« first day (2087 days earlier)      last day (990 days later) » 

01:39
@nwp But even if you can't use it, a little searching will turn up the algorithm it (usually?) uses.
 
3 hours later…
04:43
Who can fix this issue?
bool NearZero(double x, double y, double e)
{
    if ((x - y) > 0)
        return (x - y) < e;
    else
        return (y - x) < e;
}

int main()
{
    double x = 3.145;
    double y = 3.146;
    double e = 0.001;
    cout << NearZero(x, y, e) << endl; // it should return 0 because x and y are not equal at the 3rd digit after period.
}
05:23
What about [this wrapper](https://godbolt.org/z/jqTo9G6eM), it seems better.How do you think about it?

/*
UPDATED HERE:
*/
class WrapperWithSmartPointer2Handle {
public:
WrapperWithSmartPointer2Handle()
: handle_ptr(new DemoStructHandle(nullptr),
[](DemoStructHandle* handle_ptr) { DestroyStruct(handle_ptr); }) {
InitDemoStruct(handle_ptr.get());
}
#endif

DemoStructHandle operator*() { return *handle_ptr; } //ADDED
DemoStructHandle operator->() { return *handle_ptr;} //ADDED

private:
std::shared_ptr<DemoStructHandle> handle_ptr;
 
3 hours later…
nwp
nwp
08:42
@JoWmbejnjsQvujoXfUsvtu Floating point types are notorious for being unable to represent numbers such as 0.1 precisely. Instead you get a number that is fairly close but not exactly that. If you tell std::cout to print with more precision the problem becomes visible. See also What Every Programmer Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic.
@John Since only the constructor does anything you might want to just use a factory function instead of a class to simplify it further.
auto make_handle() {
    std::shared_ptr<DemoStructHandle> handle_ptr{
        new DemoStructHandle(nullptr),
        [](DemoStructHandle* handle_ptr) {
            DestroyStruct(handle_ptr);
        }
    };
    InitDemoStruct(handle_ptr.get());
    return handle_ptr;
}
It's unfortunate we don't have a version of std::make_shared that can specify a deleter.
09:10
I see, thank you.
nwp
nwp
I'm also not sure about operator*() and operator->() returning the same thing. It feels wrong, but those are tricky to get right. You'll probably notice during use if they behave incorrectly.
 
4 hours later…
12:48
there is allocate_shared which requires passing a whole Allocator
nwp
nwp
Hmm, it'll be tricky to use in this case I think, but still good to know.
 
1 hour later…
14:21
Hello! I'm not super familiar with this kind of stuff. I'd like to have values that are "unique", meaning that the probability of producing the same value on a specific machine is close to 0. I'd like for the value to fit in a "native" variable. I've used this code as a first draft, and I'd like to know if I'm on the right track:
    using simHandle = uint64_t; ///< This is big!

    /**
     * Generates a unique "handle".
     */
    simHandle
    MgrHandle::Get()
    {
      static std::random_device rd;
      static std::mt19937 gen(rd());
      static std::uniform_int_distribution<uint64_t> distrib(0, std::numeric_limits<simHandle>::max());

      return distrib( gen );
    }
if you want a shuffle of all possible values then go for a 64 bit linear congruent generator instead
It's only on the right track if your period is small
PRNGs aren't suitable for unique handles
that is much more likely to be unique
but honestly for most use cases sequential is actually preferable
Yes, that's right, however, at least for now, I don't have means to "save" at which integer I'm at. That being said, I don't have means to save the handles either.
(for now)
14:33
you can use a global atomic that you just post increment
it's a global but it's also atomic
so no data race
@Mgetz For now I suppose there will not be a lot of values generated, but I understand your point.
@ratchetfreak I'll take a look at that!
@Mgetz We don't use multiple threads (yet) but that would be an option.
I'd still probably just use an atomic and increment unless there is a really good reason not to. The merseene twister uses a lot of memory for little value
Thanks for your opinion all :)
also please don't ping reply
Yeah, sorry, I though it would have made it clearer to which message I was responding.
Yeah, it appears for now a simple increment would be the best solution.
14:38
eh right now the context is pretty clear

« first day (2087 days earlier)      last day (990 days later) »