@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 *.
@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 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.
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