Hello. If I made 2 functions: void f1(int a, int b) and void f2(void), would I be able to store both in an array like this: void (*fn[])(void) = {&f1, &f2}? Or would it have to be void (*fn[])()? Or are these both simply undefined behavior?
It seems that the former produces an incompatibility warning (and incorrect output) when using the former, but the latter "seems" fine.
Re-reading the repetitive format of the last sentence reminded me just now that I should get some more sleep.
@Byte could not say for sure, but that does not sound like a good idea. I guess compiler might complain about incompatible cast. But again, could not say for sure.
@Kamiccolo Are function arrays generally supposed to store functions that have the same number and type of arguments? Also (*fn[]() works but I don't yet understand why, hah.
I am playing about with the first project euler problem and was wondering if there is a standard way, on a POSIX system, to compare two programs for efficiency? Code length and cpu cycles used for example.
I guess with experience we can become familiar with the best ways to do things, it would be great to have a bench mark.
In C, there are ways of measures the speed of your code, but I'm sure there are bash scripts available for testing other programs as well. This may be of interest >>http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5248915/execution-time-of-c-program
@iain I've read about function pointers, just haven't gotten used to using them, and not used to using typedef all that much for functions.
I worked through a simple example to help get an idea; to make a simple text choice menu where the list of choices is written by a loop with a function pointer; it helped me to get a basic feel for it.
I've done the same too, haha. I was just unsure about how the array storing different types of functions. The compiler messages can be confusing at times.
I had written it with an array that stored several functions, and a int variable for user input. A switch statement would access the array's indexes and call the function.
This is probably bug-ridden but I haven't had enough time to experiment with function pointers in general.
Is there a generic name abbreviation for struct oriented strings, that consist of { char *s; size_t len; } ...?
If you were to write functions that expected such arguments... what corresponding names would you pick for things like: strlen(), strcmp(), strcpy(), etc?
there is no need to indicate the extra bound-checking, because normally, we would use str for simple char * which is not bound checked so the intention is pretty clear here
Hi guy/girls. What Im about to ask is not C related directly. But I figured C people would be my best at understanding this. Im trying to make a packet parser for a lidar. link to docs... Im really confused on how to traverse the packet. specifically, the not big endian not little endian format. See page 21 example packet. The hex is reversed in pairs or something like that. What am I looking at?
@fge sure, but other than fake syntactic sugar (it is not really) you won't really have any advantage there, only disadvatages! btw: Str_cmp is not longer than Str.cmp, but it costs you extra space to store a pointer in every instance, and also costs you an extra redirection
well, let me give you an advice here @fge! if you don't want to overload the operator at runtime, you should make that "vtable" object a static one, created an initialized once the program started (that is, it lives at the "code-space"
that's exactly how types are implemnted in CPython for example
@fge also false then -- since it is not the traditional way of doing things, I would read that piece of code 4-5x times, before I realise what you really trying to do.. and maybe then I would refactor as the first step :P
My design is quite the same except that your _ini and _fin would instead be function pointers in a same static struct that you would use; with the advantage that you can change the implementation in a MUCH easier fashion
// first arg name can be self/this/instance, whatever..
@DrorK. Str_new would be all about allocation, while Str_del would be all about deallocation, Str_ini is all about initialization and Str_fin is all about finalization. Str_new calls Str_ini implicitly, while Str_del calls Str_fin implicitly
these 4 stages can be used, to create an object safely statically and dynamically
What I suggested is that there were two different "operation structures", as I said earlier: one to manipulate "bstrings" themselves (init, destroy, etc), and another to perform operations on them
(I like to implement the following methods btw: new, ini, fin, del, new_copy, ini_copy, hash, cmp, bool, sput, fput, and if it is a collection/container: len, size, get, set, pop, push, pull)
(if you have these methods implemented, it is impossible for the user, to do something unsafe and stupid)
Anyway, for instance: BStrings.withContents(char *) <-- supposes a nul terminated char *; BStrings.withCheckedContents(char *, ssize_t len) <-- at most len from a char *
Or BStrings.ofSize(ssize_t len) <-- nothing defined
Of course, nothing prevents .with*Contents() to delegate to .ofSize() internally, but the user, ultimately, does not care
Have to write a 'parser' in C which can read in equations.
To be precise, I need to read in infix expressions and put them into a tree form.
Including parentheses and stuff, above operator precedence.
I do it recursively right now, and it works. But not for stuff wrapped in parentheses.
So like: x + x * x + x
Will be output as: ((x + (x * x)) + x)
But if I write: (x + x) * (x + x) it doesn't produce anything because I don't know what to do with '(', and ')'.
Well, in the tree, anything with parentheses gets piped into it's own tree, for sure. But how to do that so that it can handle any amount of stuff thrown at it: Like (((((((x))))))) + x I cannot handle yet