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1 message moved from Lounge<C++>
 
21 hours later…
user1174868
21:16
Hey gang, anyone who wants to learn about c I found out why the ++ was adding 4
user1174868
under pointer arithmetic
user1174868
I am not clever, is there any way to create a struct that takes in both a variable for the array size and the array size of variable?
@ripDaddy69 Not certain what you are asking here.
user1174868
struct foo { int a; int arr[a] }
21:25
So you are saying, make an array of a size equal to the argument?
user1174868
yes
C++ or C?
user1174868
which I see how that is stupid, but I was just wondering how
user1174868
C
Something with malloc I assume.
user1174868
21:27
Well looks like i will just take the simple route and make a global variable
Global variable for what?
user1174868
the array size
user1174868
so the struct references that
Is it known at compile time?
user1174868
Well I am trying to make it user inputted so it can't be
21:29
Not sure how a global variable will help you, then. In terms of the array declaration anyway.
user1174868
Yeah I don't understand why this won't work actually
Arrays cannot be declared with a non-constant size.
user1174868
for the struct to be initalized the inputs have to be given anyways so what does it matter if a isn't known? It will be when the struct is called otherwise it won't be called
You can do it via malloc.
user1174868
I know in java you can input a variable for array size
user1174868
21:31
c++ likely too right?
You could, say, have int * array = new int [size];
user1174868
but not in C
C has malloc.
C dynamic memory allocation refers to performing dynamic memory allocation in the C programming language via a group of functions in the C standard library, namely malloc, realloc, calloc and free. The C++ programming language includes these functions for backwards compatibility; its use in C++ has been largely superseded by [[New (C++)|operators new and new[]]]. Many different implementations of the actual memory allocation mechanism, used by malloc, are available. Their performance varies in both execution time and required memory. Rationale The C programming language manages memory ...
user1804599
calloc is silly.
user1174868
So I need to use malloc referencing a to make the array?
user1804599
21:34
int *array = malloc(sizeof(int) * size);
if (array == NULL) {
    return -1;
}
// use array
free(array);
user1174868
well things got really bad now
user1174868
why isn't there any good documentation for C?
user1174868
its like everyone who uses C died
int a[size] and fuck pointers (where size is a constant >:|)
user1174868
that isn't working
user1174868
21:38
I create it as int a[];
user1174868
I don't even understand why the compiler lets me do this, int arr[];
user1174868
is that even an array?
@ripDaddy69 int a[] = {0, 1, 4, 42};
user1174868
I tried that
user1174868
21:43
well I did this
What compiler are you using?
user1174868
gcc probably
Oh, you can't do that in a struct
user1174868
it let me :(
21:44
arrays declared like that need to know their size on compile time
user1174868
why is this so hard in c
user1174868
java was so much better
Wait what. Hold on, let me test something.
user1174868
even scheme could do this
user1174868
the most featureless language
21:45
C is poison and Java is horseshit, go for Haskell and be a manly manly man
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel That sounds awesome!
user1174868
why can't I have the user input an array size and then initiliaze an array to that size?
You can, just not using what you are using.
If memory serves, basically all Java things are on the heap.
user1174868
yeah
user1174868
I don't understand how malloc would help
user1174868
21:46
it only reserves memory space
And that's what you need.
malloc allocates memory for you
In Java, you can go, for example, new int [5] as well, I think, and it returns a reference to it.
any good (e)books on c++ streams? I'm looking for something that digs very deep into the madness which are related to <*stream>
user1174868
I don't need to allocate memory, I need to specify a size of the array for C to have an array size at compile time or whatever
Xeo
Xeo
There's only one, really
21:48
Arrays take up space. How would you do it without allocating memory?
@ripDaddy69 struct foo { int a; int arr[4]; };
Xeo
Xeo
stupid onebox
user1174868
@MohammadAliBaydoun I know that works but it isn't what I need, I need to user to be able to define that 4 with a
user1174868
screw it I am doing it the stupid way
21:49
What is the stupid way?
@Xeo found that when searching the web but was hoping for something more recent, but I guess 13 years isn't.. too.. bad :-/
user1174868
defining the array size in the code
@ripDaddy69 Then the size is not a compile-time constant, and you need to allocate the memory manually on run-time.
user1174868
how do I allocate the memory?
malloc.
21:50
so do struct foo { int a; int* arr; };
user1174868
It didn't work
Error?
Xeo
Xeo
Guys, why am I not seeing a std::vector suggested to the ghost?
user1174868
I forget, something about not valid type
Who wrote that shit? Oh, that's right, me.
21:51
@Xeo because he doesn't want to allocate memory.. someone please hand him pen and paper!
@Xeo Because C :/
Does C have std::vector? I didn't think it did.
user1804599
Snooker is complicated.
user1174868
@MohammadAliBaydoun How is it useful to make it an int pointer?
@Xeo He's writing C.
(quick, someone else tell him that)
21:51
@not-rightfold It's not. Snooker is hard.
@Xeo Have you read the book? Is it good? Can you recommend it?
@ripDaddy69 It's not useful, it's required
Xeo
Xeo
Ew, take that prehistoric thing somewhere else. :/ We're not a museum.
@ripDaddy69 Malloc returns the memory address of the newly allocated memory. The pointer points to the first element of it. You can then use it like a normal array.
user1804599
@sehe My cock was hard.
Xeo
Xeo
21:52
@Tuntuni No, apparently, N/A
@not-rightfold But that's a foul shot. You gotta use the cue
user1174868
so malloc = ptr?
@Xeo IC
user1804599
@ripDaddy69 malloc returns a pointer.
@ripDaddy69 malloc returns a pointer, yes.
user1804599
See malloc(3).
user1174868
but I need an array somewhere
Whoosh
And malloc will allocate that array for you
user1174868
so ptr point to malloc which points to an array
21:53
See, this is why Java is horseshit :V
@ripDaddy69 what
user1804599
@ripDaddy69 If you use malloc(sizeof(int) * 42), you basically have a pointer to an array of 42 integers.
@ripDaddy69 what
Xeo
Xeo
@Tuntuni Even if it's bad (which AFAICS it isn't), it's about the only resource on the Lovecraftian horror story known as iostreams.
user1174868
so ptr = malloc(sizeof(int) * 42)
21:54
Or at least, malloc will allocate a block of memory for you that you can use as an array
@Xeo hahah, indeed :')
user1804599
int *xs = malloc(sizeof(int) * 3);
xs[0] = 1;
xs[1] = 2;
xs[2] = 3;
@ripDaddy69 A pointer does not point to a function call.
user1804599
Woop dynamic array!
user1804599
Use realloc to resize.
21:54
@ripDaddy69 No. malloc just returns a pointer to the block of memory it allocated for you.
@ripDaddy69 why would you want to use it anyway? It sucks.
user1174868
@BartekBanachewicz Use what?
user1804599
inb4 close to metal
user1174868
@Tutuni So how do I assign values to the "array"
I remember the first time I touched streams. I almost cried. Things like it not writing because some flag was thrown. Took me a long time to learn that lesson.
21:55
@ripDaddy69 malloc
@ripDaddy69 Use std::vector. :3
@BartekBanachewicz What can he use insted? calloc?
@Tuntuni He's in C.
@EtiennedeMartel vector.
@EtiennedeMartel Well, fuck. Abandon thread.
9 secs ago, by Etienne de Martel
@Tuntuni He's in C.
21:56
@EtiennedeMartel what is he doing here then?
user1174868
I am using c
It's like none of you is actually paying attention.
I'm not.
@ripDaddy69 then you're screwed forever
Don't use C.
21:56
You're all throwing generic answers without giving a single shit about it.
@EtiennedeMartel We aren't.
user1804599
@EtiennedeMartel mmap!
@EtiennedeMartel You're in the Lounge. :/
@EtiennedeMartel Business as usual!
@EtiennedeMartel I don't give a single shit about people using C
user1174868
21:56
@CatPlusPlus Ok I will tell my professor to teach the class in C++ because a cat online said so
8
user1804599
2 mins ago, by not-rightfold
int *xs = malloc(sizeof(int) * 3);
xs[0] = 1;
xs[1] = 2;
xs[2] = 3;
If you really want to help, at least try a bit.
user1804599
learn2read
Otherwise, don't bother.
21:57
@ripDaddy69 :D
@EtiennedeMartel I saw malloc, the only proper conclusion is to suggest vector
I thought you'd kick a person using C way earlier
Xeo
Xeo
2 mins ago, by Xeo
room topic changed to Lounge<C>: Because apparently, we have decayed. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [no-questions]
Xeo
Xeo
No vector in C :P
@EtiennedeMartel Well, we did help. We just missed the fact he was working with C. We didn't say anything wrong.
21:57
@ripDaddy69 It won't make the course any better.
Xeo
Xeo
(You guys brought this upon yourself)
(They are all bad)
@Xeo I haven't refreshed the page my bad omg
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz I hate when it doesn't auto-update the topic
user1804599
#define instantiate_vector(T) \
    struct vector_ ## T { \
        T *data; \
        size_t size, capacity; \
    };
21:58
But seriously who'd pay attention to this.
user1804599
And a lot of functions. :D
It's some boring C shit.
I actually wasn't reading at all.
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus I was reading a ghost story - because people kept talking to something I can't see.
@BartekBanachewicz I have nothing against C.
Xeo
Xeo
21:59
Maybe it was also a psycho-thriller.
What I dislike is when people use C idioms in C++.
user1174868
int *ptr = malloc(sizeof(int) * 5);
ptr = {0,1,2,3,4};
foo x = {.a = 5, .arr= malloc};
@ripDaddy69 No.
No can do.
@EtiennedeMartel I think the language is only alive because of legacy and we have many better substitutes right now.
21:59
@ripDaddy69 No
user1174868
why
A pointer isn't an array. You can't init it like that.
@ripDaddy69 because it's C, and it's a bad language
user1174868
what is the array here?
Still feeding the troll?
22:00
@ripDaddy69 nothing
Array init works only with declaring arrays.
@BartekBanachewicz I'm not sure anything can match C in the "portably assembly" side of things.
@sehe is he trolling?
You'd think that array != pointer is obvious, but.
user1174868
I am trying to learn
22:00
@sehe He's not trolling, he's just thick.
@ripDaddy69 And what the heck is .a and .arr?
user1174868
if I was trolling I would bring up the racist tweets
@EtiennedeMartel LLVM IR.
user1174868
c
@EtiennedeMartel that's because of legacy compilers on strange architectures
Xeo
Xeo
22:00
@CatPlusPlus C makes the difference between them a semi-permeable membrane.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, maybe. But can you write that by hand?
user1174868
its how you initilize variables in a struct
@Tuntuni That's valid.
@ripDaddy69 ... in C99
22:00
@EtiennedeMartel Can you write C by hand?
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, you mean politics.
which still isn't widely accepted.
@CatPlusPlus What is it?
@ripDaddy69 foo x = {5, malloc(sizeof(int) * 5)};
@EtiennedeMartel *** you.
22:01
@Tuntuni By-field init.
@CatPlusPlus I sure as hell can. And you probably can too. Unless you really are dumb.
Keyword arguments for struct init.
@CatPlusPlus Oh.
@BartekBanachewicz No need to censor yourself. We're all adults here.
@EtiennedeMartel Nobody can write C, unless they're a machine.
22:01
@EtiennedeMartel he prolly didn't mean SSCCEs. You brought up "assembly" yourself
@EtiennedeMartel I am trying to be less offensive.
user1804599
I fucking miss designated initialisers in C++.
I can ~write~ assembly.
@BartekBanachewicz I can handle myself, milady.
But it's not what I'd call a production code.
LLVM IR is a portable assembly that doesn't pretend to be an actual human-writeable language.
@BartekBanachewicz Embedded stuff is kinda the only place where C is still useful, mostly because it's essentially a portably assembly language.
22:02
@not-rightfold why? do you use POD so often that you need'em?
user1174868
@MohammadAliBaydoun Thanks that works
(And also compiler support)
@EtiennedeMartel because legacy compilers on weird architectures.
That being said, C is still useful in some places.
ARM is a weird architecture.
The fact that you're not working in there doesn't change a thing.
@CatPlusPlus no, PIC is a weird architecture
user1174868
Why is this still wrong? foo x = {.a = 5, .arr= malloc(sizeof(int) * x.a)};

x.arr = {1,2,3,4,5};
It works. Only. When declaring. Arrays.
user1174868
22:03
How do I interact with this array I made?
Pointers. Are not. Arrays.
3 mins ago, by Tuntuni
A pointer isn't an array. You can't init it like that.
6 mins ago, by not-rightfold
2 mins ago, by not-rightfold
int *xs = malloc(sizeof(int) * 3);
xs[0] = 1;
xs[1] = 2;
xs[2] = 3;
are you illiterate?
user1174868
I have him muted
good job then.
user1804599
lol
user1174868
22:04
he told me to kill myself a couple days ago so I muted him and xeo
lolll
Oh for fuck's sake.
@ripDaddy69 why don't you go to the C room and annoy them instead?
immediate action
Still bringing that up, hmm?
user1804599
22:05
@ripDaddy69 Do it!
user1174868
what c room?
@not-rightfold You can choke on a fire hydrant now.
The C room
You know,
@BartekBanachewicz Well, we are the C room now. :S
I'm tempted to bin the entire boring helpdesk session.
22:05
The one labeled Java
@MohammadAliBaydoun The one that keeps closing?

Lounge<C>

C Programming Language Board: It's like an answering machine; ...
this one ^
user1804599
@EtiennedeMartel I like fire.
go there and click "leave" here.
It actually exists. gasp
user1804599
22:06
@CatPlusPlus Move it to the PHP room.
have fun bye.
268 messages moved from Lounge<Cat>
@EtiennedeMartel oh well
user1174868
22:25
this place got rip daddied
1 message moved from bin

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