Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:54
what he said
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:40
i'm blind
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:40
everything is small
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:40
i have a new 30'' screen
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:36
@orlp
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:36
@orip thanks for the help
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:26
:D
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 18:05
because my implementation was: for (i=0; i<size-1; i++) { for (j=i; j<size; j++) {
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:57
you're right, i changed the specs
i'm fickle as weather
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:56
0
Q: How to iterate on unordered pairs inside an unordered_set?

UriWhat's a concise way to iterate on pairs of elements in unordered_set, where order doesn't matter and elements should be different?

Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:53
will send link shortly
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:53
@orip i'll SO this question, it seems general enough
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:52
(@milleniumbug)
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:51
not asymptotically but still
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:51
but complexity is a bit worse right
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:50
@orip i have an unordered_set, i want to iterate on pairs of objects from it, where the two objects are different
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:49
@milleniumbug yeah that'll work
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:49
@mill
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:48
never realized ineffectiveness can be so fun
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:45
read-only
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:45
that doesn't matter
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:43
it changes order?
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:43
even if only accessing?
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:43
bravo
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:42
nm it was a specific implementation i had in mind
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:41
just to get pairs of different elements
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:41
never asked to leave one element out
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:39
nested loop
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:39
@caps cartesian product on a set
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:34
scarlet, not seeing a solution
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:33
with ordering or without
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:33
but you must see that it makes sense to go over pairs of a set
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:33
gotta be a better way
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:32
wow cpp sucks
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:32
just early return on equivalence?
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:32
i want all pairs, with first element and second different
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:31
then how to do cartesian product on unordered_set
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:30
get with it gentlemen
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:30
cartesian product on unordered_set
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:30
i just want to stop once before last
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:30
ok.. i don't care about the order
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:30
if there is no order what is the meaning of an iterator
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:29
std::prev(my_unordered_set.end()) ?
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:28
i want to stop one before last
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:28
what's the correct way to do this
Uri
Jan 25, 2016 17:28
for (auto i = my_unordered_set.begin(); i < my_unordered_set.end() - 1;
 

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Uri
Apr 6, 2014 23:57
about your first question - you need to use the key instead of the index. js has dictionary and arrays, and you access them similarly, with arrays you use the index and for dictionary the key
Uri
Apr 6, 2014 22:45
the captcha in the rye
Uri
Apr 6, 2014 22:41
because you love it for its shortcomings vs hating it for its shortcomings like other languages
 

Python

Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom Code formatting guide: tinyu...
Uri
May 21, 2012 21:42
anybody knows anything about app engine backends?