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13:06
Is there any potential problem in this [code snippet](https://godbolt.org/z/bYWf4KGnn)?
#include <mutex>
#include <map>
#include <vector>
#include <thread>

constexpr int FOO_NUM = 5;

int main()
{
std::map<int, std::mutex> mp;

std::vector<std::thread> vec;
vec.push_back(std::thread([&mp](){
std::lock_guard<std::mutex> lk(mp[FOO_NUM]); //I think there is some potential problem here, am I right?
//do something
}));

for(auto& thread:vec)
{
thread.join();
}
}
@John Yes.
nwp
nwp
That's a data race and thus undefined behavior.
1. When you add a thread to the vector with push_back, you are causing the object to be moved, so you should use emplace_back.
2. When you add a thread to the vector, a resize can happen, which will cause all of the threads to be moved. In order to prevent this you should either reserve memory or use an std::array
MangaD, but using push_back should not be a problem.Am I right?
It causes the object to be constructed, and then moved
nwp
nwp
13:10
Those problems just cost you a few nanoseconds of time, if even.
I agree with nwp. The two problem should be better avoided, but they are not fault indeed.
So there is no problem in moving threads?
nwp
nwp
No. std::thread is just a thread handle.
I can't there is any problem in moving threads.
The main problem is what nwp has said. The data race!
Where is the data race?
13:13
std::lock_guard<std::mutex> lk(mp[FOO_NUM]);
Inserts value_type(key, T()) if the key does not exist. This function is equivalent to return insert(std::make_pair(key, T())).first->second;
nwp
nwp
mp gets written by multiple threads at potentially the same time because they all try to construct the mutex.
oh right
The mutexes have to be created first
nwp
nwp
It's just 1 mutex because FOO_NUM is a constant, but yeah, that would be a solution.
Unfortunately data races are notoriously difficult to spot and prevent, especially when you have more than a toy example.
Also since C++17 you have [CTAD](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/class_template_argument_deduction), so you can do:

std::lock_guard lk(mp[FOO_NUM]);
What is the correct syntax to instantiate an array of sockets?
I tried this, which doesnt work:
io_context ioCtxt;
ip::tcp::socket mySocket[2]= {ioCtxt, ioCtxt};
for a single socket you are supposed to pass the constructor's arguments as follows
nwp
nwp
13:26
Vague guess: Add {} around each ioCtxt.
ip::tcp::socket mySocket(ioCtxt);
nwp
nwp
If that doesn't work use ip::tcp::socket(ioCtxt) instead of ioCtxt.
former one you suggested doesnt work becasue the move/copy constructors are deleted IIRC
nwp
nwp
That shouldn't matter, there is no moving or copying going on there.
yup that worked:
ip::tcp::socket mySocket[2]= {ip::tcp::socket(ioCtxt), ip::tcp::socket(ioCtxt)};
I m still a bit confused about the difference between paranthesis and curly braces. Could it be that in some cases people use curly braces to initialize a single class?
something like:
myClass classObj{arg1,arg2};
Which obviously is not an array
nwp
nwp
13:29
ip::tcp::socket mySocket[2]{{ioCtxt}, {ioCtxt}};
That probably compiles.
yhea that kind of syntax...
nwp
nwp
Initialization is rather strange in C++. You can also do int i{42}; and it's neither an array nor a class object.
@nwp nope.
ip::tcp::socket mySocket[2]= {ip::tcp::socket(ioCtxt), ip::tcp::socket(ioCtxt)};
however works
nwp
nwp
Weird
13:32
What error do you get with the former?
 error: converting to ‘boost::asio::ip::tcp::socket’ {aka ‘boost::asio::basic_stream_socket<boost::asio::ip::tcp>’} from initializer list would use explicit constructor ‘boost::asio::basic_stream_socket<Protocol, Executor>::basic_stream_socket(const executor_type&) [with Protocol = boost::asio::ip::tcp; Executor = boost::asio::executor; boost::asio::basic_stream_socket<Protocol, Executor>::executor_type = boost::asio::executor]’
   20 |     ip::tcp::socket mySocket[2]{{ioCtxt}, {ioCtxt}};
      |                                                       ^
oh, yeah well the error says that that's and explicit constructor in that class
hi, I am looking to find all lower case letters in a string excluding a few letters. lets say I do not want to mach x,y in [a-z] how to do that?
nwp
nwp
I really hate explicit even though everyone else seems to love it.
Right, because the constructor is explicit you cannot initialize implicitly
nwp
nwp
13:36
@DEKKER Match [a-w] and [z]?
Or just check if the character is in the "don't want to match" list.
Are you looking for a regular expression?
if (c >= 'a' && c <= 'z' && c != 'x' && c != 'y') { ... }
then repeat the same conditions for capital letters probably
oh, nvm I need to learn to read
auto num_letters = std::count_if(str.begin(),std.end(),[](char c){return c >= 'a' && c <= 'z' && c != 'x' && c != 'y';});
no no I want it as regex :D
[a-wz]
Because now you want 99 problems
13:40
const std::regex base_regex("([a-z]+)\\.txt"); something like this that excludes xy
nwp
nwp
regex101.com is very helpful in getting regex right.
actually I am on regex101 now lol but it is hard when you dont know anything
[a-wz]
nwp
nwp
I didn't know you can do [a-wz], I would have suggested [a-w]|z.
yeah but what if I want to ignore random letters
not in a sequence
like m,t,
nwp
nwp
13:42
[a-ln-su-z]?
[a-ln-su-z]
nwp
nwp
Gotta love regex readability.
nwp hence the old joke: I tried to solve a problem with a regex now I have 99 more
is there something like [a-z](!m,!t,!x,!y)
I mean adding exclusions as a list
nwp
nwp
[^mt] matches everything except m and t which is not quite what you want.
13:43
you really shouldn't make the regex more complicated then it needs to be
You can also use lookahead:
(?![mtxy])[a-z]
aha thats good
:D
also a regex will be vastly slower than a simple loop in this case FWIW
this is what I mean, now you've got a "short and easy" regex that you just increased the algorithmic complexity on
Regexes are great when you need to do complex matches a over a wide dataset and you can cache the finite state automata or preferably pre-compile it.
but they are horrible for one off things
13:51
ok now lets say I have a list of devices:
/dev/sda
/dev/sdb
/dev/sdc
/dev/sdb
How can I return lines that are not filtered by that regex
:D
so I think I need to have "/dev/sd" in my regex then apply the filter to it
nwp
nwp
You could replace the matches with "".
I do not understand the question
in the list above, I want to match the lines that not end with the ignored letters that we just talked about
e.g. (?![ab])[a-z] should ignore /dev/sda and /dev/sdb
and return all the others
As previously said, an if would work the best:

if (deviceStr[deviceStr.size()-1] != "t" && ...
I know ..... I want to learn regex :))
nwp
nwp
13:58
replace ^|\n.*[^ab]\n|$ with \n maybe.
But if you want a regex, you can do:

\/dev\/sd(?![mtxy])[a-z]
nwp
nwp
It still amazes me that regex really is write-only.
if you want to learn regex use node
thanks guys
 
2 hours later…
16:30
@DEKKER Assuming you're doing this in C++, you can pretty easily do something like if (!std::regex_match(yourString, yourRegex)) print(yourString);

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