Can someone help me with this ? I have a solution in which one of the projects builds to an exe but the other builds to a lib, however in order to get everything to compile I have to indicate the sources from the lib project to the other one , otherwise , it just indicates that the header files are unrecognized ! I thought the point of making a lib is that you dont have to make such hard links
@angryInsomniac If I understand your problem correctly, you need to make your lib a dependency of the exe. Right click onto the exe's project node, and look for a menu item like "Dependencies".
@angryInsomniac Ah, the headers. Well, they got to be somewhere where the exe project can pick them up. Look at the exe project's C++ compiler settings' include path property.
@sbi as I see it (I may be wrong) if I indicate the include dir's in the Additional include directories then the compiler might as well just use those header files and link everything into the exe file
@sbi possibly , however , one last query, if I add it in the additional include dir's and then take the debug folder , remove the .lib file from it and then try to run the .exe , it should not run , right ?
In short, and applied to VS: You need to put the headers somewhere where the compiler can pick them up. That is, somewhere that's in the exe project's include path list. You need to make the exe depend on the lib file in order for the linker to find the obj files necessary to link the exe.
@angryInsomniac This all won't help if you do not understand what compilation/linking does, and when and why headers or obj/lib files are needed.
I don't get how it's hard to tell what's being asked??? It doesn't get as straightforward as this? Or can some people not handle straightforward questions? — Tony The LionJun 7 '11 at 15:55
@sbi I just realized the massive stupidity ! I was expecting dll like behaviour from a static lib , ofcourse the static lib is compiled into the exe at the compilation time
IIRC, somebody messed with the write-access list and fat-fingered a few privilege changes. So if you were on the write-access list and you weren't when you joined a few min. ago, it could be that you were removed.
@LuchianGrigore No you don't. It makes no difference. The people on the write access list are mainly regulars who happened to be in the room in at least one instance when we into gallery mode.
Or just... copy the damn header. The boost license allows you to do that (slightly non-essential: is RAII also not allowed? Use it for the lock guards) — sehe1 min ago
but locking a mutex in a dtor to prevent the object from being destroyed is silly. It won't even help wait for other threads using the object to finish, cause something is already holding the mutex. The best it can do is cause a deadlock
all threads wait for Thread A to release mutex, but thread A is long done and Foo was accidentally destroyed.
@TonyTheLion absolutely. hence "less essential". The essence is, the guy is misguided, about the language, about using (standard) library, about threading and about the goal. 'Nuff said
@TonyTheLion Yep. Shifts tend to have lower throughputs than all the "direct-bit" instructions like &, |, xor, not, etc...
Believe it or not, shifts are even slower than additions on a lot of current processors.
Even though shifts are cheaper to implement than adders in hardware, addition is such a common operation, that they are optimized to be as fast as possible - faster than shifts in a lot of cases.
I have a unsigned integer N = abcd where a,b,c,d represents bits from msb to lsb. I want get following numbers
x1 = ab0cd
x2 = ab1cd
What is the fastest way to do it using bitwise operations in C?
What I'm trying right now is as follows
unsigned int blockid1 = N>>offset;
unsigned int ...
@TonyTheLion Pretty much. It's easy to look at it and call it stupid. (and it is in most cases) But if you do lower enough, you'll find subtle differences that may or may not make a difference in the large scale.
It's because the data-flow circuits only go from low-bits to high-bits. That's fine for all the arithmetic operations where carry-propagation only goes up. But for rihgt-shift, you need to transfer data downwards.
it's not stupid, if you where under the belief that you hardly ever do right shift compared to left shit, of course you are going to optimise for left shit at the cost of right shift
@Takarakaka Erm... Technically that isn't exactly true, unless you are willing to redefine 'trouble' to make some problems (like, you know, dying) less irreversible
I had the same thing happen somewhere last week. It was ventured that perhaps (a) they were old pending access request (from a time when the Lounge _did_ go into gallery) (b) the user involved changed his name (e.g. into DeadMG - lol) thus triggering a new notfication for the (old) access requrest
^ That is entirely unchecked hypothesis, though /cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
So, this guy had m1 = new char[strlen(m2)]; in an answer and someone correctly pointed out he was missing a +1 because strlen doesn't count the null terminator. So he changes that to: m1 = new char[strlen(m2)]; // <---- reserve memory for m1, oops! i've forget the +1 to alloc the termination character
@TonyTheLion I have my work cut out here. Over the next week, I'm to implement a service that transactionally reads and processes queue items received over proprietary protocol. And yes, this includes database transactions. Let's hope the custom transport is any good w.r.t. transaction acknowledgements