Consider an example for loop which can be used with Bash:
for i in '1' '2' '3' '11' '12' '18' '19'; do <what_you_want>; done
How do I do similar thing using for in C? In other words, what would be the equivalent syntax in C? or Is there any other work-around?
There is default initialization when you do int i; in which case the value is not initialized and reading from it is UB and there is value initialization like in int i{}; in which case it gets initialized with the value 0.
Im using OpenGL and I have a model that I want to generate constantly around the camera while the camera is constantly moving forward. At the moment I have a loop which generates 12 in front of the camera, however I want them to constantly generate like an asteroid field. Im not sure how to get around this
Hi guys, if any of you is familiar with openmesh, how can I modify properties of a mesh? As example say I've a mesh already defined, I'd like to take an edge and add a new vertex (say the middle point, between the two ends point)
that was an example, what about if I had a triangle, with vertices a,b,c. I add a mid point to each edge say mab,mbc,mca (I assume using the split you're mentioning). Now I'd like to replace the current face a,b,c with 4 faces. (mca,a,mab), (mab,b,mbc),(mbc,c,mca) and (mab,mbc,mca)
it's a bit hard to navigate through the documentation
when you split ABC with a point on edge AB you get 2 new triangles (A, MAB, C) and (MAB, B, C) but if you want to have (A,B,C) and (A, MAB, B) you need to flip the new edge
once you know that it's a matter of keeping the edges aligned correctly
if you take a piece of paper it's not that hard, first split each of the edges and after you have split them all flip the edge you created first aka you split AB then BC then AC and after that you flip edge (MAB, C)
so if you you split AB then BC then AC then you have 4 triangles inside the original triangle. (mca,a,mab), (mbc,c,mca) and (mab,b,mac), (b,mbc,mca) You can fix up the last triangle by flipping edge (b, mca)
I'd like to quickly make a vector/reserve memory for it. It goes something like
vector<vector<structData>> myData(62500, vector<structData>(1600)) this should create a total 100 000 000 structs but it takes a very long time... how can I speed it up?
Make it so structData is smaller and faster to default-construct. And maybe you can get away not actually creating the data and just reserving space for it.
well If I have render image 10 000x 10 000 pixels, Each pixel can have multiple passes like reflection/refraction/diffuse/etc. I though having struct containing all information would the right way to go
(how do I fortmat code here? I want to paste small snipets I forgot the shortcut :- ( )
I have something like this
vector<bucketData>
struct bucketData{
vector<pixelData>}
so what I end up with is for 10k image at 40 pixel bucket, a 62500 buckets that each contain vector with 1600 pixelData
It might even start making sense to sort the members by size alignment (biggest to lowest) to avoid some padding (pretty sure render uses up 4 bytes right now).
also consider splitting up the pixel data into separate data structures, especially if you don't always touch the entire struct every time. the cache will love you for it
@ratchetfreak No idea what you mean, but its definitely something I'll make a note of to figure out what you mean when I know a little more about rendering :- )
Basically if for every pixel you have to look at every other pixel that means you have to look at pixel_count*pixel_count pixels, which in your case is a prohibitively large number. If you only need to look at 4 pixels it's a much smaller number.
I was thinking about deleting the entire template signature and then (somehow) allow only some overloads. What is the correct way to approach this with templates?
@Ron If you need restricting to the two specific types: KISS approach: std::vector<float> calcFunc(uint16_t* a) { return calcFuncImpl(a); } std::vector<float> calcFunc(uint32_t* a) { return calcFuncImpl(a); } template<typename T> std::vector<float> calcFuncImpl(T a) { /* do whatever */ }
sup? How do I name a class which I initially wanted to make a template but decided against it? It is easy for container but my class is not a container yet it depends on another class.
You need to go into more detail. Maybe the classes should be overloaded functions instead. Maybe you should name them Whichever_it_was_before_case_A and B.
I have a file that is saved/loaded by my application. I want this file to be encrypted before saving and that the resulting encryption is always different. I know I can encrypt the file using AES256, my problem is that the key and IV are hardcoded so the resulting encryption is always the same until the data changes, is there some cleaver trick I could use to make so the hardcoded IV is changed but yet allows me to keep track of it to decrypt it when loading the application or some simpler idea?
For shared_ptr that means they point to the same object. Unless you can somehow make a schrödinger object that has a different underlying type than itself it should be true.
I think you can construct something like that with placement new.
@Guapo Nice one thanks! Will give it a go. So far I got my process times to around 10-20 seconds which I think its acceptable.
I have question about something else... Out of the array of 100mil pixels I'd like now to display them resonably fast... Can any1 suggest how I can display that pixel data? I use QT and currently I use QImage to display it. But I think it is causing some issues + it seems to be quite slow when updating pixels very fast...
Can C++ somehow display pixels/update them dynamically? Or i need library or else?
@Ron The equality trick is a shortcut for when they are equal. But if they are not equal you don't know if they are 2 different objects with the same dynamic type or not, so it doesn't solve the whole problem.
I can't think of a better way right now. Everything seems to require virtual functions or dynamic_casts of some kind.
@Dariusz There is a Graphics TS in the making, but there is nothing in the standard library right now that can deal with pixels. There are lots of graphics and game engines available for C++ though.
@Mgetz yep it was just an initial though and I saw it was not a good idea, hence why I was looking for advice... Right now I am xoring the key in place with a macro use it(do the encryption) and xor it back and the IV is saved along with the cipher which seems good enough for my purpose of making the config file encrypted and its data different on each save.
sure anyone with knowledge can simple go find the openssl methods used and bp at it to view the real key, but then again anyone with time and knowledge can decompile / understand /bypass it either way
@AnnaK. That would be from an error message (probably a linker error). When you compile C++, it has to find symbols for different names. It can't compile pair<int, int> to just the symbol pair, because then it would look the same as pair<double, double>. So there's a process known as name mangling in which the names, types, namespaces, etc are mangled to form a unique symbol
@AnnaK. The name mangling depends on the compiler itself. There are tools that demangle names
Sometimes the compiler itself provides a demangler, other times someone has already written a tool that follows the name mangling scheme to demangle it for you
@Guapo The normal intent is that an IV can be made public, but must be unique each time you use the encryption, so typically you'd use a cryptographically secure RNG to generate your IV, and you'd store the IV along with the encrypted data, so when you decrypt it, you have it easily accessible. Most often, the IV is just stored in the same file, preceding the first block of encrypted data.