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01:21
hello
um, this is the C++ lounge so you guys know C++ right?
I'm curious why a heap corrution occurs with deleting variables, kind of like `delete Data[index];`
and data is defined as `Class* Data[MAX_AMOUNT_OF_DATA];`
Visual studio is complaining all the time after a second delete
yet the application works..
it's annoying, I can't debug because every time a breakpoint is triggered
maybe you could look at my question? :)
yeah, here
and how do I remove a element then? (to call the destructor)
so, if I have a unordered_map of these and I call .erase then it will call the destructor?
yeah I have a command /vehicledelete <id> to remove vehicles manually
alright. Yet all the memory stuff is so confusing, unique_ptr, shared_ptr, auto_ptr, <xxx>_ptr ... :/
so I end up using normal pointers.
for containers I have an image with yes/no questions.
so I can lookup what I need
@Rapptz hm okay I will try that
@JustinMeiners thanks for the tip
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 11.0\VC\include\utility(138): error C2248: 'std::unique_ptr<_Ty>::unique_ptr' : cannot access private member declared in class 'std::unique_ptr<_Ty>' :/
Probably this: std::unordered_map<VehiclePointer,int> VehicleToIDMap;
Why can't I use an unordered_map with unique ptr?
but then I won't have data about the pointer in the other arrays?
so how can I lookup what ID an pointer is bound to without iterating all vehicles?
:<
Free Heap block 005F8EC8 modified at 005F8EDC after it was freed I seriously don't get the logic... block x modified at y after delete?
How can that happen?
@Chemistpp yeah but I don't think I'm doing that anywhere..
@ThePhD raw pointers are just int values
@DeadMG how is an address not an decimal or any other value?
`int * pointer = new int;
printf("%08x",pointer);`
just a value... which you can use in the source code to access that stored address
when you erase an element from an std::map it calls the destructor for the first and second right?
02:00
Speaking of pointers, not really sure what your sample provided does... but does everything need to be pointers?
@DeadMG Alright I get it, lucky me I don't do things "that way", I just know pointers are simple types (unsigned int or for 64 bit systems 64 bit unsigned integers) that store the address of another objects (and you may see the address as an value)
is this still valid in the destructor?
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7 hours later…
15:38
errr ... I am so dumb, this is my code:
 		String sql = "INSERT INTO messages (send_receive, sender, receiver, sent_time,  message, location, time, active_verified) Values ('";
 		sql = "2";
 		sql = "' , '";
 		sql = name;
 		sql = "' , 'me' , '";
 		sql = time;
 		sql = "' , '";
 		sql = message;
 		sql = "')";
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3 hours later…
Xeo
Xeo
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
1 message moved from Lounge<C++>

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