« first day (679 days earlier)      last day (2398 days later) » 

00:00
is there a part that confuses you in that code fragment?
@milleniumbug No, not at all.
@milleniumbug But "multiple files" case does.
that's because you used multiple files in a retarded way
there are three translation units
but the other two contain no definitions that aren't already in the first one
@milleniumbug Which "two" and what "first one"
first one contains the definition of the function main, the declaration of the class B, and the declaration of the class A
second one contains the declaration of class A
third one contains the declaration of class A, and the declaration of the class B
Yes. So far I understand. What does this prove?
00:12
that you can compile only the first one and nothing changes
IOW, there is only one file involved
and there is no "separate compilation"
Oh I see.
So If there was no main.cpp, would it still compile?
I mean if there was no the first translation unit
it would compile, but it wouldn't link because you didn't provide an entry point (IOW, the main function)
again, header files aren't typically translation units
I suppose I understand it now, I still am not sure, but anyhow, thanks for the help! I'm gonna read more about translation units and linking.
you typically have source files and header files in your program
source files contain the declarations that must appear once in the entire program, and header files contain the declarations that can appear multiple times in a single program, but only once per translation unit
non-inline function definitions and global variable definitions are in the source files, and the inline function definitions, class declarations, the declarations of functions (that is, without a body), and global variable declarations appear in the header file
00:37
I guess I have a little better understanding now.
 
2 hours later…
02:50
How can I split a string according to a list of regular expressions? I have a string that I want to tokenize, and I have a list of regular expressions that I want to tokenize it by.
I wonder if something like split(some_vector, the_string, list_of_regexes); exists.
03:16
@J.L.Louis I'd iterate on each string with a regex_token_iterator, and copy them into some destination array
03:31
Very nice. Thank you :)
 
13 hours later…
16:13
I found this code on stackoverflow for deleting an element from a vector (said to work only if expect only one occurrence of that value, which is true)

std::vector<int>::iterator position = std::find(myVector.begin(), myVector.end(), 8);
if (position != myVector.end()) // == myVector.end() means the element was not found
    myVector.erase(position);

How would I apply that code to a vector that holds objects which contain an int attribute i am searching for? Like an object item which is identified by an id which i use as a searching criteria? Since myVector.begin() and myVector.end() make
nwp
nwp
Use std::find_if with a lambda.
Ron
Ron
Should I or should I not use size_t?
nwp
nwp
Also it removes the first occurrence, which is a bit more precise. If you want all occurrences look up "erase remove idiom".
@Ron That requires a bit more context.
Ron
Ron
@nwp True. As a function parameter.
nwp
nwp
That is still not enough. If you want to pass an index for a vector then it's a good idea. If you want to pass a string then it's terrible.
Ron
Ron
16:21
I see.
What if I expect an unsigned int value from the caller's side?
Chances are I wouldn't want to use it then. Saw I code snippet on the board just now.
nwp
nwp
@Ron Well, if you expect an unsigned int you should probably take an unsigned int. But you are not supposed to expect an unsigned int, you are supposed to expect an index or a size or an age or something else that corresponds to the business logic and then think about what type to represent it with. Without knowing what the type has to represent thinking about which type to use doesn't make sense.
16:57
const auto started_time = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
const auto now = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
const auto x = now - started_time;
What is the type of x?
The type is std::chrono::steady_clock::duration
How I found this: std::chrono::steady_clock::now() returns std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono:steady_clock>, and operator- between them (overload 4) returns std::common_type<Duration1, Duration2> but since they'd be the same, just Duration.
The Duration for std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::steady_clock> is std::chrono::steady_clock::duration
Thanks!
17:13
@Justin *std::common_type_t
 
1 hour later…
18:27
hi i learned a new thing by chance today and i would like someone to explain it to me since i didnt fully understand it
int main(void)
{
  std::cout << "hi";
}
why i dont need return in the end when i use void as a parameter?
why do parameters influence return? i tought only if i have void main that i wouldnt need a return in the end?
i can do still return 0; or whatever int i want in the end, but its optional. why is that?
nwp
nwp
@jeyejow Those are unrelated.
main is special in that the standard says that if you don't return from it it implicitly returns 0. (or success or something)
The void in the parameter does nothing in C++ and just exists for C compatibility.
I'm fairly sure void main() is ill-formed.
well what does it mean in C to use void as parameter then? it has a meaning?
nwp
nwp
void f(void); means that f takes no parameters in C and C++. void f(); means that f takes no parameters in C++ and that it takes an arbitrary amount of parameters in C, so it's basically equivalent to f(...);.
what does f(...) mean?
plus i asked my teacher and he told me that it makes no diference to do f() and f(void)
this is a C class btw, not C++
nwp
nwp
... is called ellipsis and is used for variadic parameters in C.
@jeyejow Well, your teacher is wrong. f(42); compiles for void f(); but not for void f(void); in C.
18:42
yes yes i tested it and it works, i guess he mistaked when telling me
btw, how would i access something passed to a f(...) ?
for example i have a function f() { // ... }
and i call it f(5,'c',10);
how would i access the things i pass it inside of f?
can i access them?
nwp
nwp
You can't, at least not standard-compliant, so it's just a weird edge case.
so its pointless to have that ellipsis thing you told me about?
nwp
nwp
You are supposed to give the parameter a name and then use va_start and so on as linked in the ellipsis documentation.
ohhh ok
but i would need to do a #include
well, thanks for explain!
nwp
nwp
They have an example here.
19:28
Is there a difference between using while(a > b) and while(a >> b)
Isn't >> for bit shifting
> is the greater than operator. >> is the bitwise right shift operator
if a is a stream with overloaded >> operator then it's used to read stuff
that overloaded operator returns the stream which when converted to bool will be the error state
oh so the second one reads like
as long as there is something to read, enter the loop
19:46
@VioAriton aaand this is why people say operator overloading is evil
Yeah, tbh, I'd much prefer it if it was while (std::cin.read_next(b)), and std::cout.write(all, the, args, can, go, here);
Or even while (std::read(std::cin, b)), std::write(std::cout, whatever, args)
I understand why it was designed the way it was, but I don't like using it.
bad practice, gotcha
thanks
 
1 hour later…
21:00
tbh, with newbies, you can pretend >> and << are "stream operators", and pretend that bitshifts confusingly share the name :P

« first day (679 days earlier)      last day (2398 days later) »