C++ Questions and Answers

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Dec 5 05:27
If you have a problem and use reg ex to solve it now you have two problems :-(
 
Apr 6 07:43
100K node sparc cluster and do map reduce on it.
Apr 6 07:43
Since bound for all values are 100,000 it will really depend a lot on the data. If you could say that X << Y in all cases, then you could make an argument for a heap. Otherwise, maybe an insertion sort at each step then adding the top x values (doing some caching to minimize recalculations).
Apr 6 07:43
Is there a link to the puzzle.
Apr 6 07:43
Use a heap. You keep only the top x largest elements in the heap. Complexity here is O(x.log(x)) this should be better assuming that x <<< n.
 
Sep 23, 2022 02:37
No reason not to use std::vector<float> here to handle the correct memory management. The addition of move semantics in C++11 make this just as efficient as handling user allocated buffer but with no memory leaks. Makes me especially weary given that you don't show any constructors/destructors and prove that you are correctly following the rule of 3/5.
 
Dec 7, 2020 23:47
0≤i+j≤n includes the first and one past end. This indices that arithmetic is valid as long as it stays in this range.
 
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
@zstreet You did not copy and paste this from working code. You may have copied and pasted it but not from the code that compiled. No matter what compiler you are using this is going to be the same.
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
Notice the missing close bracket here: while(std::getline(source,line){
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
ParticleString = > ParticlesString (fixed spelling of variable name).
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
After fixing the code it works as expected. So the bug is not in the code you posted. You must have posted the wrong code.
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
@zstreet Actually nots not. Because that code does not compile. I suggest you copy and paste the code that is actually causing the error (because that is not it). Also to be polite its nice to add the extra code that makes things easier for people trying to help you.
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
That's not the point. The point is that there is so much missing information that nobody can help you without using ESP. Anything people said would simply be a guess. We are missing input data we are missing type information. The only way to help you is if we can reproduce your issue. What you have provided does not get us any closer to reproducing the issue so you can't be helped at this point. Let's assume that getline() is working as expected and that the problem is with your code and/or data and your understanding of it.
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
If you want real help you need to provide a minimal working example showing the failure. This means a compilable program and the input data. Preferably you would also show the expected output.
Jun 25, 2020 00:02
You obviously have not included all the information. Which is a mistake it is hard to decipher a problem using ESP. But I am guessing. "more junk" contains the work "Atoms".
 
Feb 27, 2020 20:55
OK. SO please delete your answer as it is so wrong that it will cause people problems.
Feb 27, 2020 20:54
No. The question is if you have a BaseClass pointer how do you copy the obejct that it points at. You donn't know what a BaseClass pointer points at runtime with compile time information. I have shown you that your code breaks.
Feb 27, 2020 20:52
Your solution does not work
Feb 27, 2020 20:52
Exactly.
Feb 27, 2020 20:51
Function(tmp2); Will compile but give the wrong answer using templates.
Feb 27, 2020 20:50
The trouble is that given a pointer class (RightClass*) you can tell what it points at at runtime (in the general case). You only know that it is RightClass or derived from RightClass in some way
Feb 27, 2020 20:47
````
RightClass* getMeARightClass() {
if (rand() < 0.5) {
return new RightRightClass{};
} else {
return new RightClass{};
}
}
````
Feb 27, 2020 20:46
````
BaseClass* tmp1= getMeARightClass();
Function(tmp1); // Fails to compile
RightClass* tmp2 = getMeARightClass();
Function(tmp2); // Compiles. But generates a wrong answer
````
Feb 27, 2020 20:45
Ping
Feb 27, 2020 20:41
Have you realized that this is fundamentally broken yet?
Feb 27, 2020 20:41
But you only have a pointer to RightClass. So you will not get a RightRightClass object. The vector is still BaseClass*.
Feb 27, 2020 20:41
If you have a RightClass* tmp = getMeARightClass(); Function(tmp); This will compile and fail (if the object returned is derived from RightClass i.e. RightRightClass).
Feb 27, 2020 20:41
This only works if you know the type at compile time. With types that use virtual functions like BaseClass that is rarely ever the case. You have a pointer to a base class that could be a Right or Left object you can't tell what it points at (that is the point). In any real situation you would have a reference to an object that was created many layers away from the point you want to make the copy. Thus your template function is actually doing the wrong thing as it will only ever make a copy of the current known type not of the actual derived real runtime type of the object.
Feb 27, 2020 20:41
Even after you comment about throwing a compile time error. That's not true. Lets imagine we have another type class RightRightClass: public RightClass {} Now you have a pointer of type RightClass* that points at an object of type RightRightClass. Now your function when passed a RightClass* object still compiles as RightClass is not abstract type but will generates the wrong result as the underlying object is at runtime a different type.
 
Sep 5, 2018 03:56
I would say that the proposition of the question is wrong. You have not shown that declaring the variable in the loop is faster. The code above when compiled with optimizations will basically remove the loop. But even if you changed it to use sum you have not shown that either one is faster.
 
Aug 13, 2018 23:34
@helloworld922. Are you sure its faster? Or is it that your average including memory allocation is faster. If you remove the delete/new operations do you still see the imprvoed speed. Then its cache locality.
Aug 13, 2018 23:34
Are you asking why memory allocation of objects the second time around is faster than the initial allocation?
 
Jul 11, 2018 05:33
@WaqarRashid aws.amazon.com/ec2/instance-types On the X1e machine type 10GB is less than 10% of the smallest machine. On the largest machine its less than 1%. My data structures usually span fleets of machines.
Jul 10, 2018 21:19
@WaqarRashid Your idea of huge and mine differ.
Jul 9, 2018 23:54
@Ped7g sorry spoke too quickly. You can simulate a stack. But Simulating a stack and using a stack what's the difference.
Jul 9, 2018 23:54
Those must be huge trees. I would suspect a bug before I suspected that you were running out of stack space. Have you actually checked to see there is nothing wrong?
 
May 28, 2018 02:42
Let me re-read
May 28, 2018 02:39
No. Read my answer. I explicitly say up cast can use dynamic and static cast.
May 28, 2018 02:38
Please quote from the standard where it says you can use static_cast to downcast (from B* to D*).
May 28, 2018 02:37
For downcast only dynamic cast works.
May 28, 2018 02:37
For up cast dynamic or static work (I say this in my answer).
May 28, 2018 02:36
But none of this has anything to do with the question.
May 28, 2018 02:36
You can up cast with dynamic cast. It works fine. Not required though as the result is the same as a static cast.
May 28, 2018 02:35
NEEDED is not a word from the standard.
Lets keep our discussion to the standard expressions.
May 28, 2018 02:33
But what is needed for B to D1 or D2 (both derived from B).
May 28, 2018 02:33
static_cast can do that conversion.
May 28, 2018 02:32
for static_cast
May 28, 2018 02:32
Please show a quote from the standard that specifically allows this conversion.
May 28, 2018 02:31
for static_cast
May 28, 2018 02:30
OK. Pull up the section from the standard that syas that it is allowed then.