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08:54
2
Q: How to check if file is executable in C++?

RellaSo I have a path to file. How to check if it is executable? (unix, C++)

Is this just for unix?
Or cross platform
nwp
nwp
<unistd.h> is a Linux header that doesn't exist in Windows.
One might say <unistd.h> is the equivalent of <windows.h>.
Equivalent in platform dependency, not in functionality.
Does windows.h have that function
nwp
nwp
Probably, under another name, with a different interface.
Isn't there a way to "check if a file is executable" But cross-platform
nwp
nwp
Though honestly under Windows you just check if the file ending is .exe.
09:00
Ok then for unix I'll use the question's answer
nwp
nwp
Depending on your definition of executable you might want to count .bat and .py files as executable too, even when they technically are not.
 
2 hours later…
10:52
12 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@nwp .exe and a valid executable format, NTLoader will run PE and ELF IIRC
technically com files too.... but not on 64bit
nwp
nwp
And then there is rundll32.exe.
that should not be used
although people abuse it all the time
 
1 hour later…
12:10
//exe ~ bat ~ py

int pathLen=path.length();
if(path[pathLen-4]=='.' && path[pathLen-3]=='e' && path[pathLen-2]=='x' && path[pathLen-1]=='e'){
return true;
}
else if(path[pathLen-4]=='.' && path[pathLen-3]=='b' && path[pathLen-2]=='a' && path[pathLen-1]=='t'){
return true;
}
else if(path[pathLen-3]=='.' && path[pathLen-2]=='p' && path[pathLen-1]=='y'){
return true;
}
This is what I've written
nwp
nwp
You should really make a list of file endings and use std::string_view or something to compare them in a loop. And if indeed you care about .py you'll also care about a lot of other file endings.
for (const auto &ending : [".exe", ".bat", ".py"]) {
    if (std::string_view{path}.endswith(ending)) {
        return true;
    }
}
return false;
Though .endswith() is a C++20 feature that might not be available to you.
Well it looks a lot cleaner
nwp
nwp
In theory you could do a KMP search to make it O(k) with k = length of the longest ending, but that requires effort and is probably overkill.
Yeah creating prefixes is the thing
I'm familiar with rabin karp but spurious hits is the thing
Well this rises a more question the difference between std::string and std::string_view
nwp
nwp
Maybe consider using regex. ".*\.(?:exe)|(?:py)|(?:bat)" or something similar.
12:19
Just wanna keep code simple and clean
So i guess .endswith is the thing
nwp
nwp
Unfortunately "simple and clean" means different things to different people.
return path.match(".*\.(?:exe)|(?:py)|(?:bat)"); looks simple and clean to me, but it's not quite C++ and I guess it's fair to say that reading regex isn't exactly simple.
Maybe drop the ?: for readability.
Well let's assume a file is named MYFILE.exe__.exe
Will regex pass?
I'm unfamiliar with regex though
nwp
nwp
That's a good point. Add a $ to the end.
Regex is a little tricky, but if you use regex101.com it becomes much easier to arrive at a useful regex.
FWIW you can always check the registry on windows for a list of files it has executable handlers for
buuuut that just means the shell knows what to do about it
I'll look after regex and chrono as I'm unfamiliar with both libs
nwp
nwp
12:29
Chrono is not that complicated, just a little verbose. Regex is probably worth learning about. They occasionally come in handy.
fun fact any extension under HKEY_ROOT with handler {098f2470-bae0-11cd-b579-08002b30bfeb} is definitely executable
nwp
nwp
Then the question of whether a file is executable depends on the system you happen to be on. Which actually makes sense, but still might be surprising.
as best I can tell the shell checks HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT for the extension, then uses that handler to deal with it
in theory you could create your own extension, set the loader GUID as the persistant file handler and it would work. But I think MS trys to block that
 
1 hour later…
13:54
#include <chrono>
void greet(){
auto start=std::chrono::system_clock::now();
auto t=(std::chrono::system_clock::to_time_t(start));
std::string currTime=std::ctime(&t);
int time=atoi(currTime.substr(11,2));
std::cout<<time;
}
getting errors
g++ main.cpp -std=c++2a -I../deps -lstdc++fs
In file included from main.cpp:3:
greet.h: In function ‘void greet()’:
greet.h:7:34: error: cannot convert ‘std::__cxx11::basic_string<char>’ to ‘const char*’
7 | int time=atoi(currTime.substr(11,2));
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~
| |
| std::__cxx11::basic_string<char>
In file included from /usr/include/c++/9/cstdlib:75,
from /usr/include/c++/9/bits/stl_algo.h:59,
from /usr/include/c++/9/string:52,
nwp
nwp
What are you trying to do? Print the current time?
current hour
as 11th and 12th indexes are hour
nwp
nwp
The compiler complains about you passing an std::string to atoi when it expects a const char *, but you shouldn't be using any of that anyways.
use c_str?
nwp
nwp
That's the shitty workaround to quickly hack the code together.
13:58
that didnt worked as well
nwp
nwp
It's not the correct way to print the current hour.
then how?
nwp
nwp
There is no reason to convert the string into an int and then have std::cout convert the int back into a string either.
actually im comparing the hours
nwp
nwp
I think the standard library makes this excessively difficult for no reason.
QTime::currentTime().hour(). It's not that difficult.
14:01
i tried the -'0' trick
but that didnt work
nwp
nwp
But no, gotta fuck around with C interfaces.
std::cout<<currTime[11]-'0'<<currTime[12]-'0';
works fine
and prints 19 but when adding it suprisingly becomes 10
nwp
nwp
It feels bad to have strings involved at all.
is Qtime a part of QT?
14:10
thanks
IIRC fixes to chrono were delayed on the assumption that howard's time library would be merged
14:53
how can I overload ++ operator for a enum clas variable ?
nwp
nwp
14
Q: Operators overloading for enums

There is nothing we can doIs it possible to define operators for enums? For example I have enum Month in my class and I would like to be able to write ++my_month. Thanks P.S. In order to avoid overflowing I did something like this: void Date::add_month() { switch(my_month_) { case Dec: my_month_ = J...

Ron
Ron
What does a class need in order to be stored in a std::map<int, MyClass> container? Ctor, copy ctor, copy assignment, anything else?
nwp
nwp
I don't think those last 2 are required.
Ron
Ron
I see. What's wrong with the std::map<int, MyClass> = {1, MyClass(123,456)}; map initialization?
nwp
nwp
15:04
You are giving it the initialization arguments for a key-value pair, but you're initializing a map with it.
Pretty sure you need at least extra {} and even then type deduction will probably fail you.
Ron
Ron
Do I need to overload the < operator for a class?
nwp
nwp
Not necessarily. You can also pass a comparator. But the overloading is probably easier.
Ron
Ron
I see. Thanks. Appreciate it.
nwp
nwp
It doesn't look like the mapped type has any special requirements. You'll have to be able to get the object into the map somehow which requires it to be constructible somehow, but I'm pretty sure even brick types like std::mutex are supported.
Just to be clear, for std::map<int, MyClass> you don't need to overload operator <. The key needs to be comparable which is int; the mapped type MyClass doesn't need to be comparable.
Ron
Ron
I see. If it were std::map<MyClass, int>, would I need a custom comparator class then?
nwp
nwp
15:17
You would need a way to properly compare MyClasses, yes. Either through operator < or by passing the comparator explicitly.
Ron
Ron
Thank you.

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