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00:00
@Ambush the good news is you are getting what they said they are sending you
 
2 hours later…
02:05
why am i invited
02:16
probably a result of message moving. accept that and move on.
03:12
I have a class called Bus which has a bitset in it
I have another class called Register which accepts another bitset pointer (raw pointer)
I have a member function which sets the Register's bitset pointer to that of the Bus
Is there a better way to do it?
the Bus object's bitset gets shared across multiple objects
 
3 hours later…
06:21
Sounds like you've OOP-ed yourself. Unless your explicit goal is to simulate fixed point logic as it is connected (people at big tech companies simulate their chips this way), your best bet is to have Register members in the Bus
 
4 hours later…
09:57
ask that yesterday. i want to impement a function that reconstruct the vertices of a given box, that is defined with its center, orientation, halfway extends. the problem is how to handle the return of an array.
create a struct to return, it'll be more self documenting
o.k. you mean a type of std::array<Qvector3D,8>
?
or you can use an out-pointer, especially when the vertices are going into a larger array of them
o.k. can you give me an example of an out-pointer. how you mean that. thx.
create_cube(const vec3& center, const vec3& size, const quat& orientation, vec3* out_buffer);
10:09
ah o.k. a get parameter.
 
2 hours later…
12:10
@ratchetfreak how about this ->> void LMBox::createBoxVertices(const LMBox& box, QVector<float>::Iterator& it)
if you do that I'd say make it a templated type say it needs to be an OutputIterator
that way you can use std::back_insert_iterator
which will use push_back to do the inserts as needed
resizing the vector as you go
amazing thx
12:37
you mean so : template<class output_iterator>
void createBoxVertices(const LMBox& box, output_iterator it)
and the usage: createBoxVertices(a, std::back_inserter(points));
These back_inserter means that when i assign to the output_iterator in the function createBoxVertices it makes push_back to the container points ?
 
5 hours later…
17:22
@FerencRozsa So you're really trying to read the data for a box back in from a stream?
Good evening! I'd like to understand the relationship between IEEE 754 (IEC 559) and C and C++ standards. I've looked through the C11 and CPP14 standards' final versions and only found an explicit mention of the IEEE 754 in the C11 standard, but only as an addendum.
There appears to be no explicit mention of "floating point in a C implementation must adhere to IEEE 754". Is that so and if yes, why? If not, where is the mention?
@iksemyonov It's not required, but there is an explicit test to see if the floating point on a particular implementation follows IEC 559.
@JerryCoffin Thanks for the prompt reply. "there is a test" - may I ask where exactly - is it in the standard or in the implementation?
You can test for std::numeric_limits<FloatingPointType>::is_iec559 which is a constexpr bool constant
@iksemyonov The standard requires the implementation to provide std::numeric_limits<T>::is_iec559(). Obviously returns false for integers, booleans, etc.
17:30
@JerryCoffin I've seen that in the standard, now I see the point. But that's C++ only, isn't it? What about C? What is the idea behind the IEC 559-related addendum in the C standard?
@iksemyonov If memory serves, the addendum is just about adding support for imaginary/complex numbers. There is similar stuff in the normal part of the standard library though. For example, the C equivalent of is_iec559 is something like __STDC_IEC_559__ (plus or minus an underscore here or there).
 
1 hour later…
18:41
@JerryCoffin Annex F appears to describe support for floating-point arithmetic, whereas complex numbers are described in Annex G.
@iksemyonov I guess I was remembering annex G then. Let me open it up and take a look instead of depending on memory.
@JerryCoffin I have the final version, in case.
@iksemyonov Looks like I was thinking most (or more) of F had been incorporated into section 7, but it's basically just more detail about the requirements on the standard library when __STDC_IEC_559__ is defined (and, amazingly enough, it looks like I even got that name correct).
19:00
@JerryCoffin I'm afraid I'm a little lost. Should I look into Section 7 or is Annex F self-contained now?
@iksemyonov Mostly section 7, I think. Annex F is mostly just additional bits specific to IEEE 754/IEC 559/60559. Annex F is really more about advice to the implementer ("handle this corner case that way").
@JerryCoffin And when it comes to C++, I guess the standard in turn references the C Standard regarding floating point?
@iksemyonov Yeah, pretty much (then again, it just contains a general reference to the C standard as a whole, so that applies to essentially everything, not just FP).
19:16
@JerryCoffin The journey started when I tried to find if and how the standard defines the size and precision for basic arithmetic data types in C++11, while reading The Primer. The book's fairly precise but at times it inevitably hits the reasonable limitation, of course.
 
2 hours later…
21:43
@iksemyonov In the C standard, those are all defined in section 5.2.4.2.1 and 5.2.4.2.2 for integer and floating point types respectively. The C++ standard mostly defines this in terms of the C standard, if memory serves (lots of footnotes: "equivalent to FLT_RADIX", etc.)
22:14
hey i have a question regarding pointers
I got a bad feeling about this
I have a dynamic array which holds pointers
and now i need to change the pointer so it points to another object
how can i do this?
array[index] = whatever_address_that_object_has;
also why do you have pointers there
nope i can't access the array directly
22:16
i get the pointer by calling a function
Object1* temp; getPointer(temp);
temp is a pointer in an array and now i need to change temp to another pointer
temp is not an pointer in an array, at least, not in the code you just presented
getPointer is a method
that returns a pointer from an array
I basically need to make this pointer point to a different location
3 mins ago, by milleniumbug
http://www.sscce.org/
Object.cpp

bool Object::getTrans(const string& targetName, Trans*& result) {
	Object* stp2 { nullptr };

	for (int i = 0; i < numOfTrans_; i++) {
		if (trans_[i]->getObj2(stp2) &&
			stp2->getName().compare(targetName) == 0) {

			result = trans_[i];
			return true;
		}
	}
	return false;
}

Object2.cpp

	for (int i = 0; i < numOfTrans_; i++) {
		Transition* replace;
		obj1->getTrans("Name", replace);
		*replace = transitionList_[i];
	}
}
it's not "self-contained", but let's see
22:29
sorry :(
so you want to modify trans_[i] itself from Object2.cpp?
yes
trans_[i]
is a dynamic array to Transition
of*
this sounds like encapsulation violation, but this code violates all style guides in 35435 other ways so I guess
accept a Trans**&
well I'm basically trying to create a automaton class with an array of transitions and states
and states class has an array of transitions
So in the copy constructor of an automaton class i need to make deep copies of the states

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