for (unsigned short index = 0u; index != NUMBER_OF_TESTS; ++index)
test(index); // Fails at indices 69, 420, and 2020
test(69); // Succeeds
test(420); // Succeeds
test(2020); // Succeeds
I know, there's not much context here but I'd still appreciate an opinion regardless.
Or nevermind.. I won't get an opinion unless I heavily edit it as an acceptable & interesting question anyways...
@ApoorvaAnand Yea, I wish. Did a lot of digging in the code (which was hellish) and it turns out it has something to do with the memory structure of objects being tested in the `test()` cases since I'm using bit fields and `malloc` &`realloc`.
I have a shared pointer storing a base class, like this:
std::shared_ptr<Base> baseClassPointer;
How do I check whether it is currently holding an instance of an SuperClassA? Where:
public class SuperClassA : public Base {} // There can be many other superclasses
I've tried something like below...