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01:45
Hey guys, I posted this question on stackoverflow a while ago and it has since been buried underneath the ancient ruins of unread stackoverflow questions; it's blocking me for a while, hope someone could give me a hand if they've seen similar q's before:
0
Q: ptrdiff_t typedef collision - google-test and intel anaconda

OneRaynyDayContext I am developing a project that requires intel's anaconda distribution, and we use googletest to test our natives. I am using clang for my compiler. When I build googletest via cmake, I get this: In file included from /foo/home/bar/native/build/gradle_unittest_build/googletest-src/google...

maybe my description is not accurate enough or my title is misleading; I'm not sure what about it gave it like no views
 
3 hours later…
04:19
@OneRaynyDay The problem with that question is that it's a highly specific question. It's unlikely that someone else who has run into the same problem will see the question. Unless one of the two frameworks / libraries is notorious for running into problems like that
I can't say why it has the problems it does. Honestly, it looks mostly like a problem with anaconda. It really shouldn't make a type alias to something with the same name as a name in the standard library (in the global namespace, that is)
I'm also unsure why googletest would include <regex.h>, they should be using C++11's <regex>
Stuff like this is what takes hours to figure out, and sometimes the end result is that the libraries are incompatible, in which case, I would submit a bug report to the one responsible for the carnage
04:33
@Justin not really sure who is responsible for this carnage
And yes it is a highly specific question; but I figured since people use intel's python distribution, and people use googletest, it wouldn't be overly rare
Yeah, it's not a bad question. I'd say it's a good question. It's just unlikely to get an answer :/
:/ I see; thanks anyways
05:16
@Justin but you didn't up vote it
@Mikhail I usually refrain from upvoting questions if they were linked somewhere, rather only if I found them organically. I followed that pattern and didn't upvote.
But that doesn't mean that I don't break that pattern :)
I just didn't realize it
 
6 hours later…
11:33
How accurate is this:
> Yes, it's just a series of numbers/bits which the CPU knows how to read. This representation is known as machine code (or native code) when assembled for execution on physical hardware. In the case of code assembled for execution on hypothetical CPUs (like AMX), the representation is known as p-code.
11:44
the difference is kinda arbitrary, most of the time you can build the hypothetical CPU that runs the "p-code" directly
p-code refers to both assembly and the binary code?
> In computer programming, a p-code machine, or portable code machine[citation needed] is a virtual machine designed to execute p-code (the assembly language of a hypothetical CPU).
12:00
I hear "bytecode" used more often
when talking about binary code that is interpreted
I have a question about Arduino, may I ask it here?
I posted it in an inactive group in chat room on stackexchange
When I press my button (which I wired to left leg with resistor to negative and right leg to pin 8), I get digitalRead(8) == HIGH when the button is NOT pressed. And get digitalRead(8) == LOW when the button IS pressed.
IIRC that is correct. It should be high when not pressed
@Incomputable it can go either way depending on whether it's pull-up configured or pull-down
anyway, it seems like a hardware related issue, so the chances to get an answer here are probably lower
Yeah I thought it is hardware related, but Im desperate right now.
Pull-up, pull-down conf?
12:05
I think this question perfectly fits electronics SE.
@Yashas and probably will be marked as duplicate quite quickly
@MuhamedCicak try to look at these pictures
@MuhamedCicak on which end of the pin the resistor and button is, pull up means vcc-resistor-GPIO-button-ground while pull down means vcc-button-GPIO-resistor-ground
Got it now. Thanks guys.
is HEMA popular in Europe?
12:47
what is the scheme in which the executables are organized in the file called?
and the in-memory structure too
I am writing a section for a documentation which describes the file and memory layout of a program in some hypothetical computer. I don't know what title I should give to that section.
13:02
Hi. I'm new here...
I wold like to know how I can define macros for memory addresses.
What do you mean by "define macros for memory addresses"?
I am writing a C++ library and in one of the files, there are macros that lead to various memory addresses.
Can you show an example?
@Yashas the exe is mapped to memory to some location, a few addresses are patched and the instruction pointer is set to the starting point
#define REG_DISPCNT 0x04000000
13:07
They aren't macros.
that's for embedded devices no?
no other platform has fixed memory mapped IO anymore, everything has to be allocated from the kernel
@Yashas which platform? There are multiple executable formats
@Mgetz A very unpopular one: AMX.
REG_DISPCNT is the Display Control Register in GBA.
@Mgetz I am looking for a generic term.
13:11
@Yashas It's called a loader, and it's just a matter of parsing the executable file, mapping the sections, setting the bits, flushing the TLB, and calling into the start routine (on most platforms)
It's actually for this. That documentation is aimed for high schoolers (because it's used in Counter Strike, SA-MP, etc. which are played by school students). I was trying to add a section defining data segment, code segment, etc. because it wasn't defined before ther registers section where it's used (people aren't expected to know anything while reading the doc)
I am creating a file called gba/gba-toolbox.h that will contain #defines to make things easier for the game designer.
@Yashas eh VMs like that don't normally have segments like that because they aren't necessary. The VMs loader manages all that when it loads the 'binary' into memory. But since the binary in most of those cases isn't ever JITed it doesn't matter
@EdwinPratt that's the job of the runtime to define those things, they would also need to be sure the addresses are correct and usable in a sane manner
I wrote one where I explained that things are nicely organized in files and what not but I am struggling with finding a suitable name for that section. I have already used "File and Memory Layout" as a title for another section which eloborates on the details so I can't use it again (to avoid confusion).
13:13
though fixed memory mapped stuff is often just an int cast to a void*
@ratchetfreak OK... Thanks...
14:14
How can I write a language in C++?
 
2 hours later…
16:07
hi guys, I was wondering why it's not possible to concatenate two strings like this in C++

std::string message = "hello" + " world";
because "hello" is not a std::string, it is a const char[].
you could do std::string message = std::string{"hello"} + std:.string{" world"};
nwp
nwp
Alternatively using namespace std::string_literals; std::string message = "hello"s + " world"s;.
Or std::string message = std::string{} + "hello" + " world";.
Or std::string message = "hello" " world";.
The point is that "Hello" is a C string that doesn't understand + as concatenation. You need to insert an std::string somehow which does.
okay thanks
I am reading a book and there they included <string>, but I forgot to do it, yet my code worked
so I'm a bit confused on what the benefits are of including <string>
nwp
nwp
That means you included something else that includes <string>. Don't rely on that though.
ugh, why isn't string just a part of the core language
nwp
nwp
16:18
Because that would mean that the language is so bad that you can't even implement strings.
It is considered good style to keep the core language small and enable writing libraries.
 
7 hours later…
23:32
How can I generate doubles within various ranges?
23:43
Write some code

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