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02:04
I have a get function which returns a vector of structs. I want to optimise it by making it accept an empty vector by reference and having the function populate it with the structs. However, I've heard about copy elision and other compiler optimisations, would this make my optimisation unnecessary?
 
3 hours later…
04:54
@nobism why would you populate a vector inside a get function? And unless you are working on a project where speed is critical, your compiler is almost always going to do a better job at optimizing your code
so don't do any optimizations until it's called for
 
2 hours later…
07:04
@MiroslavCetojevic Thanks, I worked out that I don't need to do that thanks to the compiler optimising out a copy when the function returns.
 
4 hours later…
10:55
Why multiple template instantiations of template won't cause link stage redefinition errors?
I mean, template functions and static data member, those which defines outside class, have extern linkage, right?
nwp
nwp
At least some of those are implicitly inline.
Hmmmm
which means that ODR doesn't apply to them, but every instance of the template instantiation in the object files must be the same or UB comes to bite you
this also means that you can simply declare a template's signature in the header and define and instantiate it in another translation unit and it will still work.
Yes, I know the latter, which is called explict instantiation.
Wait, allow me to check C++ Primer again.
Ok. Functions defined inside class are implicily inline. But those defined outside class without specifiying inline have extern linkage.
@ratchetfreak Do this use the same mechanism as inline functions?
Ok. I would just take these two as similar stuffs.
:D Thanks
@nwp But a static member of a template class can't be inline.
nwp
nwp
11:32
@Rick Why not?
11:55
Please someone tell me good place to learn virtual functions, abstract classes and polymorphism in c++, my exams nearby and i am going slowly with c++ primer 5th ed
Still dont understand "temporaries dont bindn to non const lvalue references", have seen this many times, just dont understand it what it means
void foo(T& t);
T functionThatReturnsTByValue();
foo(functionThatReturnsTByValue()); // compile error
Ahh seems logical in this context.
But why this is not good: a = fnThatReturnsByValue(); // a is an object
waiiiit!!
12:39
let me see if I get that right: lvalues are objects to which you can assign values, but temporaries are immediately destroyed after..., well, when?
I guess temporaries are destroyed after their creation, no matter what, but I don't know the exact process
nwp
nwp
lvalues and rvalues are an implementation detail you don't need to know about.
What you do need to know about is temoraries and not temporaries.
And how to turn non-temporaries into temporaries.
To identify if you have a temporary or not you can try to take the address of the thing in question.
If it compiles it's not a temporary, otherwise it is.
So &42 doesn't compile, so 42 is a temporary.
vector<vector<int> > dp(m + 1, vector<int> (n + 1, 0));
Hi can anyone tell me...what doesn't mean
Like size matrix will it form?
nwp
nwp
You care about that because you can rip the guts from temporaries and nobody cares because they die anyway.
Which can be more efficient.
@MiroslavCetojevic Temporaries are usually destroyed at the next ; of the expression where they are created.
ooh ok got it. Don't bother
 
1 hour later…
14:19
@MiroslavCetojevic At the end of the full expression in which they're created, except when extended (e.g., used to initialize a reference to const, in which case the temporary gets the lifetime of the reference).
 
5 hours later…
19:20
could somebody help me please? it's very urgent
i've done some changes but my 'insert' is not working
could you please look and help me understand why?
the function is located under 'functionality.cpp'
 
1 hour later…
20:30
if i have a function that returns int for instance, and i only care for what it returns if the condition is true, to what do i need to set the else so it will be defined correctly?
@BeginningMath could you please make an (MCVE)[stackoverflow.com/help/mcve]?
@BeginningMath In C++, you only need to define variables which you will ever use.
int returnIDThreeArguments(std::vector<std::string> args)
{

int id = std::stoi(args[2]);
if(checkIfIdISOutOfRange(id) == false) {return id;}
}
this is the warning i get: warning: control may reach end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type]
basically i check if some id i get from a vector is bigger than a const number i defined, and if not i return it
but what do i need to write for the else to avoid this warning?
if i say "return 0" i think it might be problematic, and i don't know if it's legal to return NULL
@EuriPinhollow, do you think of a solution?
 
1 hour later…
22:04
@BeginningMath well, you need to think of a default value to return, because it can happen that your if condition never gets executed, and there's no value to return then
i "cheated" by returning -1 and then verifying in the receiving function that id must be bigger than 0
but i believe that in a modern language like cpp, there's a better solution to that
I'm sure there's a better solution, because your function kinda sucks
then show me an alternative
you have a function that says it takes three arguments, but you only supply one argument (a vector), it makes zero sense
I don't know WHY you are doing what you are doing, and your explanations make no sense to me most of the time anyway, so I'm not capable of showing you a better alternative
sometimes, it's better to ask before jumping into stupid conclusions
most of my functions use only 2 arguments from the vector, this is the name i've given to make a distinction between them, because it uses 3, so the position of the id is in a different index
22:11
let me be blunt: it's a terrible name, and I can't tell you how to better name them because I have no idea what your function is supposed to do
if you cannot help but you prefer to fight, don't waste my time
i prefer to utilize my time to learn and improve, not to fight with children. thank you
good luck with that
@BeginningMath I'll try to help. Returning -1 may very well be a valid return value from your function if that's what you want it to do.
But there are number of ways you could clarify the intent of your function.
e.g. Don't get id from the command line in your function, instead, get it before and pass it as an argument.
thank you very much. i was reading in stackoverflow about that, and i can use a unique pointer for my vector, and maybe like that i can return nullptr if needed, but basically if it's an int function, pretty much all of the answers were about just returning some value and then dealing with it in the implementing function
that's what i did nobisim, it's an internal function that passes it as an argument to an another function. if that's what you meant
Consider returning a bool, these types of functions are very easy to read since you can name them isValueValid or hasBeenUpdated etc.
22:25
i'll work on the names of the functions. they indeed need improvement
thank you
Also, have a look at std::optional, it is a type that allows you to return 2 values (pair/tuple), an error value and some result. A caller would check the error value, if its OK then you use the value, else you handle the error.
I don't suggest you use it just yet, but just be aware of the different ways that functions can return results/errors etc.
checkIfIdISOutOfRange can be renamed to isIdOutOfRange. The verb check is very broad and doesn't infer what true or false would mean.
okay, will edit the code. thank you very much. also i'll read on std::optional
cool : )
22:43
the "three-args" function cough is just there to return the id to be inserted into a tree along with a name
so getID would have been just as sufficient
or returnID to keep consistent with returnName
then before inserting name and id, a check needs to be made that both values are valid

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