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01:32
I have a template class like this
template<(class TKey , class TValue >
class MyMap{
void Insert(TKey key, TValue value){}//insert#1

template<std::size_t N>
void Insert(char(&key)[N], TValue value){}//insert#2
}
This is how I called the insertion function char x[] = "abc";
I didn't get any errors, and the first insertion function got called. if i remove it the second insertion get called.
why I didnt get an error? and why the second function wasnt called
p.s I dont really need the first insertion function in my code, I dont understand why this happened
also if passed TKey by reference the second insertion works as expected, at least to my understanding
01:49
@PeterT Now i get it haha thanks Peter !!!
 
6 hours later…
08:13
can I execute statements with local variable in GDB?
e.g. `if( a ) {cout << "true" << endl;}`
nwp
nwp
08:42
Probably. It has a Python interpreter build in, so at least through that is should be possible. This video shows it off.
How can I concatenate the binary form of two ints (32 bits) to obtain a long long (64 bits)?
you can either bitshift stuff into place or you can just memcpy the "upper" part into place
int a=5;
int b=8;
uint64_t c;
memcpy(&c,&a,4);
memcpy(((char*)&c)+4,&b,4);
nwp
nwp
@ma1169 It's difficult to tell because you didn't even say what TKey you used, but the answer will be that the first Insert is a better match than the second in this case. The rules on what a better match is are a bit complicated. Usually it just works and sometimes you need to change it a bit until it works.
 
1 hour later…
09:53
@PeterT Will the memcpy metod break when the endianness changes?
@nwp Thanks, I will take a look
10:48
how does one find a whole word in a string? Say I wanted to only find 'our' and not 'our' in y'our's or some other word?
for example this is a snippet of my code: for (size_t i{};i<counter;++i)
{

s1.replace(s1.find(word1,i),word1.length(),word2);
}
nwp
nwp
You could use regex and check if there is a word boundary before and after.
I am trying to replace a word1 in a string with word2
ok nwp I will try that
nwp
nwp
(^| )our(\.|,| |$)
Something like that.
 
3 hours later…
13:24
How atomic<uint16_t> converts to uint16_t?

[Here is the code snippet](https://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/b8df3347eb07cf34):
#include<boost/atomic.hpp>
#include<map>
#include<string>
#include<iostream>

int main()
{
std::map<uint16_t, std::string> map_record;
boost::atomic<uint16_t> seq{0};

map_record[seq] = std::string("thanks"); //how atomic<uint16_t> converts to uint16_t?

std::cout << map_record.at(seq) << std::endl;
}
nwp
nwp
There is a conversion operator that allows converting from std::atomic<T> to T. It's from the standard library, not from boost, but it should be the same implementation.
I see, thank you.
[Why this code snippet does not compile?](https://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/2406feee80df09f8)

#include<boost/atomic.hpp>

class Demo
{
public:
static boost::atomic<uint16_t> total_cnt;
static boost::atomic<uint16_t> cur_idx;
}

boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::total_cnt{5};
boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::cur_idx = 0; //why this does not work? There is "operator=()" for boost::atomic indeed.

int main()
{
}
Here is the error message:
main.cpp:11:31: error: copying variable of type 'boost::atomic<uint16_t>' (aka 'atomic<unsigned short>') invokes deleted constructor
boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::cur_idx = 0; //why this does not work? There is "operator=()" for boost::atomic indeed.
Maybe I find the answer:
boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::cur_idx = 0 invokes the copy constructor other than the copy assignment constructor. Am I right?
nwp
nwp
13:41
I wouldn't call it a copy constructor since it doesn't make a copy between objects of the same type. And you mean assignment operator.
But basically yes.
There is the atomic(T initial_value) constructor though. But = init is weird. I forgot what the deal with that was.
The compiler complains that 'atomic' has been explicitly marked deleted here
BOOST_DELETED_FUNCTION(atomic(atomic const&)).
so boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::cur_idx = 0 invokes copy constructor(i.e atomic(atomic const&)) indeed.
nwp
nwp
I don't know why it does that.
Neither me.
But this code snippet works:
boost::atomic<uint16_t> last_idx;
last_idx = 0;
#include<boost/atomic.hpp>

class Demo
{
public:
static boost::atomic<uint16_t> total_cnt;
static boost::atomic<uint16_t> cur_idx;
};

boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::total_cnt{5};
//boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::cur_idx = 0; //why this does not work? There is "operator=()" for boost::atomic indeed.

int main()
{
boost::atomic<uint16_t> last_idx;
last_idx = 0; //this one works
}
nwp
nwp
14:01
So boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::cur_idx = 0 must be interpreted as boost::atomic<uint16_t> Demo::cur_idx = boost::atomic<uint16_t>{0};.
And then it looks at overloads for operator = of which there is T and const boost::atomic<uint16_t> & and the latter is better.
That's my best attempt at explaining it.
Why they thought the initializer must be converted to T and why it uses assignment at all is a mystery to me.
And the standard rarely answers such questions. You'd have to look at meeting notes I guess. Too much effort for me.
 
2 hours later…
15:45
@nwp Thanks, FYI, I used char x[] as Tkey
 
3 hours later…
18:40
enum byte : unsigned char {}; // byte is a new integer type
byte b { 42 };       // OK as of C++17 (direct-list-initialization)
from the documentation, why can I declare byte b if the enum is empty?
probably because that's not an enum class or scoped enum
it's just basically a rename of unsigned char
FWIW there is already a std::byte type
enum class isnt the same as scoped enum ?
it's the same, I'm just a bit derpy today
I blame the massive fires in Cali/Oregon
 
2 hours later…
20:27
if I want to have a enum definition in source file
and to make it extern in header file
what should I do
I don't quite understand why I need to declare a variable of the type enum and why can't I just use it like ENUM_NAME::ENUM_VALUE
I find that I shoud declare a varable of type enum, and make that variable extern in the header file and use like VARIABLE_NAME::ENUM_VALUE

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