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01:20
Guys, please take a look at my question stackoverflow.com/questions/18007153/…
 
2 hours later…
03:16
Hi~
I am new here, I wonder why there is two room for c++?
well... seems I am the only on in eastern timezone...good night~
 
5 hours later…
07:59
@yang this one is friendly
08:40
@JoelSeah I have answered it.
09:12
@Yang This is the C++ room
the other is a lounge for trolling :D
hi @Lightness
of course the guy's problem was completely different :P
09:30
naturally
yes~ I just got some in Lounge
Is there anything I can help for this room~~I am a new programmer, I just really don't want to go Lounge again....
Just hang out :)
@Yang we don't really need the help with anything. just made a space for newbie C++ topics.
or rather, a place where newbie C++ topics won't be binned
09:45
I just want there be more people, then at any time, there will be person~~ I will cover the Asian zone :P
@Yang why are you randomly appending a tilde to your words?
well....Among Chinese youngsters, ~ in words means saying with joy
like you say something end with joyful tone
does that seem strange?
no, not really.
09:48
will some one in Lounge said I will bake cookies for girls....
Actually...in China it's very normal...
man will also cook for woman
what
Oh yeah, quite normal here
My dad cooks quite a lot <:
well..I think it's fine
are you engineers in company or student?
09:51
wow, I just start my career weeks ago
@JoelSeah have you read my A?
@BartekBanachewicz haven. I will go read it now
I'm a highschool student.
Starting senior year ;_; (in a month and a bit)
I just start contribute on stackoverflow days ago, and it's hard to gain reputation. However, I just found a place in stackoverflow, which is for Chinese Language Leaning...It's really easy to gain repu there..funny :P
@BartekBanachewicz the zip. is it the same as my .end()-1?
10:05
@JoelSeah well, no. Zip is a special function that returns a range.
@BartekBanachewicz okay... so is set better or the zip better? if as you mentioned, the zip would still cause the problems that I have right now. then i should use set right?
Yes, I've included zip solution as a bonus only.
Hmmm.. okk... so where is the checking of the name in the set codes?
the 2nd for-loop?
Ello
"Checking of the name"?
10:11
I just get off work, see you later
Err sry i mean where is the comparing of the name?
@JoelSeah Is that the duplicates thing?
@JoelSeah Somewhere inside .equal_range. You have to provide comparators for that
@BartekBanachewicz So i must do something like this inside s.equal_range(element_it->name == element_it->name) ?
@JoelSeah Um, no, no. You simply have to provide comparators for multiset. Do you know how to use this container?
Look at the example i linked
10:20
@BartekBanachewicz Well.. i have only recently started c++. So no idea how to use multiset
the example referring to ur coliru?
@JoelSeah I would start with getting familiar on how it works first, then. In general, try to find a ready algorithm in std before writing your own.
@JoelSeah yeah
@BartekBanachewicz well ur code seems to pretty much fit my needs. including the display too. solves the problem of display duplicates as one element and at the same time gives me the count too
@BartekBanachewicz wad i understand is the .first and .second
urghhh. i mean don't* understand
Well it's simply the access to the pair fields.
10:28
.first and .second are the members of a std::pair that is returned.
They're both iterators.
Hmm.. i see.. then what is this .upper_bound?
That's a search function.
search for?
Why don't you check in language reference?
Searches for that element.
There's lower_bound and upper_bound.
10:32
@BartekBanachewicz Well. its faster to ask pros...
lower returns the first occurrence of the given element while upper returns the last occurrence of the given element.
@JoelSeah no, it's not. You have to learn how to find information yourself.
@BartekBanachewicz Haha.. okok Thanks for helping me ^^
@Tuntuni u too. thanks for helping me ^^
No probs.
11:01
it's true - using documentation is a crucial skill
11:11
possible to insert getline object into multiset?
huh?
11:37
@JoelSeah what
getline(linestream,user.username,':'); accSet.insert(user);
issit possible to do that?
Yeah.
But your terminology is wrong.
@JoelSeah you have to think in primitives
It's not a getline object.
user.username is a std::string.
std::getline takes a std::string reference and writes to it after it reads the line.
On the end, you just push the whole user (whose .username was just modified by std::getline) and insert it into the set.
@Tuntuni which is a pretty shitty io handling, but w/e
11:44
okok so wad i did is not advisable la
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, why is that?
@Tuntuni I dislike out parameters.
Ah. Yeah, reminds me of Win API.
something like getString :: IO -> Maybe String would be better
which in C++ would be written as optional<string> getString(istream&)
Was just about to ask if Maybe is similar to boost::optional.
11:46
Haskell is awesome :3
I started learning it but I got bored.
Couldn't find something I could use it for. Maybe it's just because I haven't gotten that far.
How it can possibly be boring? o.O
it's amazing.
@BartekBanachewicz Because I couldn't find anything I could use it for. Like an actual program or something (I just didn't have any ideas really).
@Tuntuni uh and how can you find ideas for C++ programs then?
or in any other language really.
Well I started with C++ when I was like 11-12 years old.
Back then I still had ideas.
That motivated me to learn stuff.
11:48
well then it's not a fault of Haskell that you don't have them now
Now that I know how to get around, I can use it for pretty much anything.
@BartekBanachewicz Of course not. :)
The whole functional concept is quite interesting though.
Hmm, maybe I should force myself to learn it. :p
@Tuntuni i don't see any reason if forcing anyone to learn
you have to want to learn it
I admit that after sitting in the lounge for quite a while, the topics in Haskell are not unfamiliar to me
@BartekBanachewicz True, but maybe if I just get through the first few lessons It'll become more interesting and I'll get ideas.
well just look at list comprehension :3
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, I like that. :)
11:52
it's awesum.
what is primitives?
In mathematics, logic, and formal systems, a primitive notion is an undefined concept. In particular, a primitive notion is not defined in terms of previously defined concepts, but is only motivated informally, usually by an appeal to intuition and everyday experience. In an axiomatic theory or other formal system, the role of a primitive notion is analogous to that of axiom. In axiomatic theories, the primitive notions are sometimes said to be "defined" by one or more axioms, but this can be misleading. Formal theories cannot dispense with primitive notions, under pain of infinite regress....
you build your abstractions on top of primitives
when building another level of abstraction, lower levels can be treated like primitives too
tough lol
@JoelSeah not at all
well i don't understand most of it. i only understood this part abit A set is formed by the grouping together of single objects into a whole. A set is a plurality thought of as a unit.
12:05
@JoelSeah lemme give you example in programming then.
@BartekBanachewicz sorry. code always wins. theory always lose
to read a string from a istream, you write my_istream >> my_string;
@JoelSeah that's not true
so, if you have a struct of say struct S { string a, b; }, when creating an operation of reading for that struct, you build on top of that.
auto operator<<(istream& str, S& s) { str >> s.a >> s.b; }
now, if you have a struct of structs... struct X { S a; string b; }; the same applies.
operator<<(stream, X) { stream >> X.a >> X.b; }
you are using the abstraction of reading S created earlier
so wad im missing from my struct is the operator?
uh depends on what you need to do.
12:13
so, does the operator work?
yes the operator works with ostream_iterator
well then.
what's the problem again
the compilation error screenshot
why don't you just copy the damn error? :/
@JoelSeah first, upgrade your damn compiler. Second, define operator< or comparator struct for your class. (set requires that)
hmm is the operator the same as in my struct?
btw how do u know my compiler needs upgrade?
@JoelSeah because it says 4.2.1 right there?
@BartekBanachewicz lol. then wad's the latest?
@JoelSeah 4.8.1 now IIRC
is there any websites that teach how to update the compiler. cant find anything on that
12:25
there's one called google.
Just look for prebuilt binaries for MacOS
pointclouds?
i gather from ur reaction that this link is not the one pointclouds.org/downloads/macosx.html
12:29
prebuilt binaries of g++ :/
seriously.
gcc 4.8.1?
Hi all!
I have a question about Linker error LNK2019. I know, I know... thera are tons of questions about LNK2019 on SO and other forums... But nothing works in my case.
error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol.
Lib file is added to linker, it's ok. Header is included in C++ tab of preferences. I can't understand what's the problem
Or this question is to the Lounge chat room?
12:40
87
Q: What is an undefined reference/unresolved external symbol error and how do I fix it?

Luchian GrigoreWhat are undefined reference/unresolved external symbol errors? What are common causes and how to fix them? Feel free to edit/add your own.

@Innuendo just read all that again.
ok, thanks
well this is fun
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what was fun? :)
My program compiled well when I use #define INI_LINKAGE __stdcall instead of #define INI_LINKAGE
is it strange? Earlier, I've compiled this project on another PC (but on XP and MSVS2008 as now), and it worked without modifing header file (that header file is not mine, it is 3rdparty library)
@Innuendo Look up "name mangling". Different calling conventions will produce different symbol names for the linker.
12:52
@Innuendo well then you need different calling convention
Here it is source code from header file:
#ifdef _WINDOWS
# define INI_LINKAGE __stdcall
#else
# define INI_LINKAGE
#endif

I have Windows on this machine, but the `else` condition is executed
change it to _WIN32
Yeap, the first if is highlighted
thank you
_WIN32 is the new version of this constant? Because early it worked with _WINDOWS.
So, I've changed to `#ifdef _WIN32 || _WINDOWS` to make compatible.
most compilers define only _WIN32
you can always add that manually when compiling on windows
anyway || is a good idea
ok. Thanks for your time.
 
2 hours later…
15:03
I have a std::set<std::string>, potentially large. I want to test whether there are any elements other than "A" and "B". What's the tersest way to do this? C++03 only.
perhaps intersection set_difference
@LightnessRacesinOrbit well you can also use a normal for
test s a b = [x | x <- s, x \= a, x \= b] != []
:P
damn, those / go in the opposite direction :/
ghci> let s = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
ghci> test s 1 2
True
ghci> let s = [1,2,1,2,1,2]
ghci> test s 1 2
False
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it's weirdly indented
15:20
@BartekBanachewicz copy/pasta
& ideone's editor
@LightnessRacesinOrbit or maybe you using tabs :)
@BartekBanachewicz nothing wrong with tabs; I just had one too many in some places. much easier to identify, handle and fix than 9.4 spaces too many!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit 9.4? o.O
@BartekBanachewicz that's how I feel when people use spaces
arbitrary numbers of characters to identify each level of indentation
3, 4, 5, 8, 9.4
@LightnessRacesinOrbit looks alright. Except std suckage because no ranges.
15:22
best use 1
@LightnessRacesinOrbit i see no reason why this can't be 4*n
@BartekBanachewicz needless

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