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Ron
Ron
13:05
How does one utilize wildcards with std::filesystem::path if at all?
I get it doesn't accept wildcards. I guess one must resort to OS APIs...
I think even OS apis don't do wildcards, you have to do the directory iteration yourself
Ron
Ron
I wonder why the recursive_directory_iterator does not support partial names like `C:\\somefolder*\`.
Mess...
13:37
it's not that hard to filter out names you don't want while iterating
nwp
nwp
@Ron Because OSs and file libraries generally don't understand wildcards. That is a console feature.
If you do things like ls * then the shell expands the * and ls actually gets all the files. If you use popen or something and actually call ls with * then it will say it cannot find a file called *.
that's because the shell is doing the expanding before ls gets executed
Ron
Ron
13:55
I see. Appreciate it.
@Ron Mostly because directory_iterators are intended to be a fairly thin layer to give compatibility between OSes, not something that adds a lot of features nearly no OS provides.
Ron
Ron
14:14
@JerryCoffin Indeed. I was under the impression the OS supports wildcards in API calls.
It turns out it does not.
it's a feature of the shell, not the OS
Ron
Ron
Ah right.
Perhaps I should be aiming for the ShFileOperation on Windows...
@Ron That depends on the OS. UNIX/Linux just let you open a directory and read all the entries. Windows lets you pass in a wildcard to filter what you read. Even there, however, the wildcard support is only in FindFirstFile/FindNextFile (and friends) not anything you use when actually opening a file.
Ron
Ron
I see.
All clear. Appreciate it.
@ratchetfreak Sometimes. Sometimes it is a feature of the OS.
Ron
Ron
14:23
When an recursive_directory_iterator throws, then what? How to handle such situation?
Catch the catch (const filesystem_error& e) exception?
Silently handle, that is. I don't know if the loop continues or not.
How to wrap this example in a try catch block so that ensure the loop continues?
Perhaps it's easier to give up on this file system and go native...
Excuse the spam. Yucky Windows is to blame.
15:15
@Ron in general those errors are handlable so I use the version of method calls that takes the error code.
Hi
I try a lot of variations, how is possible to specialize a object on a pointer and on a concrete instance in the same time?
Wrapper<T> myWrapper;
Wrapper<T*> pMyWrapper;
template<class T, size_t S> class Wrapper{ public: T myType[S]; T* getType(){ return myType; }}
Ron
Ron
@Mgetz Ah right, many thanks, missed that overload.
will not work as in the second case will dereferentiate the T array
15:45
@Ron Yeah in most cases filesystem stuff isn't exceptional... and when it is I'll let it throw
@LXSoft See the type traits, it has add and remove pointer traits
 
6 hours later…
21:16
How could I obtain the derived class typeid, given the following scenario bellow?
struct Foo
{
template <typename E>
void bar() {
map[typeid(E)] = 0U;
}

void bar(const SomeBaseClass& e) {
// ...?
}

std::map<std::type_index, std::size_t> map;
};
if its even possible in C++11...
 
1 hour later…
22:20
the answer can not use CRTP btw
22:51
Hi so I have an array of time_points, defined as such:
std::array<std::chrono::time_point<std::chrono::steady_clock>, 12> tpoints;
My question is how would I design two functions such that, first function when called will activate the corresponding function of the first encountered timepoint over a certain threshold.

second function will reset the last used time point
An example is I have the array time points are like so:

20, 10, 30, 62, 50, 30, 1, 2, 9, 10, 61, 15
So calling function 1 should call the corresponding function to tpoints[3]
and then when I call function 2 later on, it'll reset tpoints[3] to 0
How would I accomplish something like this? I would thiinkkkkkkk? i'd need a unique ptr or somethiing but not honestly sure what to do

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