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19:00
@PeterVaro If you look at standard functions when success has many values, while failure is being represented with one value (pointers), if (true) represents success. But when a success has one value while failure has many, if (true) represents failure. Here are examples of such standard functions:
fclose() == 0
raise() == 0
feholdexcept == 0
setvbuf() == 0
fgetpos() == 0
fseek() == 0
fsetpos() == 0
someone can explain to me how to calculate balance factor in avl tree?
In fact, many of the standard functions that have a singular error would use -1 to indicate failure, and not 0
(pointers have a sentinel value to represent error which happens to be compatible with true or false) but that's the exception not the rule
@karim Feel free to elaborate
when i have a node that contain only one node in the left
its balancing factor is +1?
I think it's correct, yes
if a node have 2 node the one in the left have a balancing factor of 2 and the one in the right have the balancing factor 0
what is the balancing factor of the root node?
19:08
Have a look at the graphics next to the 'insertion' paragraph
@Apoorv helloc
@DrorK. what they mean by the height of a subtree?
Hello world @Apoorv
@PeterVaro: When you get -17 on a question...it changes a man...
But thanks for the suggestion. Good karma.
@karim How about the charts at: opendatastructures.org
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19:17
helloc all;
@DrorK. thanks
@Qix helloc
helloc @Qix; // Morning
helloc @Qix & @Apoorv & @karim;
rehelloc @Toppest.Of.Kek;
Just a random thought: We already are in a world where we are surrounded by robots, we just don't feel it because they don't look like humans
i mean.. cars (horse robots), dishwashers (robots that wash dishes) etc etc..
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@PeterVaro didn't know malloc(sizeof **string); was valid lol
19:30
@Apoorv Well, that depends on your definition of 'robot'... it sounds more like a stationary machine to me, than a robot
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lol @ horse robots
@Qix The same logic as: int *i = malloc(sizeof *i);
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@DrorK. That wouldn't work, would it?
oh
It would
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ohohoh yes it would
derp :)
19:31
@Qix how else would you describe a horse robot rather than a car? :P
People tend to forget that the sizeof operator has a different set of rules!
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@DrorK. It's an intrinsic function, right? Therefore it's a black-sheep function that doesn't follow normal conventions
@Qix Actually it's not classified as a function at all, but as an operator
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@DrorK. Ohh, that makes sense.
@PeterVaro Hello World
Was this snippet strictly for demonstration purpose, or an actual routine that you use?
Was it intended to work on strings, or buffers?
19:49
okay.. soooooo
@DrorK. I think this a nice approach: cl.ly/code/3M2P2a280g0B
although it is not "free" as you can see
but it is a nice uniforming approach, and I think a fine level of abstraction as well
(try macro doesn't need the do-while => I forgot to remove that)
Hmm... I'm not sure how such a thing could be applied with your program's flow?
It seems to me that it's a mere message-generator, how do you actually act upon different types of returns?
ahh, I just used the messages as indicators
1) you can pass functions
2) you can call the functions yourself directly
(or write into the block of "if" or "case" -- however I don't prefer that => flat is better than nested)
And notice that you've used both a 'state' and an 'error' ... where in the vast majority of the cases it's not needed, it would take an extremely unique case where you have many-successful values and many-error values
What's the need for both 'state' and 'error'?
19:58
the need is, that error is always true
except when it is a success, then it is false
while state is the exact opposite
You see! We're twisting the rules to accommodate our personal perspective!
and..? I didn't say this is the ultimate approach
I only said, this is more intuitive
than using 0 or negative values for indicating errors, absolutely inconsistently
I hate to say it, but I find a simple self-explanatory list of enum members, with explicit if statements
to be much more readable
that's just a nuance => if-statement or switch.. your choice
I only implemented a small encapsulation approach here
The question is whether the if-statement is explicit or not, because the way you use- is definitely not consistent
20:03
which could be used with both.. the goal was to make it consistent
I'm sure it's perfectly readable to you, but I have a feeling that it could easily trick others
@DrorK. how's so?
The vast majority of functions which return a state, treat 0 as success
in the standard lib, sure
Only when the function returns an object or a value, things might differ, and even there it seems that EOF, -1 and NULL, prevails '0' as error
20:06
but not all -- and that's inconsistent
if you are an API designer
who is implementing a higher-level library
you would definitely want encapsulate this problem to make it consistent
I actually don't think it's limited to the standard C, I believe it's the same with POSIX? Even with Windows API functions?
even if it costs more
Actually what makes it consistent---is using an explicit if statement
By using an implicit if statement, it could never be consistent
"implicit if statement"?
Yes, if (!) and if ()
20:08
that's not implicit, just reversed
That could be fine for pointers, or even values- but definitely not states
I think I covered "states" in my example => you dispatch the "states" and make the ErrorSignal "compatible"
which means => at the end, you have the same approach everywhere
I can't see how do you actually change your flow according with the return state
you can quickly check if succeeded, or get the detailed errors if not, and act upon the specific error
And what do you expect these macros to do when being used with standard functions where 0 == success?
20:13
forget the macros
I only use them, so I didn't had to copy+paste them twice
Then it seems to me the same as before, your functions and other functions having very inconsistent nature
as a user, you would write the if-statement, if you don't care about the errors
or use the switch-statement -- or an if-statement again -- if you care
I dunno, I guess once you'll have a use-case it would be more clear
@DrorK. not at all -- they are using the same ErrorSignal approach, which is consistent: success if true failure if false and enum if you are curious what went wrong
@DrorK. probably -- as I clearly don't see the problem you are having with it
other than -- "it is not intuitive" for you
(which I can accept)
I actually look at things from a matter of consistency, not intuitive-ity... obviously if (!func) { failure } ... is much more intuitive for me
But the fact is, it's impractical
20:18
anyway -- I get back to coding now, bbl soon
goto back_to_hacking;
@PeterVaro Where are you going
You didn't answer
Was it intended to work on buffers or strings
which one?
where?
when? :)
The snippet with new() and concat() and String
what do you mean?
that example was a small snippet
which should work only with that case I provided
it was more like a demonstration, than an actual real-life code
When you created the new() string, you provided the size of the required buffer as an argument (not the size of the string)
Which actually shows the error with concat(), which actually allocates '2' null-terminators, while eliminates only the 'first' one
So the next call to concat would result with a misbehavior
20:22
sure -- if I wanted to make it right, I would 1) separate the String size and the buffer passing
2) deal with the null-termination
3) .. lots of other things
So what was the actual fault you experienced earlier?
(you never described the issue)
there was no fault => I created an example of a thing that is not captured by the compiler (none of them)
LOL!
and could not be captured by any linter
maybe a static analyser
You must be kidding me!
20:23
why?
Couldn't you say so when you posted it?! :)
I thought I made it clear..
I would never create a bad code like that.. :)
(umm.. actually I hope I won't)
I thought there was an actual issue you sought help with, hence you even asked others for help
no, it was a bug-hunt contest => can you spot the illegal move?
which is not so easy, even in a small snippet like that
I guess next time I'll ask you follow-up questions to have a better understanding
20:26
:)
my goal was to demonstrate to you, that restricting the life-times and the number-of-accesses to the pointers can be very handy
as you stated earlier, you think it is an unnecessary approach in Rust
(you didn't say these exact words -- but the point was something like this)
and I also wanted to demonstrate: you are doing these implicitly by default in C as well
(and in C++ ofc)
but if you are not forced to explicitly follow them, you can easily break things which are quite hard to find and fix
I said what you described in Rust is not defined to be done with C, and as such could be spotted by analyzers
After all, you said that Rust simply won't compile, hence there's no language feature to 'solve' the issue, but rather, simply make you aware of it
Using analyzers would make you aware of the very same fault with C, it's just not a requirement from the compiler/implementation to do so
nope, I said, it refure to compile, and tell you why, and you also have "special tools" you need to use to make it compile
which in fact makes it safe, and working => always and in all situations
PHP is safer than C just as well
(*"special tools" => special kind of pointers + borrowing method and life time vars)
@DrorK. we are talking about low-level system programming languages
PHP is not low-level nor a system programming language
If you want to get technical, Rust is not yet to be anything :)
20:32
well, it is a beta-stage system programming language right now
(but sure => it is not ready)
Who knows, maybe by the time they're done, it's going to be as unsafe as C
Or as non-system-programming language as PHP
they have all the unsafe features
you can add inline assembly
or raw pointers
but they have "unsafe" blocks which allows them
therefore it is easier to narrow down the arreas where the problem occurs
Bottom line, with this specific case,
ofc you are discouraged to use them
If the C implementation you were using was not a simple compiler, the result would be the same
20:34
as using unsafe blocks means: I am more clever than the compiler, I know what I am doing, let me do what I want
Maybe other language features would make a difference, but this is definitely not the case
securecoding.cerg.org shows all the variations of the analyzers and which ones captures what 'unsafety' and under what conditions, etc
I really want to get back to work now -- but I do believe this simple example was more than enough to show that the compiler is not enough and these features are not present in the langauge itself
Rust doesn't just have a "nice compiler"
it has language features which are prevent you making such mistakes
Not only the compiler is not enough- it's not the compiler's job
that's a huge difference
@DrorK. that's your personal opinion
I want a compiler, which is a faster and smarter than me and can notice me if I do anything stupid
without runtime, during compile-time
so.. daddy.. can I go back to play with my toys now? ;)
Then you want an analyzer, or a language which puts strict constraints on its implementations, or simply put: a different language!
No!
C will prevail!
20:38
:)
Have fun :)
kk bbl
goto away;
Hi, we have two lists, p, q, that are linked... p->a=q. Can a function return the pointer
p->a ?

Would we write it as followed?

int *function(){
. . .
return p->a;
}
@MaryStar What is the type of p->a?
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21:01
@DrorK. You're so patient >.>
Patience is all we have! :)
@DrorK. "p" is a pointer to the first element of a list. Each element of the list is a struct of which one of the fields is "a", which is a pointer to the first element of a double linked list.
@MaryStar Is the type of your first element is 'int'? Your function declarator specifies: int *function... it should specify the type of your pointer-to-the-first-element-of-your-list
@DrorK. Yes, the type of the first element is "int"
Then the return type of your function is fine.
Feel free to supply (by pastebin) compilable testcases for specific issues
21:09
@DrorK. And how do I call the function in the main() ?
// just dropping by to write this:
@MaryStar help us, to help you, by being: Short, Self Contained, Compilable, Example
// and I'm gone :)
Shoots @PeterVaro
@MaryStar I can only assume that you happen to be a beginner?
What beginner's resource do you use for learning C?
@DrorK. I am not a beginner...I am writing a long program and I got stuck, because I get a segmentation fault at this line and I don't know what I've done wrong...
21:14
I'm afraid you'll have to provide a testcase to demonstrate your issue
21:31
@DrorK. Here is the function:
http://pastebin.com/WZTewQ36
@MaryStar Explain line #3?
@DrorK. asteroid is a struct with the following fields:
int as;
int gap;
asteroid_t *prev;
asteroid_t *next;
@MaryStar What is malloc(1, ...)?
@DrorK. I used malloc to add a new element to the list. Isn't it correct?
How many arguments malloc() takes?
21:36
@DrorK. malloc() takes one argument... I meant calloc()
@MaryStar Explain line #8? ... what is 'A'?
This sample is incomplete, hence it's definitely not compilable, please provide a complete and compilable testcase, otherwise it will be a guessing game of what things are, 'A', 'N', etc
@DrorK. I added more information: pastebin.com/WZTewQ36
21:54
@MaryStar Well, try going one step further: make it compilable so it would demonstrate the fault that you experience
22:05
@DrorK. I added also the main() function http://pastebin.com/WZTewQ36

I get the following when I compile it:

$ gcc mary_star.c
mary_star.c: In function `function':
mary_star.c:145: warning: return from incompatible pointer type
mary_star.c: In function `main':
mary_star.c:172: warning: initialization from incompatible pointer type
@MaryStar Hmm...
@DrorK. Have you found a mistake?
What is the type of: p->asteroids?
@DrorK. Isn't it an int?
asteroid_t *asteroids;
typedef struct asteroid asteroid_t;
22:12
@DrorK. So should I define the function "asteroid_t *function(int as, int gap, int sol)" ?
The question is what do you actually wish to return
Do you wish to return the struct, or one of its members
According to your assignment: asteroid_t *m=function(...
You wish to return: asteroid_t *
So you need to change the return type of the function 'function' accordingly
@DrorK. In the main() I want to print the values of "as"( which are in the system of identifier "ss"), the corresponding "gap", the value "as" of the previous asteroid and the value "as" of the next asteroid. So, what should I return from the function?
@MaryStar You may return: asteroid_t * , and then print the member you'd like, such as you do: m->as
@DrorK. So, should I just write :

return asteroid_t * ;

?

When I call the function in the main(), do I write:

asteroid_t *m=function(as, gap, sol);

?
No, I meant you may return the type (asteroid_t *), which is what you're already doing
(I just described the current state of events, as you currently do)
22:26
@DrorK. I see... And what should I write in the end of the function in "return ;" ?
The same thing that you've already written: p->asteroids
22:45
@DrorK. Ok! Now I changed the while loop but I get a segmentation fault.
Here is the old and the new version: http://pastebin.com/A9bLEQkt
Could you tell me what I have done wrong?
@MaryStar Is there a case where both m->prev and m->next are NULL?
23:25
@DrorK. I added an if-statement: http://pastebin.com/W4CM8gv4

Why do I get a segmentation fault?
23:36
@MaryStar It's likely that the fault is not within this snippet, but actually within the context of whether 'm' is being assigned with a valid value
@DrorK. Now I don't get a segmentation fault, but the gap that is printed is not correct..

We give as input the gap between the new asteroid and the object(that is constructed at the function Beginning(int sol, int ss) ). But the field "gap" of the struct should contain the gap between the new asteroid and the previous element of the list of asteroids.
@DrorK. Here is the part of the code where I find the gap: pastebin.com/MHNM6vNd
Look at line #12 for example
Is there a guarantee that p is not being assigned with a NULL?
and the initializer at line #8 is redundant
@DrorK. Should I write the while as followed?

while(p->sol != sol && p != NULL){
p=p->next;
}


Why is the initializer at line #8 redundant?
@MaryStar The exact same assignment is being done at line #10
You need to switch your conditions
First test for: p != NULL && then the second one
You're not allowed to dereference a NULL
And in the event of p == NULL, line #15 is not allowed to test (nor assign) p->asteroids
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