@nobism Here's a decent mental model on how member functions work: RetType SomeType::fnName(Arg arg) /* const */ is equivalent to RetType(/* const */ SomeType* this, Arg arg)
Basically, you put in the implicit this parameter as the first argument
The const on a const member function applies to the this pointer
@milleniumbug hey, thanks for checking vs2017 with the get_time format string! seems weird that they haven't fixed that bug, but good to know that it's still there.
My approach for my problem which i explained last days here. The main thing is to combine the particular types of bounding volumes to one structure type. One that holds only the parameters and one for the models to be able to draw the voluminas. All that is again part of a so called bounded node which should be an abstract base class for my geometry, transform, etc.. nodes in my scene graph.
@BartekBanachewicz Thats what the calculateBoundingVolume() method does. It produces an consistency between the current position of the bounded model in world space and the bounding volume.
i want to be able to use all three types which i can choose over an switch. So when i want to use an obb i set the switch to obb and now i use the obbs while i traversing the scene graph.
o.k. so my bounded node class would only have the 3DModels to draw the voluminas as members ? And the paramters would be calculated on the fly in the calculateBoundingVolume method ?
Hello, is there anything special that needs to be done to copy a vector of vectors? Or would "Copy(vctrOfVctr.begin(), vctrOfVctr.End(), NEWvctrOfVctr.begin());" work?
Also, is it necessary to allocate memory for vectors at all?
Alright. Also, if I pass a class Z with private members A and B to a copy constructor, can I specify something like "copy(Z.A.begin(), Z.A.end(), back_inserter(this->Z);" ?
in fact, most of your classes should not define any of the Big Five members (move assignment, copy assignment, move constructor, copy constructor, destructor)
const Coord& Place::Coord (int i, int j) const {
if (i < 0) {
i = 0;
}
if (i > (COORD.size()-1)) {
i = (COORD.size()-1);
}
if (j < 0) {
j = 0;
}
if (j > (COORD[i].size()-1)) {
j = (COORD[i].size()-1);
}
return this->COORD[i][j];
}
So, Place is a class with a function which returns the value of a Coord. Coord is a class with a function named x. Would this work to get that x? "Place.Coord(a, b).x()"
Oh, right, sorry, I was using fast-and-sloppy syntax
Okay, so, Place object is named "plaaace" and functions will be COOORD and X. COOORD returns a Coord and X returns an x. Would this work: "plaaace.COOORD(a, b).X()" ?
the typical problem with signed types is that using them with bit operations is likely to result in an implementation defined behaviour or undefined behaviour
the typical problem with unsigned types is that n-1 may wrap around and do the wrong thing in comparisons
I'm currently converting my .lib projects into .dll projects. And so far that's going great. Oddly enough though, one of those dll projects now requires an int main function, which I'm trying to get rid of. It doesn't sound logical for a dll to have a main either? The project that includes the dll does have a main
MSVCRTD.lib(exe_main.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _main referenced in function "int __cdecl invoke_main(void)" (?invoke_main@@YAHXZ)
that's the error I get if I don't add a main to the dll project
I have a vector which stores objects of that struct. I cannot use emplace because the compiler expects Edge(int, int&) but I have Edge(int, int). What can I do? I feels very wrong to write a constructor to take an int reference.
@Mgetz What I wanted to know is if I can compare word[i] != '/0' inside the for, as an argument. Let me know if you know, please. I will do further research in K&R anyways, I've noticed I asked before researching. xD
@Mgetz I'm not sure what you're trying to say. Could you elaborate? English is not my first language and sometimes I don't understand some sentences or expressions.
Anyone else experience freezes with gdb + Qt? When I try to debug, if the breakpoint is in GUI code, ubuntu freezes. This time, I couldn't just kill gdb because Ctrl+Alt+F1 was blank...
Wondering if theres something simple I can do to fix it
Hi! Um, so I'm writing a simple enqueue function that makes use of an array, but I feel stuck? I think I did it right, but it refuses to show any update in the queued list, so obviously something isn't working right, but I'm not sure how to fix it.
it must work like this: > The enqueue function should add elt to the rear of the list. If the list is full when this function is called, it must make the array bigger and transfer the existing list, plus the new elt, to the bigger array.
@jeyejow This generally isn't a meaningful question. On most systems each process has its own address mapping tables, so the virtual addresses (which is all you can normally see from inside a process) for one process are meaningless inside another process. Even if they both have the same physical memory mapped, it may appear at a different address in each process.
@jeyejow Okay. So you're reading some value into an integer, then trying to read from that address. If the number you entered was less than around 4 million, a typical system will reject it--to reject null pointers (and most small integers) the first few megabytes of address space is permanently marked as "not present", so any attempt at reading or writing it will produce an error message.
Basicly, i eard that when i have a function, and that fucntion ends, everything that was created in it is destroyed. What i think that also means is, the memory address of the objects created inside the function should be free to be used by other programs of processes. I then tried to pass a reference to a variable i created in a function, only to see if i could make a pointer to a variable that would be destroyed, and it turned out i could. now im trying to,
assuming that im thinking straight and the variable i created in the function is destroyed when the function ends, im trying to create a varible in that memory address, just to see if i can, and i do, i just can access it without getting "read access violation"
im typing the address of the variable
i have 2 programs, one that gets the reference from a variable that was destroied from a function, and another one that tries to create a variable in that memory address
Your operating system keeps the memory spaces of separate processes separate. The "same address" in both programs can be pointing to different things @jeyejow
@jeyejow Your underlying assumption is faulty. On a typical system, variables local to a function are allocated on the stack. As soon as some other function starts to execute, it's typically going to be re-using the same memory space.
@jeyejow Perhaps it's best to back up, and tell us a bit more about what you're trying to accomplish. My immediate reaction is that answering the questions you're asking will be quite a bit of work, and probably won't accomplish much.
Im trying to create a variable in a specific memory space, i want to make a variable in the memory space of another variable i created in another program of mine.
thats what im trying to do
i know that the other variable is destroyed, because i created it in a function
i can post the code i currently have if it helps you understadn better
@jeyejow Programs are memory isolated, so there is a special Windows command that lets you write to another programs memory. Kids use it to hack video games.
Anyways, the stack is allowed to grow as the system commits more memory to it. In principle, the OS could also reclaim some of the pages, although I'm not sure if this happens in practice as the OS would need to know somehow that the stack was free to re-use. I think there is a stack de-alloc command for that, but nobody does stack allocation...