C++ Questions and Answers

Solve problems and approach solutions. Just ask and lurkers wi...
Jan 3, 2017 16:37
Or the optimizer would do that for me?
Jan 3, 2017 16:37
Ok so chunking alignment optimizations cannot be done in a valid way?
Jan 3, 2017 16:30
So by reintpret_casting the 16bit pointer to a 32bit pointer in the code it can mess up the optimizer?
Jan 3, 2017 16:10
Hi friends, had a question regarding memory alignment for C++. If I have an array of 16bit integers (uint16_t) and wanted to sum them, is it best to just iterate over them as usual? Or to cast the pointer to a 32-bit (int) pointer and do shifting and so forth to work with two 16bits per memory retrieval? Assuming 32-bit (4byte) memory alignment.
 

Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
Mar 6, 2014 14:48
So what's with the "The only hope for humanity." then?
Mar 6, 2014 14:41
What's this channel about?
Mar 6, 2014 14:41
Yo guys.
 

C#

General discussions about the c# language, Squirrels | gist.gi...
Feb 1, 2013 21:36
@Pheonixblade9 Yea! I was reading a Walkthrough Combinatorics by Bona. Though, any mathematical proof text tends to take a long time to grok.
Feb 1, 2013 21:32
@KendallFrey If you're on windows there's an on screen keyboard for the mouse. (Start -> Run -> OSK). It has a PrtScn key
Feb 1, 2013 21:27
@Pheonixblade9 It's all good. I think I will go about making a series of most desired nodes to include in a solution. Using breadth first, or another shortest path algorithm to make all along path as allocated. Then mutating the result, and assessing with a fitness function, and repeat. For as to produce every possible solution would be O(n!) as you pointed out.
Feb 1, 2013 21:16
@Pheonixblade9 So to produce the entire solution space would take too long at O(n!)? So I suppose I should head down more of a GA approach or something?
Feb 1, 2013 21:12
I should've studied combinatorics instead of programming.
Feb 1, 2013 21:06
@Pheonixblade9 That's like uhh pigeon hole stuff, though
Feb 1, 2013 21:05
@Pheonixblade9 I see
Feb 1, 2013 21:00
@KendallFrey What are those processes called and/or where can I read more on them?
Feb 1, 2013 20:58
@KendallFrey OK, so if I want to do things that involve working with more than 2GB of data I need to load only portions of it into memory and save it in my own kind of flat file or something?
Feb 1, 2013 20:55
How do you tell C# to use the page file instead in that case?
Feb 1, 2013 20:55
@KendallFrey Well, suppose you create a loop that iterates the creation of a large object (say 20MB) and the loop just continues to go enough iterations to fill the RAM.
Feb 1, 2013 20:53
Also, I'm not really sure how C# handles it if you fill the RAM, will it go to page file? Or just crash the program?
Feb 1, 2013 20:50
Well, I know it's a combinatorics issue. Though, the goal I'm trying to reach seems reasonable, say a couple million permutations. I'm just unsure if it's the implementation/approach or language that is adding so much extra overhead to the memory used.
Feb 1, 2013 20:47
It boils down to loop that each time it iterates I end up with an exponentially growing number of List<int>s. However, each iteration each List<int> only increases its Count by 1.
Feb 1, 2013 20:44
@Pheonixblad Trying to find some permutations of node allocations on a graph.
Feb 1, 2013 20:42
Hey friends, I wrote an essay of a question if anyone wants to take a crack at it. stackoverflow.com/questions/14654469/… Thanks.
 

PHP

Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, ...
Oct 25, 2012 14:23
If I have a large array in global space and I know at a certain point in the script I will no longer need it, does manually calling unset() on it buy me anything in terms of performance, or should I just let PHP handle it?
Oct 24, 2012 17:30
If I have a list of strings and I'm interested in maintaining a unique set, is it efficient in php to put them as associative array keys (with some dummy value pointed to by each key) then adding a new string to the "set" if it isn't there via array_key_exists?
Oct 18, 2012 18:26
If I want to do a many-value-list insert to MySQL via PHP, e.g
INSERT INTO `table1` VALUES (1),(2),(3),...(100000);

Am I really suppose to construct it like this (e.g. PDO/MySQLi):

INSERT INTO `table1` VALUES (?),(?),(?),...(?);

$stmt->execute($values);

Where $values is an array {1,2,3...100000}
Oct 12, 2012 14:50
OK, I guess MyISAM doesn't have FK's so I guess InnoDB it is.
Oct 12, 2012 14:38
@LeviMorrison OK, was just confused since the answers on that question all said deprecated
Oct 12, 2012 14:36
How do you know which functions are deprecated? I didn't see the mysql_* listed as such on php.net, just that it was "discouraged to use these"
Oct 12, 2012 14:28
So uhh pdo or mysqli?
Oct 12, 2012 14:24
Wow, I hadn't used PHP in, well forever... didn't realize the mysql_* were dead already.
Oct 12, 2012 14:19
I just checked, I'm using 5.1.63 so MyISAM still?
Oct 12, 2012 14:13
These were the choices I was given: ARCHIVE, CSV, MRG_MYISM, BLACKHOLE, InnoDB, MEMORY, MyISAM.. not sure which is suppose to be default?
Oct 12, 2012 14:11
Storage engine.
Oct 12, 2012 14:09
Sorry for broad question, but which MySQL engine would you recommend for use with a PHP app? I'm not really sure how to even being to compare them.
 

MySQL and relational databases

Ask your question, and then hang around a while to see if an e...
Oct 12, 2012 14:05
Hey
 

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Mar 20, 2012 19:29
@GGG Yea but I was looking for the form.onreset not the window.onreset
Mar 20, 2012 19:16
@andrewjackson But, it works in all mozilla based browsers I've seen, so how is it not supported?
Mar 20, 2012 18:48
Hey, I was looking for documentation on the onreset <form> event. I found some info on sitepoint and msdn, but I can't find it at all on the MDN -- wondering why that would be the case?