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00:29
@JerryCoffin Thanks for the input; in this case, the functions have to check and they know what error message to return. But I'll return true for success, it makes more sense in this case too.
 
12 hours later…
12:25
is it possible to initalize an array explizit in the initalizer list ?
nwp
nwp
You mean like int ia[] = {1, 2, 3};?
struct box
{
QVector3D center;
QVector3D size;
QVector3D base[3];

box():center(), size(), base{QVector3D(1.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f), QVector3D(0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f), QVector3D(0.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f)}{}
};
doesnt work
nwp
nwp
Maybe like this.
12:42
@milleniumbug that is my approach but it doesnt work for QVector3D rvalue calls
not working nwp
nwp
nwp
What is the error message?
msvc compiler says no explicit initialization for arrays possible
look declaration
msvc2013
i use vs 2013
yes, MSVC is broken
nwp
nwp
12:51
It seems to work fine in VS2017.
I don't have a VS2013 to test with. You shouldn't use such a crappy compiler anyways.
Heyyo! Currently working in C and got a quick question. When you use fscanf to read from a file, is there a way to give it a very specific format (as in, will it accept it under any circumstances)? For example:

fscanf(srcFile, "%c%d.%d.%d%c", &start, &d_day, &d_month, &d_year, &end);

Would search for:

"06.11.2017"
what would it do if there's no suitable data in the input
In the input? Not sure, but my guess goes on that it wouldn't be very happy, that's for sure
by "what would it do" I mean, what do you expect your "hypothetical function that would do what you want" to do in that case
80% of the C standard library functions are garbage anyway
if you want to handle errors properly, don't use the *scanf family
As far as i see it, if it does *not* find suitable data, it'll probably throw an error of some sort, or atleast thats what i'm expecting.

If it *does* find suitable data however, I'd want it to search in a file containing different amounts and types of data, and pull a date from it.
This was a lot easier when working with Classes and JSON-strings in C# <.<
12:57
the closest thing to your description would be a regex engine, of course you'd need to find a library for that
since there's no such thing in the C standard library
Hmm, i could see that, yeah
Would it be stupid to sit strtok()'in data until we get the wanted data?
strtok is garbage
@Xariez C does not throw errors it has no concept of throw it does have the concept of errno
Since basically the data-structure I'm working from looks something like this:
{
Date: "dd.mm.yyyy";
// some more data
}
if you want to parse JSON, get a JSON parser hmmm, it's not JSON
13:00
@Mgetz You get what I mean though, and I get what I mean
Nope, it aint JSON
Its a bit of my own data-structure, which may sound odd, but thats the task at hand
@Xariez actually I don't because error handling in C is one of the major reasons for C++
I did sit wondering if JSON would be a good way to go though
@Mgetz > "it does have the concept of errno"
Which i feel we both ment
which nobody ever bothers to check
Fair enough
Hmm, I'll have to keep looking at this. But for what its worth, thanks for the chat/help thus far!
errno is like a mailbox for complaints that nobody ever bothers to check because it's not technically THEIR mailbox
13:04
doesn't look like that complicated of a format though
Thats the best description of any type of error "collection" ever, lol
Nope, pretty basic @ratchetfreak
either make it proper json or live with having a half-assed-json parser
@ratchetfreak you forgot to say "and the vulnerabilities that come with that"
making a parser that can take arbitrary input and not be vulnerable isn't that hard just tedious (most of the time)
that is, half-assed parsers for simple languages are trivial
In computer science, a recursive descent parser is a kind of top-down parser built from a set of mutually recursive procedures (or a non-recursive equivalent) where each such procedure usually implements one of the productions of the grammar. Thus the structure of the resulting program closely mirrors that of the grammar it recognizes. A predictive parser is a recursive descent parser that does not require backtracking. Predictive parsing is possible only for the class of LL(k) grammars, which are the context-free grammars for which there exists some positive integer k that allows a recursive descent...
13:11
btw the half-assed bit refered more to the json dialect than the parser
@ratchetfreak you're not disagreeing with me though...
nwp
nwp
Still, "JSON parser do the work for me" has some advantages and usually JSON is good enough to represent the data.
if you need something and you control both sides I'd suggest Protobuf
@Mgetz I usually prefer expanding the point rather than disagreeing with people
@ratchetfreak good strategy
13:13
ISTR this guy doing all this as a uni exercise
 
1 hour later…
14:20
amazing:
LMBox::LMBox()
: center(),
size(),
base({ {
QVector3D(1.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f),
QVector3D(0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f),
QVector3D(0.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f)
} })
{}
and
QVector3D center;    ///< Center
QVector3D size;    ///< Half width extends
std::array<QVector3D, 3> base;    ///< Base
There's no reason to use C-arrays anyway, so a good choice
 
2 hours later…
16:13
I'm seeing #endif at the bottom of every .h file in my legacy solution. I'm wondering if there is any case in which you wouldn't end the .h file with #endif. I'm using embarcadero c++ builder.
that's part of the include guards
to avoid double includes which would define structs with the same name twice
nwp
nwp
Some people use #pragma once which replaces include guards and then you wouldn't need #if/#endif. Technically #pragma once is non-standard, but every compiler supports it.
the one time I've seen the #ifdef not span the entire header is in math.h where you can get a set of constants macros defined if you have a specific define set. But it needs to work even if math.h was already included
@nwp officially non standard, realistically I believe most compilers support it
@nwp all our .cpp files start with #pragma hdrstop #pragma package(smart_init)
nwp
nwp
16:18
@Mgetz Apparently wikipedia found one that doesn't support it.
@HappyCoding I don't know what that means. Seems like you have some more custom things going on there.
@nwp that's msvc stuff related to precompiled headers and init order resp.
so if my .h file looks like this:
<----- should I put my #include "something.h" here?
#ifndef Class500H
#define Class500H
<----- should I put my #include "something.h" here?
#endif
<----- should I put my #include "something.h" here?
or does it matter?
#ifndef Class500H
#define Class500H
#include "something.h"


#endif
nwp
nwp
In the middle probably. Putting it on the top will also work. Putting it on the bottom will not work because you have to #include stuff before you use it, and arguably you are using something between the #if and #endif, otherwise you wouldn't #include "something.h".
if you put it at the top the file will get included again every time Class.h gets included, why make more work than absolutely necessary
16:36
Thank you, you all are very knowledgeable and I appreciate you sharing it with me. It has been very helpful.
 
2 hours later…
18:21
@nwp does anyone use Portland anymore?
Obviously I could use std::partition to break a vector into two vectors according to a function
Is there any caveat to using conditionals/push_back inside std::for_each according to those conditionals
let's say we had a class with a sex attribute and I want to sort by males and females
Would std::for_each and conditionals/push_back work just fine
nwp
nwp
@Mgetz I have never heard of that compiler. I could have sworn some Sun compiler was the only one that didn't understand #pragma once.
@MalikBrahimi Changing a container while iterating over it is problematic.
the container is intially empty tho
nwp
nwp
Then the loop would not be entered. Can you make an example?
I can't tell if you are using push_back on the container you are iterating over or another one.
18:42
Basically I have a vector that is passed in, which is a container of SSARecord objects each of which has a name and sex as well as other attributes
I'm trying to sort out the names by males and females into separate vector<string>
@nwp I have, it used to be the best compiler to use for AMD chips you've probably heard it called PGE
and then find the ones that are common between them in a new vector<string>
nwp
nwp
@MalikBrahimi That looks like it should work fine. Did you have issues with it?
It can probably be expressed a bit simpler.
Sorting mString and fString should drop you from O(n²) to O(n log(n)) which might matter.
Should use placement new probably. :D
nwp
nwp
18:58
You probably shouldn't be doing reference replacing in the first place.
Is this UB though?
Not talking about const or rvalue references of course.
nwp
nwp
@EuriPinhollow Not that UBsan can detect.
You are clobbering the previous A, but that in itself is not UB.
If you have a pointer to a it might become invalid after replace_reference and dereferencing it might be UB, but I'm not sure.
You can try to ask a question on SO.
I seeee. Of course it is not UB because pointer can point only at a or at b, neither of which is moved.
Changing reference does not affect pointer.
There is probably explicit wording about binding reference more than once, that's what I mean.
Which is clearly an issue in case of owning references.
Const lvalue and rvalue reference can be both owning and not owning depending on initializer.
nwp
nwp
The old object technically still exists because you never called the destructor. I think. So it would continue to own whatever it owned before. Probably.
2
Q: Using placement new to update a reference member?

xiaofeng.liIs the following code legal in C++? template<typename T> class Foo { public: Foo(T& v) : v_(v) {} private: T& v_; }; int a = 10; Foo<int> f(a); void Bar(int& a) { new (&f)Foo<int>(a); } References are not supposed to be bound twice, right?

19:14
it is quite possible that this is not UB, but I hope this won't pass the code review
nwp
nwp
> The placement new reuses the storage, ending the lifetime of the object
Guess the old object technically does not exist anymore.
 
2 hours later…
21:25
@nwp No I'm not having any issues
I'm just wondering if it is logically sound
reducdes the need more many more calls to STL functions
@EuriPinhollow If you're going to do it, I think it would be better to at least destroy the old object first. coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/9fe925bf5f4f8159
I'm not sure invoking the dtor is strictly necessary to get defined behavior, but if your object contains some non-trivial type, re-using it's storage without destroying it properly is rather rude at best.

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