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mr5
mr5
02:03
enum definition on source file, like in .cpp? and also reuse it on other files? does that even work?
 
2 hours later…
04:28
yes it should if you declare extern
05:14
@nwp Thanks.
 
1 hour later…
mr5
mr5
06:23
why not just define the enum on header file?
Is there a good reason to not just have default non-static member initializer on all data members? So like

struct S{
int a{};
std::vector<int> b{};
MyClass c{};
};
for every member that is default initializable of course
also, I can't find on cppreference if this is actually allowed for data-members:

int a{};

it says:

> member-declarator-list - similar to a init-declarator-list, but additionally allows bit-field declaration, pure-specifier, and virt-specifier (override or final) (since C++11), and does not allow direct-non-list-initialization syntax.

And isn't that `direct-non-list-initialization`
nvm., it's

int a{}; //value initialization, or aggregate initialization if the type is an aggregate
int b{1}; //direct-non-list-initialization
07:17
#include <iostream>
int main(){
std::cout<<"234"+2;
}
why does this output 4
can someone explain
Ah ok me being dumb got it
 
1 hour later…
08:37
[Why std::bind does not work for overloaded member functions?](https://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/9089ae3363cecf15)

#include <boost/bind.hpp>

#include <functional>
#include <iostream>

class Demo
{
public:
#if 1
int foo()
{
std::cout << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl;
}
#endif

#if 1
void foo(int)
{
std::cout << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl;
}
#endif
};

int main()
{
Demo demo;
std::bind(&Demo::foo, &demo, 5)(); //why std::bind does not work for overloaded member functions

//boost::bind(&Demo::foo, &demo, 5)(); works
09:22
@PeterT (Quick point of terminology: your empty brace initializers result in value initialization, not default.) In some cases (notably not yours, because you defined a default constructor) you might want to leave the option to users of your class to choose between default (e.g. S my_data;) and value initialization (e.g. S my_data {};). As a matter of opinion this can matter for e.g. high performance numeric code. That’s also why I always force value init for pointer members.
yeah, I noticed that in one of the later comments.

If people want to leave it uninitialized for performance, I'm going to tell them to use placement new
@PeterT there are things like setting up a vector to hand out a slice of memory to somewhere else, that have good ergonomics when you can rely on cheap default construction but not without
nwp
nwp
I wanted to enforce this in my code at some point, but it turns out I often couldn't because things could not be initialized with {} and once I lost the ability to quickly go through all the members to see if any {} was missing the guideline didn't prevent forgetting to initialize something anymore. Ultimately I gave up on the idea.
In hindsight maybe I should have added //{} to all members that couldn't be initialized like that to keep the consistency somewhat.
09:38
there's only a handful in the code-base in question that can't be value initialized. Mostly just by happenstance, because most types that couldn't seem to be behind unique_ptr, optional, etc.
nwp
nwp
I feel like C++ should only throw an error when initializing a class member with {} that cannot be initialized as such if at least one of the constructors doesn't override the initialization in their init list.
Although that doesn't play nice with delegate constructors.
10:35
what is the difference beteween a variable width and size
for e.g. speaking about a bitshift operation: bitsifht operator makes a promotion to int for the left and right operands
and if the value of the right operator si less than 0 or grater or equal with the width of promoted left operand -: results UB
@John that's a limitation of std::bind, it can't do overload resolution, you have to do it yourself by casting it to the right function pointer type:
std::bind((void(Demo::*)(int))&Demo::foo, &demo, 5)();
nwp
nwp
The most important part is that you should not use bind because Lambdas are superior. C++ doesn't really support passing overload sets. There is a workaround (that can be improved in C++17) that gives you some of that, but I'm not sure at the moment if it works with member functions.
Hey, I got the workaround to work.
But seriously, forget that bind ever existed. [&object] (int i) { return object.foo(i); } gives you the same better thing and it's more readable too.
11:18
12 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
 
5 hours later…
16:19
Hi guys, can anyone help with a while loop not working? I am trying to find whole words in a entered string, so I used a while loop and regex however the code gets stuck because of while loop
code snippet:
cout << "Enter the word to be replaced by *: " << endl;
cin >> word1;
regex r("\\b" + word1 + "\\b");
smatch m;

string word2(word1.length(), '*'); // create asteriks of length word
int counter{};
size_t index{};

while (regex_search(s1, m, r)!=string::npos)
{
++counter;
index += word1.length(); // Advance by full word (discards overlapping occurrences)
}

for (size_t i{}; i < counter; ++i)
{
s1.replace(s1.find(word1, i), word1.length(), word2); // replace with *
}
16:31
or to make my question simpler: how do I modify regex_search to find the next occurrence of that word I am looking for?
16:44
define whole words?
separated by whitespace?
dictionary words?
17:03
ok so by whole words I mean I want to search for 'our' and not our present in y'our's
(hopefully that make sense?)
nwp
nwp
17:43
There is an overload that takes iterators. You should be able to use std::begin(s1) + last_occurance_index + word_length, std::end(s1) instead of s1.
 
5 hours later…
22:39
For a test, I was asked to fill in the update function (Added in comments as to what was required): Did I do it right or are there any improvements I could have made?

void update(int* a, int* b, int& c)
{
    int tempA = *a;
    int tempB = *b;

    *a = tempA + *b;            // a should contain a+b
    *b = abs(tempA - *b);       // b should contain absolute value of a-b
    c = tempA * tempB;          // c should contain a*b
}

int main()
{
    int a = 3;
    int* b = new int(5);
    int c = -2;

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