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22:10
@OneRaynyDay I'm not sure how that adds any value, since it's basically just doing the expression dynamically on references. Why don't you just write that then: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/8d12f59b4672d038
In fact, you can just use it as a callable, of course: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a9e53ab88efaef06
Removing the indirection of the placeholders really downgrades "Delayed Callables" (or "Actors" as Phoenix would call them) into "Callables"
@sehe hmm, could you elaborate on that?
Have you seen the linked Coliru?
what is the difference between toolset, toolchain, and compiler suite?
That's really all the elaboration I can give
Hello
Can someone explain me what I am doing incorrectly here:
error: no match for ‘operator*’ (operand types are ‘cv::MatExpr’ and ‘cv::Point3f {aka cv::Point3_<float>}’)
     Point3f a = M.inv() * Point3f(0, 0, 1);
my code:
Point3f a = M.inv() * Point3f(0, 0, 1);
a = a * (1.0/a.z);
22:17
not a lot. And those have fuzzy defs.
Toolset = compiler, linker + more (checkers, linters, IDEs, build tools like cmake, qmake etc).
Toolchain = compiler + linker (most closely tied to ABI and "the triplet")
Compiler suite = shipment unit, the product that ships a compiler, usually container the entire toolchain, but not necessarily (Borland used to ship the compiler separately and use Microsoft's Linker at some time).
I guess the issue that I'm not understanding is the difference between "Delayed Callables" and "Callables". I would take a stab in the dark and say delayed callables are evaluated by "filling in" the expression during compile time, versus a "callable" which is evaluating the expression during run time?
I tried googling "delayed callable/callable", but found nothing relevant
@privetDruzia M.inv() returns a MatExpr instead of Point3f. Perhaps it's because it's optimizing by returning a expression template. Try Point3f(M.inv()) * Point3f(0, 0, 1)
 error: no matching function for call to ‘cv::Point3_<float>::Point3_(cv::MatExpr)’
     Point3f a = Point3f(M.inv()) * Point3f(0, 0, 1);
Point3f a = Point3f(M.inv()) * Point3f(0, 0, 1);
@sehe ^
a better question: what do you expect by multiplying a matrix by a point
Ah. I assumed M might have been something else.
@OneRaynyDay My bad. I was loosely borrowing jargon from Boost, like boost.org/doc/libs/1_65_0/libs/fusion/doc/html/fusion/…
22:24
@milleniumbug calculate the warped position of some corners
in the imagespace
ok solved it
But I don't understand why this doesn't work, while in the provided example it works
This is what I had to do:
cv::Point3f operator*(cv::Mat M, const cv::Point3f& p)
{
    cv::Mat_<double> src(3/*rows*/,1 /* cols */);

    src(0,0)=p.x;
    src(1,0)=p.y;
    src(2,0)=p.z;

    cv::Mat_<double> dst = M*src; //USE MATRIX ALGEBRA
    return cv::Point3f(dst(0,0,0),dst(1,0,0), dst(2,0,0));
}
@OneRaynyDay just bumped into this one (timed link) youtu.be/uzF4u9KgUWI?t=65
@sehe Thank you, that makes sense, there is no standardization in case of programming vocabulary lol, people often talk the same meaning with these words, nice fuzzy logic
@sehe I see. After some reading, I gathered the difference between the two are that you can define a constexpr static variable and allow for optimizations. Meanwhile, by explicitly defining a constructor and giving it a value, we p much lose the optimizations, no?
And thanks for the link, one sec :)
@privetDruzia wow I'd never guess operator* does "calculate the warped position of some corners in the imagespace"
@OneRaynyDay unless you're actually responding to an older message, I think these are really unrelated.
22:31
cv::Point3f calculateTheWarpedPositionOfSomeCornersInTheImagespace(cv::Mat M, const cv::Point3f& p);
@milleniumbug no this is what I am trying to accomplish by multiplying my matrix with this point
9 mins ago, by milleniumbug
a better question: what do you expect by multiplying a matrix by a point
@OneRaynyDay Nah. I mean, when you do not use the placeholders, you do not actually use the context.
You could just have used language-level references, which my lambda hack demonstrated
@sehe right, I agree, and also to the second point about the lambda hack. Is there a performance drop between using the context and not using the context here?
@privetDruzia yeah, I know, just made me wonder whether adding an operator overload for two classes which you're managing neither of them is such a good idea
22:34
@OneRaynyDay You should measure it. I expect there to be, but how much of it depends on usage patterns. In this case the map lookup is gonna hurt the most. Perhaps you need to optimize it for the access patterns (but measure first)
22:48
We're dangerously at risk of becoming Lounge<C++>. Shall we move?

Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
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