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11:51
To interrupt a loop in an function and return a value, is the return statement sufficient or do have also take break statement ?
nwp
nwp
You can return from inside a loop and it actually returns from the function.
o.k. thx nwp
 
1 hour later…
Ron
Ron
13:19
Can you or can't you use or for || and and for && operators in C++?
I was reading about alternatives. How common is this? Was this always a part of the C++ standard?
nwp
nwp
It probably existed since standardization, at a time where keyboards without characters like {[]}$%& were common enough to have to be supported.
There is also something about IBM's alternative character table that doesn't support something, but I forgot the specifics.
Ron
Ron
13:41
@nwp Appreciate it.
13:53
How is that Armadillo library has no translation matrix? (I am new to matrices, so I may sound ridiculous).
anyone know, how to merge two aabb's stored as center and positive half width extends ?
nwp
nwp
14:10
@FerencRozsa You take the minimum of the leftmost edge, maximum of the rightmost edge and so on and create a new aabb that has those values.
LMBox LMBox::mergeAABB(const LMBox& a, const LMBox& b)
{
LMBox aabb;

for (qint32 i = 0; i < 3; i++)
{
float max = qMax(qAbs(a.center[i]) + a.size[i], qAbs(b.center[i]) + b.size[i]);
float min = qMin(qAbs(a.center[i]) - a.size[i], qAbs(b.center[i]) - b.size[i]);

aabb.size[i] = (max - min) * 0.5f;
aabb.center[i] = (a.center[i] + b.center[i]) * 0.5f;
}

return aabb;
}
thats my approach
nwp
nwp
It should either not be a member function or only take 1 argument. Right now you are passing 3 LMBoxes.
@Ron This has been at least since C++98. Visual C++ is non-standard in that these aren't supported there by default (unless you #include <ciso646> or pass a switch to the compiler options)
nwp
nwp
aabb.center[i] = (a.center[i] + b.center[i]) * 0.5f; looks wrong. The combined aabb does not necessarily have the average center of the other aabbs.
aabb.center[i] = (min + max) / 2; seems more reasonable
14:29
its static ->> static LMBox mergeAABB(const LMBox& a, const LMBox& b);
o.k. so center of merged box isnt the center of gravity from the centers of the two boxes ?
nwp
nwp
You can imagine a big box and a small box inside. The merged box will be just the big box, no matter where the center of the small box is.
Although what I'm describing is combining Axis Aligned Bounding Boxes which has nothing to do with gravity. If you actually mean center of gravity it might not be what you want.
Ron
Ron
@milleniumbug I see. Thank you.
I was editing this answer and since it was reverted I thought I was wrong.
 
1 hour later…
16:10
What does this syntax represent?

template <typename T, typename Compare
void SortVec<T, Compare>::insert(const T& obj){
// ....
if(Compare()(obj, *pos)){} // ??? What does this do?
}


Where `typename Compare = less<T>>`
16:31
@MatthiasHerrmann It creates a default constructed Compare and calls its operator() with two operands in an if statement's condition
17:02
@milleniumbug Let's assume that Compare takes the default value of less<T>, less is defined in #include <functinal> and is a function template? Can I create an object from a function?
std::less<T> is a class type with an operator()
in Lounge<C++>, 22 mins ago, by Euri Pinhollow
I recall that named parameters was mentioned as a proposal or something here. Should this be a feature of IDE instead of feature of language?
named parameters have several problems that are unlikely to be resolved
@milleniumbug ty, I'm learning about templates in C++, it's not that well explained in the book I'm reading....
17:08
I don't see why wouldn't named parameters be a feature of an IDE, so sure
@milleniumbug for example?
a.) a function can be declared without any parameter names b.) a function can be declared with some parameter names c.) a function can be declared multiple times, each one with different parameter names d.) all the code that was written previously assumes that parameter names aren't part of the API
e.) introduction of named parameters would require to specify all the parameter names for each function in the standard library, and also in the C standard library
currently all these are uglified with __name or _Name in standard library implementations as a protection from macros
@milleniumbug why would anyone do that? ;_;
what? define a macro that happens to share the name with a variable name in the template code defined in the standard library headers? this can happen by accident
of course, if everyone had followed the "macros are uppercase" convention, this wouldn't have been a problem
Wait wait wait.
17:16
but there are significant codebases where this is not the case
So if template function argument shares name with a macro it will be substituted?
macros trample everything
I pretty much always compile-firewall <windows.h> so it doesn't define the shitton of macros in my code
I cannot understand how macro can affect library code.
inb4 macro defined before including
the most annoying one is #define max(a,b) there which breaks std::numeric_limits<T>::max and std::max
Iiiiiiiiii ssseeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.
No wait I do not.
How can header be affected with macro defined after inclusion?
Parameter name in particular.
17:20
well, why do you disregard the "macro defined before inclusion"? it happens all the time
also hey
#include <algorithm>
#define whatever hahahahahanope

int x = std::asdf(whatever: 42); // broken
Wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait wait.
You said that there are underscores in STL function parameter names to shield from macros.
How so?
there are underscores everywhere
in the private function names, in the variable names
why underscores? because __xxxx and _Xxxx are reserved names
694
A: What are the rules about using an underscore in a C++ identifier?

Loki AstariThe rules (which did not change in C++11): Reserved in any scope, including for use as implementation macros: identifiers beginning with an underscore followed immediately by an uppercase letter identifiers containing adjacent underscores (or "double underscore") Reserved in the global names...

Ok then.
@milleniumbug the trick is that you do not need to write this text into the source to display the hint to user.
It can be built in only by renderer.
18 mins ago, by milleniumbug
I don't see why wouldn't named parameters be a feature of an IDE, so sure
That's why I said that it should be feature of IDE amongst other reasons.
Cool, should get that into Qt Creator now.
17:27
AFAIR IntelliJ displays parameter names directly in the source edit window for Kotlin code
18:10
I have an idea. What if I wanted to have a private nested class which could not be used outside of class and I wanted to use all class member in nested class without any additional qualifiers/dereferences/whatever? Think about it as about having each parent class scope appended to global namespace.
Ron
Ron
18:59
Slight off-topic: I am fairly new to the site. Are weekends always this bad in C++ tag? All I see are homework dumps and gimme teh codez.
nwp
nwp
Typically people don't work on weekends so the working population doesn't ask questions on weekends. Students still have homework over the weekend.
But there are still enthusiasts that ask questions, so not all questions on the weekend are terrible.
Ron
Ron
I see. Appreciate it.
nwp
nwp
@EuriPinhollow How would that differ from just removing the nested class and making the members members of the parent class?

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