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Sam
Sam
11:54
How can I define an optional vector in a class constructor?
My Class Event holds a reference std::vector<std::unique_ptr<Effect>> effects; and I want to construct an Event object with an empty vector
I thought maybe:
Event stroke = { patient, 10.0, 0.1, 5.0, Risk::riskOfStroke,
	std::vector<std::unique_ptr<Effect>> };
But I'm getting a compile error "type name not allowed"
nwp
nwp
std::vector<std::unique_ptr<Effect>> is a type. std::vector<std::unique_ptr<Effect>>{} is an object.
Sam
Sam
Ahh right
suppose I got the following code (in two headers)
// Folder.hpp
class Folder {

};

// Message.hpp
#include <set>
#include "Folder.hpp"

class Message {
private:
	std::set<Folder*> folders;
}
why do I get the error ‘Folder’ was not declared in this scope
seems, this line std::set<Folder*> folders; is the culprit, but why?
12:12
Are you missing a semicolon after the Message class definition?
no, it seems that including the Message header to the Folder class was the mistake
must've become a circular conundrum or something
Yes, that would make it so Message appears before Folder
You should also add header guards to your header files
it's done automatically, I just strip the code, whenever I post it here
Alright, but if you're having problems with some code, and then show people different code, they might not be able to help you.
You shouldn't post all of your code, because that would be too large, but you can copy the project and remove irrelevant parts until you have a smaller example that still has the same problem. stackoverflow.com/help/mcve
 
1 hour later…
Sam
Sam
13:51
How can I make a safe guard against checking whether the index of a boolean vector is true in the case that it is empty? I can't predefine a vector size as its not going to be known
if (this->patient->hadEvent.at(this->index) == true) currently fails if the vector value at the position is empty
I mean I could just wrap it in another if but I don't like using ifs if i can avoid
Saying that I guess I'd need to know its size
Hi. When using standard C++ only is it good idea to input from stream and output to C-file because of how painful using <iomanip> is?
@EuriPinhollow depends on how much you hate iostreams
C style io has it's own issues
14:10
Yeah but simply formatting numbers is done easily in C without excesive punctuation and naming.
Doing output formatting with iomanip is like writing regexp with words.
It surely is more readable but why do it if people were using C formats for decades and are used to them.
Am I missing anything?
@EuriPinhollow descriptor leaks, undefined behavior, type safety missing, and boost.format
Thanks, using boost is obviously better.
don't get me wrong... iostreams suuuuck\
but C io is in many ways just as bad
I know.
Therefore I'll use Boost.
Sam
Sam
14:44
Not sure if this is a bit ambitious. Suppose I have two instances of a custom class Event. Is there a way I can define some sort of relationship between the two which informs when I should stop using instance 1 and move to instance 2?
Write a mockup please.
Сode which you would like to work.
Sam
Sam
It might help if I draw a schematic initially
Something like this: goo.gl/D8qwgx
I have an encapsulated health state which itself is comprised of inner states
so a state machine
Sam
Sam
Yeah I guess so
I want to try and write code which allows a user to define these states and relationships without having to write the state code themselves if that makes sense
Maybe with each instantiation of an object I can pass in the possible classes which can be transitioned to?
15:39
@Sam generally I encourage Event classes to be idempotent after creation and the same in the order of handling
Sam
Sam
So each Event object be an element of an ordered set where the ordering defines the states?
Wait maybe I should google idempotent first
dempotence is a funky word that often hooks people.
15:59
@Sam yeah the events basically say "X happened" you then have handlers for various types of events to actually make changes to things
16:39
Is there a standard way of making locking/unlocking mutex RAII-complient?
Some kind of pre-defined guard.
nvm altavistaed it
What's C++-equivalent of waiting for event without spinning?
I.e. what STL class is implemented that way?
It's a bad question probably.
that depends on the event, but most of the time there is a wait function
In OS API - yes, of course there's always wait function.
that depends on another thread notifying the variable
16:57
Well I did not expect GDB to be built into C++.
17:17
@EuriPinhollow just a heads up condition variables are broken on windows
and won't be fixed until next release of VS (major)
17:59
@EuriPinhollow what is GDB?
are these codes equivalent? (variables are all pointers)
for (auto p = first_free; p != elements;) alloc.destroy(--p);

for (auto p = first_free; p != elements; p--) alloc.destroy(p);
18:19
@MiroslavCetojevic gnu debugger.
@MiroslavCetojevic No, not equivalent. The first never calls destroy on the initial value of p.
@JerryCoffin yeah, I realized
@JerryCoffin so the debugger is now in the C++ specs?
@Mgetz lmao! I'll just use MinGW. When will they fix wcout tho?
@MiroslavCetojevic It was a joke. It's not reasonable to expect C++ to provide memory or expression watchdogs, those are implemented in debuggers.
 
2 hours later…
20:39
@EuriPinhollow mingw IIRC doesn't have an implementation at all
@EuriPinhollow Actually, I've often found it pretty useful to do notify watchers when a write happens (albeit, using operator overloading, not watching the target storage).
20:55
oh for fuck's sake.
Actually, it's implemented if I am not mistaking it: https://sourceforge.net/p/mingw/bugs/2314/
21:28
@EuriPinhollow those are OS condition variables which don't actually match the semantics of the standards (sadly)
@Mgetz I'll use boost then.
is there a list that shows all the ways in which a lvalue or a rvalue is returned?
21:42
isocpp.github.io/CppCoreGuidelines/… - there's a "bad" example there. I do not understand, how does adding condition to waiting prevent thread2 from blocking forever?
How can thread2 ever unblock except by being notified?
22:12
@EuriPinhollow thanks
22:51
can i ask c related question here ?
sure
only rule of asking C questions is to say you're looking for C answers (otherwise people will assume you're using C++)
23:28
so basically i am trying to make a mpi ping pong using c which actually pings back and forth for like 50 times this fuction i am calling from another fuction now when i am trying to get the total execution time ... it keeps printing the time twice .. with different values i assume this is because it executing print for different processor i dont understand what is the issue here .... any hints
*** double startTime, endTime;
startTime = MPI_Wtime();
for(int i=0;i<50;i++) {
send_rcv(i);
}
endTime= MPI_Wtime();
int time=1000000*(endTime-startTime);
printf("TOTAL TIME :: %dµs \n",time);
printf("TIME TAKEN FOR SINGLE TRANSMISSION :: %dµs \n", time/50); ***
well, first print is total time, and 2nd print is single transmission which is divided by 50
you are not printing the same value
what were you expecting?
well yes i am getting them both but they both gets printed two times
for some reason ... i dont know with different time values ... i want them to be printed only once
perhaps the function is called twice?
not really its called only once since i have wrapped it inside another fuction basically if it was called twice then mpi ping should have been done like 100 times which is not the case here ...
well, I can't tell with the code you showed
perhaps try running your code there: coliru.stacked-crooked.com
23:40
ok
and then post your link here
what's mpi?
message passing interface basically used to communicate between two processors
independently
@AtharvaPandey Presumably you have two processes, and both of them are printing
23:46
yes i know that is what is happening i think i guess i will just post this question because i am not able to figure out how to fix this
pick arbitrary process (by rank id) and print only in that one process
okay but that can be done only for single transmission what about total time ? thats where the whole problem is
what is stopping you
there is no rule that says you can only call MPI_Comm_rank once
actually i tried making a global variable to store time for some reason the program was crashing ... and i cant store the total time hmm i ll check if i can get this with rank id outside of the function block ... :) thanks anyways
hmm will try that
literally a matter of replacing
printf("TOTAL TIME :: %dµs \n",time);
printf("TIME TAKEN FOR SINGLE TRANSMISSION :: %dµs \n", time/50);
with this:
int my_rank;
MPI_Comm_rank(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &my_rank);
if(my_rank != 0)
    return;
printf("TOTAL TIME :: %dµs \n",time);
printf("TIME TAKEN FOR SINGLE TRANSMISSION :: %dµs \n", time/50);
23:56
replacing with that does not print time at all
oops it did sorry haha thanks again
so basically i can use mpi comm rank any number of times in any function it does not affect the over all program i thought this might break it

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