Oh oops, I mixed up assignments and copy constructors, but you cannot have assignments with references and const variables. You probably just don't have a copy constructor defined
...for some reason, foo=nullptr (or something else that causes read access violations?) is sometimes bypassing if(foo!=nullptr). But it doesn't do the same for while (foo != nullptr).
...forgot to set deleted pointers to null. For some odd reason, while loops were treating the deleted pointers as null pointers, but if statements were treating them as the deleted pointers they actually were.
@SzymonBrych Sorry, I'm not motivated to do vague things. I'd use Boost Graph instead of rolling my own based on expensive dynamic allocations and ubiquitous null-checks
i would expect to declare pppi like this: int *const *const *pppi; if i want to do this: (*pppi)++; but instead, i have to do this: int *const **const pppi; why is that?
that said, well, the pointer at your indirection level is const, what did you expect, of course you can't increment it
start with int const *const *const * const pppi;, which has as many consts as you can have in this declaration
if you remove the outermost const, like this int const *const *const * pppi;, you have a non-const pointer, IOW, you can increment it, the pointer: pppi++;
in terms of style that was a mechanical mistake which was a result of me copying one declaration to the other
if you remove an innermost const from int const *const *const * pppi;, like this: int *const *const * pppi; you're left with the same declaration like you had at the beginning
also in terms of style I wouldn't write this anyway because it's fucking unreadable
and that means you can now increment at the (***pppi)++
note that you haven't removed the const that allows you to write (*pppi)++
Using triple+ pointers is harming both readability and maintainability.
Let's suppose you have a little function declaration here:
void fun(int***);
Hmmm. Is the argument a three-dimensional jagged array, or pointer to two-dimensional jagged array, or pointer to pointer to array (as in, funct...
so you're saying that i should use flexible arrays instead of pointers? that introduces a problem when the variables are structure members that need to be initialized while having a static storage duration
also I've yet to see a person use const in C for anything more complicated
also I'll repeat what I've said in the answer
> Is the argument a three-dimensional jagged array, or pointer to two-dimensional jagged array, or pointer to pointer to array (as in, function allocates an array and assigns a pointer to int within a function)
lets say i have a typedef like this: typedef const char *pstr; and then i make a variable like this: const pstr *ppstr; does it have the same type as: char *const *ppstr; ?
please, disregard anything I said. I don't have the patience to teach people the beginnings of why C is bad if you can't work out that that was pseudo code with (E)BNF notation for an optional token.
@treintje Out of curiosity, how old are you? I might be convinced to increase my patience a bit :)
That's weird. I'd have guessed <=16y/o, but most things on that list imply >40
It's ok to be a noob. I was a noob. It's not usual to be clingy or, shall we say, adamant about your questions, requiring more and more detailed reponse. This is where I politely asked you "out of curiosity" about your age. Feel free to disregard.
It wasn't meant to put you down. It was more of a half-apology from my side for being brief when you could be much younger than I assumed, perhaps.