@Rick "Can you give some example or a link to a topic." is not a question at all. SO wants a best expert answer. You cannot have a best example. Additionally link-only answers are considered bad. In combination with "What is predicate in C++?" it is kind of a question, but at the quality of "How is babby formed??" with no way to create a precise answer, because you can always add more information and have no clue what information the person needs.
Additionally people sometimes use the same words for different things, so the question arose in context with something, but that something was not given, so you are lacking required context.
It is phrased much better and gives much better context, but it is still a terrible question.
The question is from the ancient times when any garbage got 100 upvotes. Nowadays it would instantly be downvoted and closed.
The standard for what is acceptable on SO has changed significantly over the years to you have to look at the question date to understand why some questions are received the way they are.
OK. So it's a bad question as for SO and probably it should be asked in other sites. Maybe for softwareengineering.stackoverflow.com it's considered a proper one?
The absolute minimum is to give context, like "unary predicate which returns true for the required elements", but even then the answer helps maybe 1 person and does not reflect the vision of creating a collection of expert knowledge. Also the answer would still be RTFM because the term is linked and explained.
i am trying to pass a void* as an argument through a function. I first had a struct pointer and i casted it to void*. in the function i recasted that void* to struct* but variables in it are different than before
no compiler errors and no runtime crashes, values are different
How do you preserve the formatting and colors when pasting C++ code into PowerPoint? Surely there must be a more elegant way other than the Notepad++ Npp route. Do you have any experience with it?
essentially Im trying to drag a widget from 1 qtWidget to another, and upon dropping I need to re-connect the signal to use the newer qtWidget data members
@Dariusz I'm fairly sure you don't need to store the function and you don't pass a pointer to an std::function. You should pass in the std::function by value and it should work.
so is this how the constructor of QAction should look like? icAction(QString text, QObject *objPtr, std::function<void()> functionPtr)?
as far as I can tell, if I connect a signal and then do drag/drop between 2 tool bars that does simple print this, no matter where I drag the button to it will always call the original toolbar function and not the curently parrented toolbar function
Another idea would be to not connect to the object directly. Instead you connect to a function inside myAction. The function then uses parent() to figure out which toolbar it is currently in and call the slot on it.
error C2664: 'myAction::myAction(const myAction&)': cannot convert argument 3 from 'void (__cdecl icToolBar::* )(void)' to 'std::function<void (void)>' note: No constructor could take the source type, or constructor overload resolution was ambiguous error C2664: 'std::function<void (icToolBar &)>::function(std::function<void (icToolBar &)> &&)': cannot convert argument 1 from 'std::function<void (void)>' to 'std::nullptr_t' note: No user-defined-conversion operator available that can perform this conversion, or the operator cannot be called
error C2338: Signal and slot arguments are not compatible. note: see reference to function template instantiation 'QMetaObject::Connection QObject::connect<void(__cdecl QAction::* )(bool),std::function<void (icToolBar *)>*>(const QAction *,Func1,const QObject *,Func2,Qt::ConnectionType)' being compiled with [ Func1=void (__cdecl QAction::* )(bool), Func2=std::function<void (icToolBar *)> * ]
o here is rest of error, didnt notice the below part
] C:\Qt\5.10.1\msvc2017_64\include\QtCore/qobjectdefs_impl.h(351): error C2228: left of '.()' must have class/struct/union C:\Qt\5.10.1\msvc2017_64\include\QtCore/qobjectdefs_impl.h(351): note: type is 'std::function<void (icToolBar *)> *' C:\Qt\5.10.1\msvc2017_64\include\QtCore/qobjectdefs_impl.h(351): note: did you intend to use '->' instead? C:\Qt\5.10.1\msvc2017_64\include\QtCore/qobject.h(323): note: see reference to class template instantiation 'QtPrivate::FunctorReturnType<Func2,QtPrivate::List_Left<QtPrivate::List<bool>,0>::Value>' being compiled
It may not do what you want yet though, because it doesn't do dynamic lookup of the toolbar, it just captures a single toolbar.
So we don't actually want to do mFunction(objPtr);, we want to do mFunction(get_the_current_tool_bar());. Not sure where exactly you get that from, but calling parent() from the right object might do the trick.
mFunction(objPtr) is highlighted and say that called object is not a function error C3480: 'icAction::mFunction': a lambda capture variable must be from an enclosing function scope error C4573: the usage of 'icAction::mFunction' requires the compiler to capture 'this' but the current default capture mode does not allow it error C2064: term does not evaluate to a function taking 1 arguments
connect(this, &QAction::triggered, [this]{ mFunction(); }); error C2064: term does not evaluate to a function taking 0 arguments note: class does not define an 'operator()' or a user defined conversion operator to a pointer-to-function or reference-to-function that takes appropriate number of arguments
connect(this, &QAction::triggered, [this] { mFunction(objPtr); }); error C3493: 'objPtr' cannot be implicitly captured because no default capture mode has been specified
I need help debugging a strange edge case in which adding code later in the program can cause lines earlier on to cause segmentation faults. Is anyone willing?
one line introduction to valgrind: valgrind --vgdb=yes --vgdb-error=0 ./my_program in one terminal, and open another terminal and follow the instructions from shown in the first one (as in, running gdb ./my_program and paste in the command target remote | whatever). That will allow you to break into the debugger at the first memory corruption
I'll rewrite this message to for better linkability
one line introduction to valgrind: valgrind --vgdb=yes --vgdb-error=0 ./my_program in one terminal, and open another terminal and follow the instructions from shown in the first one (as in, running gdb ./my_program and paste in the command target remote | whatever). This will provide a debugger with the program's currently executed instruction being at the start. If you issue a continue command in the debugger, it will stop at the first detected memory corruption error.
So I ran Valgrind on it and got: Before segfault ==18585== Use of uninitialised value of size 8 ==18585== at 0x109C0D: main (xievent.cpp:48) ==18585== ==18585== (action on error) vgdb me ...
I take this to mean that one of the two variables on that line was uninitialized
Unfortunately, those variables are initialized without the additional code below it.
if there's none, and the API exposes the data members (it does in this case, as you can access ->deviceid), and the docs don't say otherwise, you should be able to declare a variable of the struct itself, assign appropriate values to all the members, and pass the pointer to it