Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
Jun 16, 2017 02:01
: would the fact that the call occurs in setRight() mean there is still technically "work" to do? or not, because all that is required is simply pointing to the value received by insert().
Jun 16, 2017 02:01
my message appeared twice for me there
Jun 16, 2017 02:01
woops
Jun 16, 2017 01:59
is the following call successfully tail recursive? this occurs in insert(): current.setRight(insert(current.getRight(), data, height + 1));
 

Python

Room rules: sopython.com/chatroom Code formatting guide: tinyu...
Jun 14, 2017 18:41
good to know
Jun 14, 2017 18:39
@AndrasDeak Java room is relatively quiet at the moment, I thought this would be "Theory" heavy to be relevant on here, but I was unaware of the possible more drastic differences possible between java/python
Jun 14, 2017 18:37
I was trying to understand the logic, but to be honest, thinking of it the other way around, it would not make sense to suddenly call a parent function when one called it initially on an overriding class
Jun 14, 2017 18:36
It does seem to call the child
Jun 14, 2017 18:35
good point
Jun 14, 2017 18:35
do the rules of polymorphism change across languages?
Jun 14, 2017 18:34
I initially thought the logic would be that given it's a parent function calling another function in its own class, it wouldn't "reach down" and get the child class, but it seems that it does.
Jun 14, 2017 18:33
This is technically a question in Java, but I imagine the rules for polymorphism are the same. I have two classes, parent and child. if a method in child calls a method in parent which calls a method in the same class (so in parent as well), but that method is override in child, will it execute the parent function or the child function?
 

Java

Dedicated to the discussion of the Java programming language a...
Jun 14, 2017 18:28
mmm, since I am calling the original method from child, the overriden method will be called, due to polymorphism?
Jun 14, 2017 18:27
from intuition, it should execute the parent version of the function, but it seems like it's executing the child. What is the rule here?
Jun 14, 2017 18:27
I have two classes, parent and child. if a method in child calls a method in parent which calls a method in the same class (so in parent as well), but that method is override in child, will it execute the parent function or the child function?
Feb 25, 2017 01:46
@Michael thanks for the clarification
Feb 23, 2017 17:15
Hey there, this is a fairly basic question. I'm in a java class and we're starting to handle bigger projects. Anyway, we're expected to always include getters and setters, copy constructors, equals methods, stuff like that. Whenever I make a constructor, I end up using the getter and the setter, even if I'm in the class. Is this "bad practice"? should I be accessing the property directly? does it matter in terms of speed, safety, or memory efficiency?
 

 Android Era with Kotlin and Java

Important: Read dos and don'ts here: androidera.github.io . Ma...
Mar 4, 2017 22:48
figured it out, .equals fixed my issue
Mar 4, 2017 22:31
Hey there, I'm having a minor problem with inputting information in a file. I would like to, for each individual object I put in a file, test to make sure that there is not already an entry for that object. I am testing each individual line in the file, for each item in my array of objects. Despite that, no duplicates are ever found. Are extra characters (return or something) perhaps entered on each line? my code snippet is here: paste.ofcode.org/ZqbcXihEvBpZRBqT5k9WgV
 

SQL

Got a SQL question? Any SQL flavor here, just ask. Indicate yo...
Jan 20, 2017 16:57
Jan 20, 2017 16:57
you can see it (in french) here:
Jan 20, 2017 16:57
"Error of syntax" (absent operator) in the expression "CASE WHEN a.length < b.length THEN a.length ELSE b.gene_length END"
Jan 20, 2017 16:56
and the error is in french, so I translated what I got above
Jan 20, 2017 16:56
Jan 20, 2017 16:56
the idea is this:look in a table that has entries with a gene name and a gene length, take entries with the same gene name, compare gene length, and output entries with the longer gene length
Jan 20, 2017 16:55
yeah
Jan 20, 2017 16:24
@Shaneis, you still here?
Jan 20, 2017 15:53
"Error of syntax" (absent operator) in the expression "CASE WHEN a.length < b.length THEN a.length ELSE b.gene_length END"
Jan 20, 2017 15:52
@AndyK I am using SQL Access and got this error:
Jan 20, 2017 15:51
@An
Jan 20, 2017 14:49
@AndyK Thank you very much!
Jan 19, 2017 19:59
would this work?
Jan 19, 2017 19:59
SELECT
a.gene_name,
CASE WHEN a.length < b.gene_length THEN a.gene_length ELSE b.gene_length END AS gene_length
FROM MyTable a
INNER JOIN MyTable b ON a.gene_name = b.gene_name
WHERE a.gene_name = b.gene_name
Jan 19, 2017 19:58
but don't fully understand the INNER JOIN part
Jan 19, 2017 19:58
I've been trying to use this: stackoverflow.com/questions/25103485/…
Jan 19, 2017 19:57
I am trying to get it to check if the names are the same, and if so, fetch the longer gene length
Jan 19, 2017 19:57
C1 | 5
Jan 19, 2017 19:57
C1 | 3
Jan 19, 2017 19:57
A1 | 3
Jan 19, 2017 19:57
A1 | 2
Jan 19, 2017 19:57
gene_name | gene_length
Jan 19, 2017 19:56
I have the following "table"
Jan 19, 2017 19:56
Hello