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03:58
@Cubbi Possible, but enough came in from SysV, that if they went by that, probably one out of every three functions would have a v in it...
 
1 hour later…
05:15
I got a question
SysInfo& SysInfo::instance()
{
static SysInfoLinuxImpl singleton;
return singleton;
}
Does the ampersand in the return type mean that it's returning the memory address of this object?
06:13
3 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@nobism only in a very loose sense. It's returning a reference: en.cppreference.com/book/intro/reference
06:40
@sehe Ok thanks, so it's like a pointer?
4259
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...

@Wolf sending to the lounge tends to auto-route to the questions room these days. Messages can be moved pretty swiftly.
@milleniumbug What is your favourite all time c++ book?
There is none. Accelerated C++ is a nice one if you already know a PL
I'm coming from a C background
06:46
Then it would be my pick.
ok thanks
The good part is where it doesn't focus on the similarity with C - which is superficial and should probably best be forgotten (that is not to say that yes, it'll speed up your understanding of those nooks and crannies)
And, to be fair, when I started out C++, I too imagined references to be like "pointers that cannot be null". I came from Turbo Pascal at the time
hehe yeh, I just thought that it was a pointer with the ampersand on the other side of the variable
Do you think there is a good reason why that constructor returns a reference, and not the object itself?
SysInfo SysInfo::instance() would not return "an object itself"
it would return a copy
Ah ok
07:19
@yonutix it's not very nice to delete a question like that. I was writing a draft. I hope you got your answer
@nobism Also, it's not a constructor :) en.cppreference.com/book/intro/classes
07:50
oh yeh you're right
M-J
M-J
08:43
@sehe Sure, thanks, that was exactly the subject of what I was reading. I wonder whether I need Makefiles if I'm using an IDE too or it's done automatically in that case??
@M-J depends on the IDE and how you use it
Depends on the IDE and how you use it
but a lot of them can do it automatically
M-J
M-J
Does VS do that?
Usually
M-J
M-J
08:45
Thanks guys.
A lot of people will suggest using cmake which will set the build system up for you
M-J
M-J
I know make and Nmake but not cmake? How different is it?
@milleniumbug Just for understanding this right: Isn't a reference that's returned by SysInfo SysInfo::instance()?
cmake is a mechanism to set up a build system, not a build system in and of itself
M-J
M-J
How can it be better? Are we tired of using a build system for any specific reason?!? I mean it's awesome on its own... and has made things pretty easier already...
08:49
there are a half a dozen different build systems out there, not all of them equally good
cmake lets different people work together on the same project using their own preferred system
M-J
M-J
Oh, interesting.
@M-J you'll still use a build system. You'll just not have to bother with annoying platform specific details (instead, you'll learn annoying syntax lol)
2
09:07
hi guys
anybody here?
nope nobody ever
is this the right place to reverse engineering code?
I'd like to reverse engineering some of the code here
can you help me with that?
or is this the wrong place?
@user8469759 You don't reverse engineer free, open-source code.
You merely understand it.
And the people who can best help are usually the ones who write/maintain the code.
it's a well known algorithm
> it
09:15
I was hoping that someone who has understanding of the algorithm could help to highlight some of the features I'm looking for
If you have specific question about some step/implementation detail, you could present it on Stack Overflow.
> the algorithm
You linked to a complete source file from a large library with a lot of code devoted to Voronoi stuff
(Hint: I'm not experienced with the latter. I'm experienced with C++ and Boost though)
I have linked a link
and as I said
I'm trying to understand some features not the whole code
but anyway I can't ask for that then?
YOU DIDN'T ASK.
Please stop bargaining. Come to a point.
09:18
for who does know the Fortune's Algorithm it should be known that the status structure consist of a balanced search tree whose leaves correspond to site points while internal points correspond to pair of points representing parabolas that intersect to a break point
since it's a bit unclear what this means (at least to me)
I've tried to find some implementation of voronoi diagrams
some implementation I've found involve lists instead of binary search tree
but the boost one seems the only one that actually implements such tree
[Side note: A balanced search tree sounds like an implementation detail. (Many data structures provide similar semantics). So, let's forget about implementation choices, lest they don't match the boost implementation]
the data structure is a implementation detail, they are not important to understand the algo
I did understand the algorithm
@user8469759 You mention "Fortune's Algorithm". Is it related to that source file you linked? Because I don't see any mention of it.
09:21
it's the implementation I'm trying to understand
sehe...
listen, just read the comment at the beginning of the code
Yup. I scanned it. No mention.
the description matches 100% the fortune's algorithm
there's the tree description as well
using std::set
@user8469759 Oh. So, just say that then. Don't make me out for a fool for not knowing this.
@user8469759 Check, thanks.
can I carry on?
anyway... apparently the boost provide this implementation
it uses an std::set because internally implements a red black tree
as keys of the set data structures
it uses pairs of points
(i'll show the detail later)
where I THINK
if the pair is composed of distinct points then this should represent two consecutive parabolas in the beach line (fortune's terminology, also present in the code)
while if the pair is something like <p,p> I believe this represent a single parabola
@user8469759 or any other ordered set, I suppose
09:25
@user8469759 std::set can be implemented as any type of ordered set
yeah, but boost specify the redblack tree specifically
but anyway the point is
I'm not entirely sure
@user8469759 [It doesn't. It mentions it.]
@user8469759 Yeah I've just consumed the comment. It's way too involved for me to grok in a minute. But at least now we have a general picture.
@sehe sorry
it mention it
what I do not understand is what order criteria is used
when a new node is inserted
in such tree
@user8469759 Ah, lemme look...
I also think actually red black tree is slightly different from the actual algorithm in theory
but I don't care about that
I care more about understanding how they achieve O(n*log n) complexity
so I really need to understand the implementation
09:28
@user8469759 Precisely my point. I'll look for the comparator used. Hold on
of this specific part
one warning
that implementation also handles "segments"
I don't care about that, I just care about points as sites
I think the comparator is in /details/voronoi_predicates.hpp
I have implemented a similar algorithm to find segments intersections
but this one is more complicated
I think the voronoi_structures.hpp header contains some helpful comments.
TBH I can't find the std::set<> referenced in the main comment you linked.
what do u mean you can't find? you cannot find the comment? or the declaration of the set?
> STL map (red-black tree) container was chosen to hold state of the beach line.
I did find the priority queue, which they implement as orderered_queue I think. Depending on the exact usage patterns, you could substitute a ordered queue (fibonacci, whatnot) for that tree.
09:32
my apologies
@ratchetfreak Yup. You found it in the code though?
@user8469759 the latter
it says map
they need key,value pair of course
True. I did look for maps too. Let me look again though
typedef typename VP::template node_comparison_predicate<key_type>
    node_comparer_type;
  typedef std::map< key_type, value_type, node_comparer_type > beach_line_type;
we have this
typedef std::map< key_type, value_type, node_comparer_type > beach_line_type;
ok
09:33
Yeah I missed that one - started looking for map in the other header only.
at the very end of the code
So, node_comparer_type is your solution key
there's the specific instance
(thx for the help)
@user8469759 It usually comes from voronoi_predicates.hpp:372 (node_comparison_predicate)
    // Compares nodes in the balanced binary search tree. Nodes are
    // compared based on the y coordinates of the arcs intersection points.
    // Nodes with less y coordinate of the intersection point go first.
    // Comparison is only called during the new site events processing.
    // That's why one of the nodes will always lie on the sweepline and may
    // be represented as a straight horizontal line.
    bool operator() (const node_type& node1,
                     const node_type& node2) const {
Huh. Clipboard fail
Sometimes terminal vim catches me out.
It references some private helper functions: boost.org/doc/libs/1_65_1/boost/polygon/detail/…
09:53
@sehe I think I read that
but I'm not sure of what happens exactly
get_comparison_site i assume gets one of the two points in the pairs
It imposes an ordering on the nodes inside the tree, so that searching for a boundary/specific node will be O(n log n) due to binary search
@user8469759 That makes sense. I haven't looked into that detail, mostly because "sites", "beach line" and "sweep line" don't have meaning to me
@sehe I figured this out, but I more wondering geometrically what this means
const site_type& get_comparison_site(const node_type& node) const {
      if (node.left_site().sorted_index() > node.right_site().sorted_index()) {
        return node.left_site();
      }
      return node.right_site();
    }
it get's one point
the one with greater sorted_index()
what the hell...
Ah. You're looking for that elusive thing: an intuitive grasp on mathematical things. I'd focus on the wikipedia treatment in such a case. Boost tends to have a lot of implementation/c++ specific line noise, more involved with optimization/genericity than the semantics that you might intuitively grasp
@user8469759 so the nodes in the tree are ordered by the "highest" site. You would have to trace back sorted_index() to see what guides it
from the site_event class
// Members:
//   point0_ - point site or segment's start-point
//   point1_ - segment's endpoint if site is a segment
//   sorted_index_ - the last bit encodes information if the site is inverse;
//     the other bits encode site event index among the sorted site events
//   initial_index_ - site index among the initial input set
// Note: for all sites is_inverse_ flag is equal to false by default.
Like I said, I'd step away from the lower levels for more understanding
@user8469759 Like I said: highly optimized. You'd describe the inverse flag as a node "color", or at least a separate flag if you were unconcerned about optimizing in the land of C++/CPU architectures
10:01
// Each input segment is divided onto two site events:
//   1) One going from the start-point to the endpoint
//      (is_inverse() = false)
//   2) Another going from the endpoint to the start-point
//      (is_inverse() = true)
@sehe not sure I get this
What? Your quoted comment or the message your reply links to?
I quoted the message linked
Sigh
I don't think you did i.imgur.com/7BBQLiy.png
I'm not going to spend much time on this now. I have a funeral to attend. And besides, I'm not that much into Fortune's algorithm (since I don't have a use for it). Good luck
bye, thx
 
3 hours later…
13:16
Hello everyone
I am implementing a virtual keyboard in my application. It works fine on my desktop computer but not on the other machine I am using although the code is exaclty the same.
I used my debugger to check what the issue may be
nwp
nwp
Why are you not using the virtual keyboard that the OS provides?
@nwp because when writing "virtual keyboard Qt" I automatically found some solutions So I thought that may be easier
my machine:
the other machine:
Also, I think that this code should run no matter what type of machine you use.
I don't see why I get those differences when going in debug mode, although the code i exactly the same.
Stuff like "not accessible" and the fact that "[1]" is empty on the other machine
nwp
nwp
Of course w is not accessible. It doesn't exist yet.
I don't see any meaningful differences.
@nwp but on my machine w already seems to have an address
0x....
while on the other machine, I stopped at exactly the same place and it is unaccessible.
nwp
nwp
It's the address it will have, once it exists, probably.
I don't know why you care about the address of things that don't exist. Also the debugger doesn't seem to be the same which would explain those minor differences.
13:29
@nwp I am just looking at what is different. The code is a pale copy-paste so it should work, yet it doesn t
This is what I used and read: doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtvirtualkeyboard-index.html
also the second argument ie "[ 1 ]" is very different on both machines
nwp
nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn That is the parameter passed to the program. You should have full control over that.
@nwp those values are automatically set when I launch my software from the IDE
nwp
nwp
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Then you should investigate why your IDE screws with arguments. It should not do that. Qt Creator has the arguments in Projects -> Run and there shouldn't be any arguments unless you manually added them.
@nwp I think I found the main issue
on my machine as you can see "a" contains many different elements
while on the other machine "a" is always empty
Any suggestions about what I should look at to know why this is the case? @nwp
The options in projects run are mainly about QML debugging
(when going through the linked prerequisites)
nwp
nwp
13:52
The only situation I can imagine where QApplication a{argc, argv}; fails is when you are on a system that doesn't have an x-server installed which sometimes happens when run on build servers.
@nwp could be my case...
I am on an embedded device
Does that count?
nwp
nwp
Does the embedded device have a display that can show the MainWindow?
nwp
nwp
Then it should be fine.
@nwp even if it s an aarch64?
nwp
nwp
13:56
I would ignore Qt internals for now. Qt will complain when something doesn't work. You can try setting QT_FATAL_WARNINGS=1 in the environment variables to make it crash after printing a warning.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn I don't really know what that means, but if Qt supports that architecture then that should work.
14:18
0
A: How to use boost::atomic_store with shared_ptr<T> and shared_ptr<const T>?

sehe I understand that because pc is a template argument, it is considered part of the type of the shared_ptr and not a cv qualification. Yes, this is known as "non-deducible context". The following work boost::atomic_store(&const_p, boost::shared_ptr<const pc>(p)); However, it creates...

Interesting little conundrum. Anyone able to shed some light there?
Good question. I just checked and the C++11 specs say the same. en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/memory/shared_ptr/atomic I'll ask for assistance in the loungesehe 1 min ago
 
2 hours later…
16:13
@Wolf that's returning by value, so no.
 
4 hours later…
20:07
I was using an iterator to go through the elements of an unordered_map and while i was adding elements to that map I noticed there was some repetition, so I found out there is "invalidation" happening. To fix this i decided to come up with a second map and add to that the new elements, then merge the two maps. My question is: while I'm iterating and not adding new elements to the original map, can i edit the existing elements of the (original) map or will invalidation still occur? Thank you
Need links to applications that are built using VisualC++2015. Any leads
?
invalidation happens when you modify the container (by adding, removing elements, depending on the container). Modifying the elements themselves is fine
2 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
you can detect that quite easily - will they run if you don't have a Visual C++ 2015 Runtime installed?
@milleniumbug thank you
20:31
Is there a way to know if after an assignment the item was copied vs referenced?
@AnnaK. To see if a copy occurred vs no copy happened?
@Justin yes, because i want to change the original value not a local copy that will be destroyed along the way
@AnnaK. Then you want to take a reference to the object
Yes but I don't know a way to always guarantee it
Can you show example code?
20:34
C++ follows value semantics by default, so things will be copied by default, deal with it
Ouch :/
If you want to store a reference, you do auto& x = your_container[index];
nwp
nwp
@AnnaK. The only way to be sure is to disable the copy constructor. You can probably get away by making sure you have a & in all the right places.
iterators too?
...?
Iterators are iterators
copying an iterator doesn't influence the value referenced by that iterator
20:36
sorry i was using *it to dereference since it was a vector of strings
so auto& x = *it; // use x in your code
@milleniumbug will try that
20:50
I tried the auto & but I get:
invalid initialization of non-const reference of type β€˜__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char>*, std::vector<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char> > >&’ from an rvalue of type β€˜std::vector<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char> >::iterator {aka __gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char>*, std::vector<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char> > >}’
@AnnaK. Again, if you had some example code you could share, it would be easier to help you
Have you heard of a dangling reference?
That compile error is because if it compiled, you'd have a guaranteed dangling reference.
auto & mylist= somelist;
for (auto & it = mylist.begin(); it < mylist.end(); it++) {

}
> auto & it = mylist.begin();
garbage code
You almost certainly want to use a for-each loop:

for (auto& value : mylist) {
....
}
you want a copy there
20:55
but what if i want to edit the contents of the list
As milleniumbug says, the way to write that loop is: for (auto it = mylist.begin(); it < mylist.end(); ++it)
19 mins ago, by milleniumbug
copying an iterator doesn't influence the value referenced by that iterator
Although you are replicating the behavior of a range-based for loop with that, and it does have a call to mylist.end() every time
^ IOW in auto it = foo.begin(); auto other = it;, it and other point at the same object
also
4259
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...

Hi guys, I'm actually trying to load some packages into R using the command line, but I keep getting this error each type: fatal error: 'gdk/gdkx.h' file not found Do any of you guys know what this file is? Trying to get gtk+
21:01
sorry but I doubt anyone here knows R in any reasonable degree
I assumed its a C header file i'm missing, research has showed me its not just an R related issue. Worth a shot
@Daruchini Assuming that you are compiling some C++ program to use with R, you need the gdk library headers. If you actually have them, they need to be in the include directories that your compiler searches
Just found out its a header file for XQuartz which isn't shipped with later software versions
I've spent about 5 hours mucking about, delightful evening
@milleniumbug for (auto& value : mylist) {} worked and i replaced *it with it.
And it updates the references like a charm
21:44
@ManjunathBabu Step 1. build something in VS2015 2. ????? 3. Profit!!!

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