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05:18
UnweightedDirectedGraphMatrix<int> graph(1); tells that there is no instance of a constructor
and VS IS underlines the '1' argument
oops
I did this class MatrixContainer = std::vector
How do I take a template as a template parameter?
template <typename T, class DataContainer = std::vector<T>, class MatrixContainerMinor = std::vector<size_t>, class MatrixContainerMajor = std::vector<MatrixContainerMajor>> looks ugly
nvm
 
1 hour later…
07:04
Small change to illustrate usage restriction: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/76425ca463d5bf2e
 
2 hours later…
nwp
nwp
09:16
@EuriPinhollow I don't understand the "in member function" part in line 10. It's not inside a member function.
Removing internal: makes it almost work. It just doesn't like that you have multiple canOnlyBeUsedFromAs and it doesn't know which someVeryUsefulState you are referring to.
I tried to wrote an example of what I would like to achieve and obviously it is not possible with present C++. The error on line 10 is an imaginable error which should be raised if this code would ever work: internal class should not ever be used anywhere except defining scope.
Currently the only way of doing same thing is either storing a pointer to owner or passing pointer to owner in each method.
nwp
nwp
09:37
Hmm, I just still didn't understand what you want to achieve.
template <typename VertexStorageType, typename VertexIndexType = size_t, typename EdgeCountType = size_t,
		  typename VertexContainer = std::vector<VertexStorageType>, typename VertexList = std::list<VertexIndexType>, typename EdgeList = std::vector<VertexList>>
class UnweightedDirectedGraphList;
template <typename VertexStorageType, typename VertexIndexType = size_t, typename EdgeCountType = size_t,
		  typename VertexContainer = std::vector<VertexStorageType>, typename VertexList = std::list<VertexIndexType>, typename EdgeList = std::vector<VertexList>,
		  typename GraphType = UnweightedDirectedGraphList<VertexStorageType, VertexIndexType, EdgeCountType, VertexContainer, VertexList, EdgeList>, typename UnaryFunction>
void DFS(GraphType& graph, VertexIndexType& start, UnaryFunction& f)
ERROR: cannot deduce template type for VertexStorageType
DFS(graph, 0, [](int x) { cout << x; });
Declaration: UnweightedDirectedGraphList<int> graph(1);
Heyo guys :)
Does someone know of a question/answer that covers a bit how drawing is done on operating systems in principle...especially when using kombinations like Qt and OpenGl...it feels hard to put that in a precise question....
I cannot understand why it is not possible to deduce the type of VertexStorageType
The variable graph should have the required information, right?>
actually I shouldn't even be giving default types for the function I guess
I have a template class X and I am trying to write a template function Y which accepts any template instantiation of X as the first argument.
10:00
@nwp I want some very useful state to be directly accessible from nested (i.e. defined inside) class allowing some restrictions on how nested class may be used. It is not possible now.
nwp
nwp
For that you need to bind an instance of A to the instances of canOnlyBeUsedFromA.
And the problem with that is that you have to use a pointer or reference which doesn't fulfill the "directly" requirement.
I think I'm getting closer to understanding the problem.
Yep! Are there reasons to include described feature into language?
Given that totally isolating objects can cause additional memory usage like you pointed out.
nwp
nwp
I feel it's a bit of an XY-problem. What I think you really want is to define what you mean by "total isolation" and then see if we can't get that through something else than a new language feature.
@Felix.C You have a graphics card that understands some commands, a graphics card driver that gives the OS a standardized interface, a library like Qt that uses the standardized interface and an application that uses Qt. The calls just propagate all the way down. There is no magic or interesting points there, just a lot of code to turn low level drawing primitives into useful expressions like a QPushButton.
You might want to check out minix which is an operating system optimized for teaching operating systems. It will have all the parts that windows and linux have, just less complete and less performance optimized, but the same principles apply.
@Yashas because you do not use VertexStorageType anywhere in declaration of DFS.
@EuriPinhollow GraphType template parameter uses it
10:14
@Yashas it does not. Template parameters are isolated even if they are same. Write it explicitly so that compiler understands it.
* even if their names are same
There is no other way out? :/
11:09
It's like I am asking you to trade your soul.
void DFS(GraphType<VertexStorageType> is what I mean.
Ron
Ron
11:53
When quoting a standard should one always quote the latest draft?
nwp
nwp
Usually no, because the latest draft is a work in progress with various errors and basically cannot be supported by compilers.
You may quote any final draft just mention the version explicitly. There are still places where 98 is used so universal answer will be always better.
nwp
nwp
But it is still acceptable because nobody wants to give money to ISO and you just hope the difference doesn't matter in your particular quote.
Ron
Ron
I see. I was quoting the one from http://eel.is/c++draft/. I didn't mention any versions in my answer. Should I have?
Maybe I should add the 14882 wording.
You may find other version here or elsewhere: github.com/timsong-cpp/cppwp
nwp
nwp
11:58
Usually it's fine, unless the question mentioned a specific version that doesn't have that specific feature.
Ron
Ron
Ah I see. Appreciate it.
 
2 hours later…
13:32
@nwp ok thanks!
 
1 hour later…
14:48
What's the difference between an iterator and a pointer
a pointer is a specific type of iterator
specifically, it's a contiguous random access iterator for raw C-arrays
oh okay
by any chance would you happen to know to to convert an STL return type (iterator) to a vector
Let's say I had a custom type Person
and I'm using std::copy_if on my vector<Person>
how would I take that iterator and return a vector<Person> in my function's return type
if you have a pair of iterators that point to [begin; end) range, then you can pass it to std::copy_if, with the output iterator being std::back_inserter(your_target_vector)
so ...
std::vector<SSARecord> YearIs(const std::vector<SSARecord>& data, const int& year)
{

    return std::copy_if(data.begin(), data.end(),

        [year](SSARecord record){ return record.year == year; });

}
How would I fix something like this
As I now know ... copy_if returns an iterator which I'm assuming is a pointer to the first element of the result
How would I use that iterator to produce a vector of my custom class
std::vector<SSARecord> result;
std::copy_if(data.begin(), data.end(), std::back_inserter(result), [year](const SSARecord& record){ return record.year == year; });
return result;
@MalikBrahimi you don't
14:59
So what's a back_inserter and where is it defined
it's in <iterator>
it returns an output iterator which uses .push_back to insert elements to the target container
These are the only headers I can use
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
1
<vector>
<string>
<sstream> // Included for parsing text files.
<iostream> // Included for parsing text files.
<algorithm> // Included for necessary library features.
<gtest/gtest.h>
Do you know if any of these includes <iterator>
what does "I can use" mean
is this a retarded uni exercise
5
yeah lol
I know it's pretty dumb
since the proper way to do it is disallowed, you have to make use workarounds
you could use a foreach loop and use .push_back if the record year matches
15:11
ok
thanks man
@MalikBrahimi "As I now know ... copy_if returns an iterator which I'm assuming is a pointer to the first element of the result" - when in doubt check the cppreference.com

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