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07:57
I want to get the digital position and recognize the digital from a image with c++. Could anyone give me some direction?
08:49
for(auto it=input.begin(); it!=input.end(); it++) - I cannot use range for if I want iterators, right?
 
3 hours later…
nwp
nwp
12:11
@yode By "digital" do you mean "digit"?
@EuriPinhollow You can take the address which gives you a pointer which technically is an iterator, but that is probably not good enough.
well it's not like "cannot", but there's no built-in adapter, so unless you'll write it, you'll probably be better off using a standard for loop
12:38
@nwp Yes..
nwp
nwp
@yode You can click the little arrow in the bottom right of not your message to refer to a specific message.
Wow, first time to know that..
nwp
nwp
Usually you would use something like OpenCV or just search for another text recognition library.
OCR is not a simple thing
13:17
@milleniumbug i c
@nwp Yeap, not good enough for obvious reasons, even impossible to use for obvious reasons with specific containers.
but vector/array should be your most used container for various reasons
nwp
nwp
The only reason I can think of right now where you would need iterators is when you need std::map::erase in which case a range based loop doesn't work anyways.
@ratchetfreak i don'
@ratchetfreak I did not catch your drift.
@nwp I may need adjacent elements at times.
nwp
nwp
Adjacent elements tend to be super annoying to deal with. You have special cases for edges and corners. Maybe an adapter that takes care of that is the way to go.
14:29
Hello
I ma working on a program which calculates dot product of the vectors by using linked list implementation.
#include <iostream>

using namespace std;

struct node
{
int data;
int index;
node *next;
};
class linked_list
{
private:
node *head,*tail;
public:
linked_list()
{
head = NULL;
tail = NULL;
}
void add_node(int i,int n)
{
node *tmp = new node;
tmp->index = i;
tmp->data = n;
tmp->next = NULL;

if(head == NULL)
{
head = tmp;
tail = tmp;
}
else
{
tail->next = tmp;
tail = tail->next;
}
}
node* gethead()
{
return head;
}
};
void display(node *head)
{
while(head!=0)
{
cout << head->index <<" ," << head->data << endl;
My problem is in the main function while loop
Obviously, I am compairing 2 classes instead of linked list
I will need your help to compare the linked list
nwp
nwp
What do you want A != 0 in line 62 to do?
I wanted to compare the head of the linked list
nwp
nwp
So instead of A != 0 you want A.gethead()->data != 0.
This time it gives me th e below error
|error: base operand of '->' has non-pointer type 'linked_list'|
nwp
nwp
Do you understand what the error message is trying to say?
@mwater07 Do you mean you want to compare to the data in the head node or to the node pointer? If you mean the node then ` A.gethead() != nullptr` would be it (you can use 0 instead of nullptr, but you probably shouldn't).
14:48
This time it givers me error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment|
while( A.gethead()->data != 0 && B.gethead()->data != 0)
{
if(A.gethead()->index == B.gethead()->index)
{
product = product + A.gethead()->data * B.gethead()->data;
A.gethead()=A.gethead()->next;
B.gethead()=B.gethead()->next;
}
else if(A.gethead()->index < B.gethead()->index)
{
A.gethead()=A.gethead()->next;
}
else
{
B.gethead()=B.gethead()->next;
}
}
nwp
nwp
When you write A.gethead()=A.gethead()->next; do you want to overwrite the head of A? What happens to the old node?
I am just trying to traverse linklist
nwp
nwp
Currently you are modifying the list. So let's fix that.
You could make a node *current = A.gethead(); and then current = current->next; to iterate over the list.
Except node is private.
Is this for an assignment or to learn proper C++?
For both
nwp
nwp
Did you write all the code yourself or did they give you some fixed header that you cannot change?
14:55
University C++ and proper C++ are disjoint subsets
I wrote the vector version of its. now, we are requested to convert it to linked list version.
nwp
nwp
So you can do whatever you want as long as it is a linked list where you can insert and remove elements and iterate over them?
nwp
nwp
That's nice. So there is hope.
I'm gonna assume using std::list<int> is not allowed.
no it is not
nwp
nwp
14:59
@nwp It isn't private -.-
I'm not sure how to make it understandable and good. Let's settle for technically correct for now.
You are essentially trying to use A as a node *. That doesn't work well. Use a proper node * current_a instead.
Yes exactly
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

struct node
{
int data;
int index;
node *next;
};
class linked_list
{
private:
node *head,*tail;
public:
linked_list()
{
head = NULL;
tail = NULL;
}
void add_node(int i,int n)
{
node *tmp = new node;
tmp->index = i;
tmp->data = n;
tmp->next = NULL;

if(head == NULL)
{
head = tmp;
tail = tmp;
}
else
{
tail->next = tmp;
tail = tail->next;
}
}
node* gethead()
{
return head;
}


};
void display(node *head)
{
while(head!=0)
{
cout << head->index <<" ," << head->data << endl;
this is the last version of the code
nwp
nwp
What is the current = current->next; for?
Also you are going to need a current_a and current_b. Or name it differently.
that s my bed
nwp
nwp
And then in the while replace the A with current_a and B with current_b and it should become much better.
@mwater07 You can click the "fixed font" button after you paste code so that chat doesn't ruin the formatting.
15:17
I am totally messed up with the code
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

struct node
{
    int data;
    int index;
    node *next;
};
class linked_list
{
private:
    node *head,*tail;
public:
    linked_list()
    {
        head = NULL;
        tail = NULL;
    }
    void add_node(int i,int n)
    {
        node *tmp = new node;
        tmp->index = i;
        tmp->data = n;
        tmp->next = NULL;

        if(head == NULL)
        {
            head = tmp;
            tail = tmp;
        }
        else
        {
            tail->next = tmp;
@ratchetfreak Hello, you mean it is a easy job?
Could you give me some instruction?
nwp
nwp
@mwater07 You are still using A to iterate instead of current_a.
@yode I mean it is not simple
15:34
I still did not understand
if i replace A with current_a, it will give me another error
nwp
nwp
You are trying to traverse the list without changing it. You stay in the loop as long as A.gethead()->data != 0. Since A never changes you will be stuck in that loop forever.
16:30
eel.is/c++draft/basic.lval#11 - so how exactly do I use reinterpret cast to access layout-compatible structs (for example) without breaking strict aliasing rule?
nwp
nwp
@EuriPinhollow You don't. You avoid reinterpret_cast like the plague.
Ok, better question then, what can I use it for without causing UB?
nwp
nwp
Here are some standard quotes that I didn't read.
I got a clue about that already, I just wonder now what can reinterpret cast be used for without causing UB other than trivial things like re-casting pointer to C-array or something.
Or casting between char/void and other types which is trivial as well.
17:12
hi guys.
I want to call C# dll from C++ ATL COM using the C++/CLI. Here are my steps:
1. Create c# class library project
2. Create CTL proj., add dependency to C# project
and here is a very interesting part:
3.a If I create plain old c++ project and add link .lib file from second project -> all works well and I have no problem with calling functions from C#., but when I
3.b create C++ ATL project, and as well as in 3.a (link to project #2) and set /clr option - I have a runtime error when trying to call functions from C# (Error is "Could not load file or assembly ...")
sorry, in #2. - the project is not CTL but CLR. It's a wrapper
nwp
nwp
17:26
My guess is that the calling conventions differ. It's just a guess, but worth checking.
thx for answer, I'll give a try, but I've already:
1. exported function from the wrapper dll (as I said it works well in simple c++ project)
2. for testing purposes I used function void foo(void) - which don't need any marshaling/conversion stuff
btw, I tried both member and static functions
nwp
nwp
Another thing to check is symbol names. Dump the lib symbols and see if they are mangled differently (which is basically the same as calling convention).
17:56
@nwp should I dump ATL COM and the wrapper project .lib files?
nwp
nwp
@Kiramm I don't know. I have never used any ATL, COM, C++/CLI or CLR.
okay, I hope u'll never be forced to use it :)
anyway thx for help
18:19
I fixed it. Thanks to ur suggestion to dump libraries I used Fusionvw and found the actual problem: VB6 wasn't able to use c# .dll. It looked up only in vb6 ide folder for it. I copied it to this folder and now all goes ok.
:-)
sry, not Fusionvw but Fuslogvw
18:46
Strict aliasing joint bugs me out sooooo much.
I just tried to find some information about whether I can use chars as storage for arbitrary objects without breaking aliasing rule and found contradicting answers.
stackoverflow.com/questions/41298619/… - says that storing objects in chars is UB.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37302691/what-are-the-strict-aliasing-rules-when-casting-from-a-char-array
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10965325/does-encapsulated-char-array-used-as-object-breaks-strict-aliasing-rule
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37259909/cs-strict-aliasing-rule-is-the-char-aliasing-exemption-a-2-way-street
- these say that storing in `char`s is fine.
god damn it
:40272807 I have done those changes and it runs but does not provide a result
    node *current_a = A.gethead();
    node *current_b = B.gethead();

    while( current_a->data != 0 && current_b->data != 0)
    {
        if(current_a->index == current_b->index)
        {
            product = product + current_a->data * current_b->data;
            current_a=current_a->next;
            current_b=current_b->next;
        }
        else if(current_a->index < current_b->index)
        {
            current_a=current_a->next;
nwp
nwp
19:05
@mwater07 I don't think current_a->data != 0 is correct.
Why?
Hey guys. I've got an annoying overload resolution issue where the (thing that does resolution) seems to ignore the constness of the arguments of the function type of a std::function.
nwp
nwp
@mwater07 Because it checks the value of the data, but you want to check if you are done traversing.
YES YOU ARE RIGHT
I have fixed it
Thank you
nwp
nwp
@Benjamin You have "convert lambda to mutate<T> manipulator" vs "convert lambda to consume<T> manipulator". Neither one is better than the other, so you get an ambiguity error.
Wait, ignore that, I haven't understood it enough yet.
19:32
@nwp yeah, I know that. The problem is that function<void(T const&)> should be a different type from function<void(T&)>, but the resolver doesn't seem to understand that
nwp
nwp
std::is_same says they are different, so I don't think it's that simple.
Adding const to R &operator>>(mutate<T> manipulator) makes it compile.
But I don't know why that matters.
 
1 hour later…
20:41
Actually, removing operator taking consume makes it compile as well what makes think that there is either an error somewhere or that you just found a way of surpassing const without any unsafe method.
That's the most elegant way of destroying the foot which I've seen.
20:58
Oh wait I understand it.
it's not weird if you dig into it: function accepting reference to const int is the most universal one. If you try to do it the other way - pass an std::function which accepts int only there will be no ambiguity.
http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/26e85cc421307b46
yeah, but that won't work for larger things like structs
I'm working on a version that uses a lot of template specilaztion to wrap stuff up
@Benjamin what do you mean?
I suppose that's a valid architecture though.
sbi
sbi
(My job is still tied to C++03, so I'm a newbie in C++1... land.) How do I write a variadic function template that takes an arbitrarily long tuple with pointers? Is something like this the correct syntax? template<typename ...E> void f(std::tuple<E*...>)?
I mean if you've got a big'ole struct it's gonna get copied all over the place if you're using pass-by-value
21:10
> //allow this operation to be const, but still return a mutable reference to this property.
Why would you need to pass a lambda accpeting const int & to it then if it returns a mutable reference?
Oh wait I now understand original question.
Since you are already removing const in use method there is no reason to only accept consume then.
yeah. It's for chaining. Just because the operation you're doing now is const, it doesn't mean you want the entire rest of the chain from that point on to be const.
21:40
@Benjamin wait wait wait.
When you say "operation" you mean "consume" and "mutate", right?
21:55
yeah
the function
oh, no. in that cause operation would be either put or use, or << or >>
Something that returns the reference
The const qualifier for operator<< is not what I meant. I meant that I do not understand why operator<< accepts consume at all if internally it makes no difference.
So if you exclude operator>> taking consume it won't make any difference.
I'm more interested in why the thing isn't detecting that they're different types
 
1 hour later…
23:33
@sbi If you're passing it a tuple, it (probably) doesn't need to be a variadic function. The function is just receiving a tuple, which is a single object of some arbitrary type, so it's just template <typename T> void f(T const &t). The tricky part is where you start to tear the tuple apart and process the pieces.
Using a variadic function, the function would receive a number of separate parameters, so you wouldn't have a tuple involved at all (other than the fact that one of the things passed could itself be a tuple).

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