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19:25
Hi, I've got this problem I can't seem to formulate well enough, so I'm not finding anything on the web
I have a (potentially huge) set of 2D points and I want to get those inside a circle
I can easily get something working for a small set, by looking at each point's coordinates
But I'm thinking of storing the points in a way such that I don't have to go through every point
At first I thought about storing them in a graph, linking points whenever they are close enough, but the problem becomes finding one of them inside the circle
(that circle isn't centered on one of the points in the set)
Then I thought of quadtrees but that seems complex, with a lot of cases to account for
So I was wondering if anyone here could help me find something, even the smallest lead to a google search
It's not specifically about C++, although I do program in C++, but I thought I might as well try asking here
spatial queries maybe
maybe a quadtree or octree depending on the number of dimensions
Alright you led me to Nearest neighbor search
Apparently k-d trees are the simplest space-partitioning technique and are used for spatial queries
if you have a really large number of points, you may want an actual geodatabase or sth
19:42
True, I'll look into that
Oh actually I found something else: Fixed-radius near neighbors
Yeah I think I know how to solve it
I'm surprised I didn't think of it sooner
You just have to store the points in some kind of lattice
A 2D array
If the circle always has about the same radius, you then only have to check for at most 4 squares
I'm having doubts haha
It shouldn't be hard to store the points in that way, right? I also have a guarantee that points cannot be too close to each other, so there can only be a set amount of points in each square
Well I'm gonna try that
Thanks for the input!
 
2 hours later…
22:16
hi guys...how would you pass multiple references to a function? I don't want to have them all being individual parameters, e.g. it's not possible to pass an array of references, is there an alternative?
if you have so many references that passing them becomes tedious, it's likely the referred to objects are related and should be in a single object
actually what I want to do is to create mutliple QTranform objects and then manipulate them..I have to do this for 8 objects so far...perhaps more in the future...so far I have a switch statement such that I act only upon one object use the transform and then produce the next transform object...this makes my code very long...I'd prefer to have them all produced at the same time, but I need to pass them as references to my function in order to act upon them, pointer are not allowed...
22:55
so create them in a function and return a vector of these...?
23:22
how would you create dynamically objects without using new?
std::vector

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