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Oct 11, 2019 13:30
@TsakiroglouFotis I don't quite understand how this makes sense here. If using C++ is allowed, one can use std::less directly. If pure C is required, a C++ library can't really help.
Oct 11, 2019 13:30
@TsakiroglouFotis Boost is C++
 
Apr 8, 2019 08:35
Indeed, this is the textbook definition of an XY problem. Can you explain why you need to distinguish these two situations?
 

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Jan 3, 2019 08:15
@TheGeneral No idea. I just encountered it on my watched tags and reported it here since every second it wasn't flagged into oblivion was one second too many.
 

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Jan 3, 2019 07:56
 
May 18, 2018 04:28
@KuoChongYii My impression from your question is that you're somehow confounding compile time and runtime. That is, mixing up the source code (or even compiled binary code) with the data that is in memory when executing that code. Which may be causing your confusion.
May 18, 2018 04:28
@KuoChongYii Note that at compile time, there is no such thing as a variable's value. There are variables (or actually their names) and there are literals representing values, plus there are expressions. Variables and expressions will have values at runtime.
 
Nov 9, 2017 08:34
Není zač :-)
Nov 9, 2017 08:30
Thanks, as I said, happy to help.
Nov 9, 2017 08:30
That is where such a master config file will come in really handy :-)
Nov 9, 2017 08:29
Either configure_file() or file(GENERATE), that depends on whether you'll need to evaluate genexes to create the file's contents.
Nov 9, 2017 08:27
Or this indeed, or any other complexity you like.
Nov 9, 2017 08:27
Yes, it could very easily be a single-line config file just setting the master root of all hardcoded relative paths in the .exe.
Nov 9, 2017 08:26
Actually, I would recommend the setup I mentioned last: creating a "master path config" file at a well-known path relative to the .exe, and obtaining all other paths from there. You can then easily generate such a config file specific to the binary dir (such that it points into the source dir if you prefer not to copy assets), and generate a different one for the installation case.
Nov 9, 2017 08:22
But you should never rely on the CWD for looking up relative paths anyway, since someone can easily launch your program as ..\mybin\prog.exe. Start from the program's actual path (argv[0]), not from CWD.
Nov 9, 2017 08:22
I believe the default settings of the VS debugger is to set the CWD to the directory where the .vcxproj is located.
Nov 9, 2017 08:21
And BTW, probably the most general option would be to provide a single configuration file directly alongside your .exe (or at another well-known path relative to the .exe), and put all other paths in there.
Nov 9, 2017 08:20
The .cpp file will not interact with them at all, only the .exe will. So only the path relative to the .exe matters.
Nov 9, 2017 08:19
Yes exactly, that's what I meant.
Nov 9, 2017 08:17
And, as an alternative to manually setting up all this copying just for the binary tree, you can use install() commands to set up your project's installation steps, and them perform the install step before running the exe.
Nov 9, 2017 08:16
If you want the exe relocatable, you can copy (or symlink) the resources into the binary directory. That has the extra advantage of being able to store them in a different structure/layout in the source tree than in the binary tree, being able to process them somehow into their final form etc.
Nov 9, 2017 08:14
If you don't need the exe relocatable and just want it to work from where it was built, you can use e.g. configure_file() or file(GENERATE) to get the value of CMAKE_BINARY_DIR (or any other CMake variable) into a header/source file for use by your program.
Nov 9, 2017 08:12
As for handling runtime paths relative to the excutable: there are multiple options.
Nov 9, 2017 08:11
Note the difference between ${} and $<>. The former is a CMake variable dereference (evaluated at CMake configure time), the latter a generator expression (evaluated at generate time).
Nov 9, 2017 08:10
Here's how I would set the runtime output directory: set(CMAKE_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/$<CONFIG>/bin).
Nov 9, 2017 08:07
No problem, happy to help. Is it clear now?
Nov 9, 2017 08:06
@Startec Source directory is where the toplevel CMakeLists.txt is. Binary directory is where you have generated the buildsystem (such as the toplevel .sln file). All build artefacts should normally go into the binary dir, so that you can have as many buildsystems (= binary dirs) generated from one source dir as you want, and you can easily wipe the entire buildsystem by simply deleting the binary dir.
Nov 9, 2017 08:06
@Startec Yes it is, that's why I am saying it's unusual. You'd normally put binaries in the binary directory (CMAKE_BINARY_DIR), not the source one.
Nov 9, 2017 08:06
@Startec Then I suggest adding them in the single-configuration generators instead of removing them from the multi-config ones.
 
Oct 27, 2017 15:11
Stepping through the code with a debugger would easily show you where the problem is.
Oct 27, 2017 15:11
@bolov vector <int> adj[v]. Actually, they have an undefined number of vectors, since v is not initialised.
 
May 3, 2017 13:04
@Floris It's more like the definition of a JITter, I'd say. An interpreter doesn't have to involve machine code for the interpreted language.
May 3, 2017 13:04
@KyleStrand How to implement eval in a purely compiled language? Make a compiler part of the language's runtime environment.
 
Feb 21, 2017 13:11
OK, I've had my stab at the answer & edit. Hope it helps. Bye
Feb 21, 2017 13:01
OK, I'll write it up as an answer to the Q, and I'll try editing the Q itself based on what I've learned. Feel free to revisit the edit once I'm done :-)
Feb 21, 2017 12:55
std::function<void(Event&)> MakeEventCallback(std::function<void(Input&)> callback)
{
  return [callback](Event& ev) { callback(ev.getOriginalInput()); };
}
Feb 21, 2017 12:53
(code will follow)
Feb 21, 2017 12:53
OK, in that case I believe I have the solution. Are you looking for this?
Feb 21, 2017 12:52
When I have an Event object, is there a way to retrieve from it the Input with which it was constructed?
Feb 21, 2017 12:48
So it should be invoked with the same Input that was used to create the Event?
Feb 21, 2017 12:31
When will the input-taking functor be invoked? At the time the event-taking functor is created (i.e. in MakeEventCallback), or at the time the event-taking functor is invoked?
Feb 21, 2017 12:29
I'm back
Feb 21, 2017 11:43
I have to go AFK for ~45 mins, but I'd like to get to the bottom of this afterwards, if you're still interested.
Feb 21, 2017 11:42
What is that std::function<void(std::shared_ptr<Input>&)> actually for?
Feb 21, 2017 11:41
But MakeEventCallback is taking a functor which takes shared_ptr<Input>. So it seems this Input must be available at the place where you're creating these callbacks, not where you're invoking them.
Feb 21, 2017 11:38
And where does MakeEventCallback enter into the picture? What does it do?
Feb 21, 2017 11:35
And the eventual destination of all these callbacks, this place "loop over it at some point," this will do what? It will have an Input (or several Inputs) and want to create Events out of them? Or something else?
Feb 21, 2017 11:32
You're saying that in your code, you create an Event from a shared_ptr<Input>, right?
Feb 21, 2017 11:32
It still seems to me as if you have the parameter types sort of "backwards."
Feb 21, 2017 11:29
What should the functor returned from MakeEventCallback do?