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16:05
Is there a benefit to using an action on an onclick event vs just using an onclick method? I'm working with a legacy system and I'm seeing in the code that buttons have a action associated with them and also have said action's action.onexecute() associated with the button's onclick event. ... I'm trying to figure out, from first glance, imo this is overkill, pick one or the other, but wanted to see what y'all thought. Also, the actions aren't being used anywhere else in the code.
I'm working with is Embarcadero C++ builder
sounds like almost forgotten remnants of attempts to debug it
16:31
If I'm understanding you, you're saying it sounds like actions were added to the button to help with debugging?
or rather one way didn't work and the other did, but then the guy forgot to remove the first
unless the actions are actually different?
Ah okay. I actually just found in embarcadero documentation as well that onclick() supersedes associated actions.
No, the actions were the same.
 
1 hour later…
17:56
@MalikBrahimi Pretty much all the standard headers there probably do? Depends on the standard and the implementation
18:09
Depends on what part of `<iterator>` you need. For example: `In addition to being available via inclusion of the <iterator> header, the function templates in 27.8 are
available when any of the following headers are included: <array>, <deque>, <forward_list>, <list>,<map>, <regex>, <set>, <string>, <unordered_map>, <unordered_set>, and <vector>`
That gives you size, empty, and data.
18:52
@MalikBrahimi Here's a dumb way to do it without copy_if: Copy the vector, then use std::remove_if with the erase-remove idiom to delete the excess.
19:41
Good evening folks :) ...about Qt
I need to draw some 2D stuff, e.g. mainly pictures that might rotate rather fast...and then some text in it and perhaps some arcs...simple stuff...now I have the agony of choice but well my Qt is practiacly not existent...I figured I have the follow options:
#1 QGraphicsView with QPainter
#2 QOpenGLWidget with QPainter/OpenGL
#3 QBackingStore with QPainter
#4 QOpenGLWindow with OpenGL...or QPainter?
Is it so that #3,4 are just QGui versions of #1,2 that use QWidget? I'd really appreciate if someone could give me a quick hint about how they differ :)
20:04
What's cleaner? Returning "true" when there is no error in a function, or returning false?
bool
checkStuff( std::ostream& aErrorStream ) {
  bool hasError = false;
  if ( [something bad] ) {
    hasError = true;
    aErrorStream << "Something bad happened \r\n";
  }

  return hasError;
}

void
Foo() {
  std::ostream errorStream;
  if ( checkStuff( errorStream ) ) {
    // handle the bad stuff
  }
}
(That's returning "true": there's an error )
bool
checkStuff( std::ostream& aErrorStream ) {
  bool wasEverythingFine = true;
  if ( [something bad] ) {
    wasEverythingFine = false;
    aErrorStream << "Something bad happened \r\n";
  }

  return wasEverythingFine;
}

void
Foo() {
  std::ostream errorStream;
  if ( !checkStuff( errorStream ) ) {
    // handle the bad stuff
  }
}
(That's returning "true": there was no error, all is good)
20:22
Using bools for error codes can cause confusion, as you noticed here. You may want to use an enum
Although, since this is C++, you might want to consider using exceptions
If you must use a bool, name the function appropriately. E.g. isEverythingFine or didSomethingFail. Naturally, if the function should perform something, you should imply that in the name as well
@Justin Yeah, at that level it's partially looking for errors, so returning an exception is logically weird and IMHO unclean. I think renaming the function will be the way to go. Thanks for your input.
20:41
@AlexandreVaillancourt At least in the case of reading from a stream, it's well established true means "success" and false means "failure". In most cases, however, you just want to return a reference to the stream object itself, and leave it to the user to test that (using its conversion to bool) as needed.

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