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09:12
I'd avoid the C++ room FYI. They're quite aggressive.
09:28
@Owatch Were you asking C questions in C++, without making this fact known?
land of Bartek.
@DrorK. I made it known a little later than I should of.
@Owatch What did you mean when you said that you're passing it by reference?
I thought that mean I was passing pointers around instead of copying my types in functions
That answer would imply that you're writing C++, not C
09:32
Well then it is a misunderstanding.
I thought pointers = references.
Then I found out it is different in C++
So the fact that you asked it in a C++ channel, and your answers were misleading, led them to believe that you were intentionally lying
I would've come to the same conclusion
Really?
Usually I would imagine someone is confused.
Not intentionally trying to lie to me to hide the fact I'm using C or whatever.
But okay.
It's common in ##c ... C++ guys coming to ##c, saying that they're writing C, trying to change a few things, and then ask questions
##c ?
10:03
@DrorK. I have a function that performs a simple multiplication. (For all elements, *= n). This does its operation on a pointer, and so return type is void. Is it better practice to have it return the pointer to the multiplied Type, so that I can embed another function in its arguments and have it return the function + operation without losing the pointer?
##c channel on freenode
I do not know of it.
Anyways, my example is as follows:
Vector *v = new()
And then I have a function:
void multiply(double_t n, Vector *v);
But if I have multiply return v
Then I can do:
Personally I reserve the return values for status, success/failure
Vector *v = multiply(n, new())
What do you in the case of overflow? Or wrap-around?
10:05
Wrap around?
UINT_MAX + 1
I guess I'm not sure what mistake I am not handling?
Why would an overflow occur?
Or a wrap around.
If the types you use happen to be signed integers- they could overflow, outside of the range of the type, which imply UB
If the types are unsigned integers for example- they could wraparound, might be undesired or required to be dealt with for the logic of your program
Well, I'm using (signed?) doubles within the Vector.
So the types used in the multiplication match. But I don't account for anything like that.
I don't test for overflow.
I'm not sure how to handle it either.
Is there a way to do this for doubles?
I guess I could for addition/subtraction. If (MAX_DOUBLE - a < b){ overflow} but for multiplication it would be: IF ((MAX_DOUBLE / a) < b){overflow}
 
6 hours later…
15:54
Got a phishing email.
Happily filled it out with garbage.
Then submitted.
They didn't control fields or anything, so I just wrote NULL for most of it. Hopefully it breaks something somewhere.
 
1 hour later…
16:56
mfw I was using memcmp and not memcpy
 
2 hours later…
18:48
aha, and casting the result of memcmp to a pointer? :D

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