Giraffe I have. Not much consistency between projects. argc/argv order perhaps more common though...
BTW, I prefer not to give my variables one-letter names like p and n, unless the function is both tiny and very generic (like a wrapper for realloc() or something)
there are so many goodies in the std:: namespace
std::vector when you want a container. void f(std::vector v) is perfectly ok. void f(const std::vector & v) has some advantages sometimes.
@CaptainGiraffe I'm afraid C++ has less in common with C than I guessed/hoped, but thanks for the examples
@Will The man pages are poor for the c++ library.
00:36
@Will That depends on how the C is written. Really good C is a lot like C++. Most C is completely different though...
 
8 hours later…
08:10
    QMediaPlayer *player = new QMediaPlayer;
    player->setMedia(QUrl("qrc:myMP3.mp3"));
    player->setVolume(100);
    player->play();
Does anybody know why I can't hear my file being played? The path is correct
I also tried a .wav file, but I can t hear anything neither.
nwp
nwp
Check for errors. And make sure you didn't do something silly like plug headphones into the computer but not your ears.
08:28
@nwp no warnings nor errors
and no headphones plugged in :)
I can hear it when I play the file via my file browser
but not when I try to play it via Qt
nwp
nwp
I'm pretty sure the functions you call return some bool to indicate success or failure which you ignore. Did you check those?
@nwp going to check that now
08:45
@nwp none of them returns anything, all are void
nwp
nwp
Never mind, I'm bad at reading.
np
I m bad at programming apparently
turns out that's my job
nwp
nwp
You could see if error() or mediaStatus() return anything interesting.
 
7 hours later…
15:57
Hello

I have created a library and I built it with CMake.
I install it as a package.

When I try to link it in another project, I use find_package(MyLib) and then target_link_libraries(foo MyLib)

However if I type target_link_libraries(foo MyLib_LIBRARIES) instead it doesn't work.

How can I fix that?
but target_link_libraries(foo MyLib) works as you expect, right? so why do you want the latter to work
@milleniumbug It just annoys me, and I would like to know whats "wrong"
@milleniumbug But yes. Just using target_link_libraries(foo MyLib) works fine
MyLib is a target. MyLib_LIBRARIES is not a thing that exists
The reason you see this in the other packages is that they're not CMake libraries, so they expose variables instead
as they're variables they'd be used like this ${MyLib_LIBRARIES}
16:21
Oh sorry, I of course meant to write target_link_libraries(foo ${MyLib_LIBRARIES).

For GLFW it works using ${GLFW_LIBRARIES}, and that is built with CMake. Is there any line I need to include in my package configuration to enable use of ${MyLib_LIBRARIES) ?
I actually based my CMake files from the GLFW project, and took out the parts that I found relevant, yet it doesn't work
 
3 hours later…
19:41
Hello world
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
 
2 hours later…
21:18
is there a standard implementation of n-tiling in a common library in C++?
what does "n-tiling" mean in this context?
21:33
divide a vector n different groups based on naiive rank
@nwp turns out that first of all, depending on how you write your code, it could be that you don't pass the path correctly and Qt won't ncessarilly tell you and secondly Loading an mp3 file takes time. You can only play it once it has completely been loaded. You can know whether it has been loaded by keeping an eye on the mediaStatusChanged signal
It can become funnier once you start combining multithreading with that...
like a histogram?
essentially finding the buckets for which the resulting histogram heightis the same for each bucket
(1 2 3 4 5 6) ntile(2) -> (1 1 1 2 2 2)
(1 2 3 4 5 6) ntile(3) -> (1 1 2 2 3 3)
sorry, I don't really get it on this example, but maybe you could try looking up statistics libs or math libs and check
a shame I can't be of more help
I am using the code below to play an mp3 file. I can not post my entire code because it is quite big and it is really difficult to boil my actual code to something usefull as it is a combination of multithreading etc. I can however tell this:
     MainWindow::MainWindow(QWidget *parent) :
         QMainWindow(parent),
         ui(new Ui::MainWindow)
     {

         player = new QMediaPlayer;
         player->setMedia(QUrl::fromLocalFile(QFileInfo("/home/myFile.mp3").absoluteFilePath()));
         player->setVolume(100);
         connect(player, &QMediaPlayer::mediaStatusChanged, this, &MainWindow::myErrorHandler);
     }

     void MainWindow::myErrorHandler(QMediaPlayer::MediaStatus status)
     {
         qDebug()<<"status: "<<player->mediaStatus();
What happens is that this code works perfectly fine in a singlethreaded software. But when I copy-paste this exact code in my multithreaded code (ie also put those4 lines in the constructor of my main thread and create a function myErrorHandler in MainWindow). The status of my media is *always* stuck at LoadingMedia file. I *guess* it has something to do with the fact that I am using multiple threads, got no other idea...

Does anybody of you guys have an idea about what I could do to check where the issue lies?
21:53
@milleniumbug thanks! could you describe what an n-tuple is? It was the next page in the documentation
In mathematics a tuple is a finite ordered list (sequence) of elements. An n-tuple is a sequence (or ordered list) of n elements, where n is a non-negative integer. There is only one 0-tuple, an empty sequence. An n-tuple is defined inductively using the construction of an ordered pair. Mathematicians usually write tuples by listing the elements within parentheses " ( ) {\displaystyle ({\text{ }})} " and separated by commas; for example, ( 2 , 7 , 4 ...
^ they probably can explain it better than I can
ah, ok, thanks

« first day (415 days earlier)      last day (2662 days later) »