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00:00
@Mikhail I'm not initializing at creation that is the first problem, the data is entered later
push_back the things in the parenthesis
but it's a vector of vectors
hmmm ok it.second can "latch" onto the first (outter) vector
push_back({"name",some_object_that_is_vector_of_vectors})
also maybe emplace_back, or whatever the static analyzer tells you
that will replace previous vectors
that's how a map works
00:03
I want to append
its a one-to-one mapping
well this is why i use vectors on for value
so i can append more things
there is also multimap which is another story
You're probably over complicating something
Maybe
00:59
Still stuck with map<string, vector < vector > > uhhh, it seems anything I try to pushback replaces the entire vector
 
1 hour later…
02:27
That is by design
Each key maps to a value
 
8 hours later…
10:43
On this page - c-faq.com/decl/spiral.anderson.html, anyone knows why we say "str is an array 10 of..." and not "str is an array (of size 10) of..."?
Are both the statements not equivalent? I feel that the former statement is clearer
*latter
nwp
nwp
Maybe because the author was bad at english or because the point is getting C right while not caring much about correct english.
10:58
I just wanted to make sure if I understood the statement correctly. Did I?
nwp
nwp
"str is an array of 10 elements of type ..." is probably good english and prevents confusion between size and number of elements.
Typically when talking about size you mean sizeof and the size in bytes.
:O
superb, thanks! :D
 
3 hours later…
14:03
I have trouble problem initializing and occupying these complex structures i want to form like:
std::map< std::pair< int, int> , std::pair < std::set<string> , std::set<string> > > mydata;
I want to populate the sets
Any ideas? :/
what are you tryina achieve
I want to have a key that is formed by two elements (hence the first pair). then based on each key I want to populate the value with a pair (like Left and Right) where each side has a set. I want to iterate over those set each time and add/remove strings.
is this for an exercise?
No
Why would an excercise need that
Sadist teacher? :P
isn't it as simple as the following?
mydata[{42,42}].first.insert("hi");
mydata[{42,42}].second.insert("hello");
14:10
oh instanciate directly you mean
i think it will produce compile error
because there is no pair of sets instantiated
ah, mkay, opening up my compiler :D
i will also try in my code let's see
map.emplace(std::make_pair(a,b), std::make_pair(a.emplace(a), b.emplace(b)));
@login_not_failed Holy molly, it works.
@VioAriton I'm going to try yours as well because it looks more like what i was thinking (like not using brackets that hide stuff underneath)
the emplace variant is not working for me although I'm not following it 1:1
14:17
the emplace actually has something peculiar :/
this is too verbose, but it works:
mydata.emplace(std::make_pair<int, int>(42,42), std::make_pair<std::set<std::string>, std::set<std::string>>({"hi", "hello"}, {"hi", "hello"}));
i want to place strings , how did a and b appear
i actually used hi and bye haha ^^
you have a pair of 2 sets?
yes
they are supposed to be separate not one big set
well yeah, that should work
14:22
@login_not_failed solution does exactly what i was looking for. Thank you
if it is slow, use std::piecewise_construct to construct pair values in-place
@login_not_failed I don't know what that is but I get it has to do with the "move" semantics of c++?
I just threw some words of magic, so you'll know that if this insertion is slow (as I suspect, there will be some redundant copying), there's a hope
@login_not_failed A quest, I see.
14:47
@AnnaK. btw, you can directly initialize your map:
std::map< std::pair< int, int> , std::pair < std::set<std::string> , std::set<std::string> > > mydata
{ {{42, 42}, {{"h", "i"}, {"h", "i"}}}, {{42, 41}, {{"h", "o"}, {"h", "i"}}} };
@login_not_failed I'm not hardcoding data into the program, can you give me an example how I could take advantage of that? (I can't think of any un;ess of hardcoding)
at some point it's worth it to replace std::pair with your own struct
@VioAriton That is beautiful
I'm pretty sure you are way past that already
14:52
@ratchetfreak for speed reasons or...?
code comprehension reasons
seeing a bunch of std::pair std::map std::vector loses the critical information in a sea of std:: types
@ratchetfreak maybe but at this point it helps me to have a distinct separation
you can have the separation using proper named types instead of the generic ones
you can also give better field names instead of first and second
nobody watches my code that's the missed information
they only expect results as automatons
@AnnaK. here you go:
using data_t = std::map< std::pair< int, int> , std::pair < std::set<std::string> , std::set<std::string> > >;
data_t mydata;
std::set< std::string > set_one{"h", "i"};
std::set< std::string > set_two{"h", "o"};
std::pair< std::set< std::string >, std::set< std::string > > p( std::piecewise_construct,
std::forward_as_tuple(set_one),
std::forward_as_tuple(set_two) );
mydata[{42, 42}].swap(p);
14:57
but sometime down the line you will need to look at your code again and you will be wondering what each first and second refers to
@ratchetfreak if everything goes well I won't have to
you can hide these ugly long types into other helper types as well, I just didn't bother much
and hopefully I'll join a more professional team
@AnnaK. famous last words
 
1 hour later…
16:12
Should I provide an external link of C++ code with third-party tools (I don't know what to use, something like JSFiddle maybe?) or just paste all the code in the question? Because I think it may look too overwhelming with even 3 files, 1 main.cpp, 1 header files and corresponding cpp file. Any suggestions?
Click on new file
and just add your header, cpp and whatnot
16:40
Ah, thanks for that.
17:06
guys
anyone used the D programming language?
@Rick Posting on SO proper? Don't use links to external files. Is having multiple files required to reproduce the problem? If not, reduce the example
@Permian it's been a few years
how hard is it? @ratchetfreak
if you know C++ it's not that hard
interesting
ive been asked whether i have D experience (I dont have any)
17:15
a lot of features in D are based on similar concepts in C++
im only intermediate in C++
and havent used C++ for years
D looks trickier to java/c#
I'd say about the same as C#
really?
thats much easier than c++
is it dangerous to take jobs in niche languages????
the GC tends to help a lot
massively
17:18
@milleniumbug Err, yes , need to have multiple files to reproduce the problem. (Though I've solved it on my own)
@Permian as long as you can map the skills you learn to other languages it's fine
having a project on the side where you apply those skills will help when applying in a new job though
@milleniumbug But why using external link is not a good choice? It can make the question body cleaner.
@ratchetfreak most hr departments are so inflexible
@milleniumbug any ideas?
@Rick 1. The person who wants to answer the question still has to read the code 2. External links are prone to rot
@milleniumbug Oh damn I miss that. Very good point. OK. Thanks
17:21
In particular, a question or an answer may link to external resources, but the question/answer must be good, and be usable on its own
^ I often link to external links which do contain more code (e.g. a main function)
@Justin What service do you use if I may ask? Is it Gist a good idea?
@Justin but at least the core of the issue should be in the question
@Rick 99% of the time I use either the compiler explorer or wandbox
Let me take a look.
17:24
@ratchetfreak Yes, it's supplementary code to help show what I'm talking about, but the question has to be able to stand on its own without the link
:D I see
17:46
Why can't I view library function implementation in header file? I am using CLion and Clang with Mac.
Screenshot imgur.com/uD2sXd9
view library function implementation from* header file?
Sorry I think I shouldn't ask a dump question here in chatroom.
:D
you can't see it "in the header", because it's not there
Er, I mean, can't go to source file with clicking "go to definition" in header file.
What milleniumbug said is true. It brought you to the declaration, because there isn't access to the definition of the function
18:02
So I can only view the source file through file system?
The definition of the function is provided at link-time. There may not even be a source file for it on your system. And I believe the standard library is dynamically linked.
When I've wanted to see the source for standard library stuff, I look into the implementations. libc++, libstdc++
Aha! So it is!
But be warned that the code in standard library files is really hard to read. They do some things that shouldn't be done outside of the standard library, such as use a strange naming convention (which you aren't even allowed to use unless you are a standard library implementer) so that their code is less likely to break with macros
OK, thanks. I just wanna take a peek.
The dynamic linking of the C and C++ standard libraries is why the executables appear to be so "small". If you look at the size of a Rust Hello World executable, it seems much larger than an equivalent C or C++ one. This is because the Rust standard library is linked statically. Or at least it was, last I checked
18:09
Ok I see

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