@Telkitty what are good practices on how to go about remembering how many elements are in the array?
when you are building the array in the body of some function, suppose you do not know what the length of the array is going to be until you are ready to return. isn't that, like in java, an issue, since you need to know the size of the array you're initializing?
not sure whether it's a good practice but you can set a global variable or you can return struct with a pointer pointing to the start of the array and number of elements or you can set special characters to show it's the end of the array
there was a question in recent that had a pretty confusing description, but once I deciphered it I thought the problem would be a fun exercise just as something easy to do while trying to learn how to use CLion
A common pattern in C is for functions to take a pair of 'out parameters'. So the function caller passes in a pre-allocated array that can hold plenty of items and another pointer for the actually used size. This let's the function write data into the pre-allocated array and then also set how many items it actually put into that array
needles to say, it's terrible because it's going to cause problems
So this is a program that the user enters the number of the digits of the number group and then the power and it is supposed to show the number that the sum of their digits on that power does the number. For some reason the program won't repeat and will only show one number or even nothing. How c...
yeah definitely, I believe in that. Arrays give better performance, right? but it's painful to not just use lists
The problem she is trying to solve in that question is really "Given two integers, k and n, return all numbers x such that sum(d^n) = x, where k is the number of digits in x, and we are summing over the digits d in x."
C++ has raw arrays T[] and then std::vector<T>. Yes, raw arrays can potentially be more performant, but vectors (which actually use arrays behind the scenes) are going to save you so many headaches for almost no overhead
That said, just as in Java you would use ArrayList<T> unless you must use an array, here, you use an std::vector<T> or std::array<T, N> unless you must use an array
it helps that the number of cases where you must use an array is way, way lower than in Java
With std::vector, returning is done just like you would return any other type
Hm i will asked that again. In my appl. the user has the possibility to create new 3d objetcs. While i have only a certain amount of id's in every level of my scene graph my approach is to limit the child nodes a parent can hold. So i avoid this conflict.
:-) the approach. an other is to create a amount of (3d objects) nodes that not actual is part of the scene graph. the user can add each of them at runtime. when all added the user has to delete a object from the scene to add a new one.
And Qi somehow deduces that this expression produces an attribute vector<...>, which is the attribute type of the list<...>-grammar (a variable template), but the compound thing should be a pair, right
It must treat start's attribute as ignored, but why?
> And Qi somehow deduces that this expression produces an attribute vector<...>, which is the attribute type of the list<...>-grammar (a variable template)