C++ Questions and Answers

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303
Nov 9, 2021 16:40
is there a way to use the hidden friend idiom with scoped enums? since scoped enums can't have member-functions, i don't really see how
303
Nov 9, 2021 08:42
(or whatever long type that 2147483648 fits in)
303
Nov 9, 2021 08:39
because if i do 2147483647 + 1, the result will simply be 2147483648L
303
Nov 9, 2021 08:33
i just realized, because the whole thing can be computed as a constant value, won't the std::numeric_limits<signed>::max() + 1 actually result in a long int literal? therefor making it equivalent as unsigned u = 1234L; resulting in a implementation defined conversion from long to unsigned?
303
Nov 9, 2021 00:01
is this UB? unsigned u = std::numeric_limits<signed>::max() + 1; I'd expect the intermediate result needs to fit inside a signed int before being converted to an unsigned int, which it can't, therefore UB. is that right, or not?
Jan 16, 2018 18:04
because 0xffffffff requires int to be 4 bytes, which means -1 has to be the same as 0xffffffff when using unsigned ints
Jan 16, 2018 18:02
in what situation could -1 and ~0 differ when using unsigned types?
Jan 16, 2018 18:00
@milleniumbug so "unsigned z = 0xffffffff;" could never make any sense?
Jan 16, 2018 17:53
in what situation could someone prefer the latter option?
Jan 16, 2018 17:53
so if we use -1, then we say: "we always want the max value of unsigned type" if we use 0xffffffff, then we say: "we want the max value of unsigned type in most cases but sometimes we only want the half of max"
Jan 16, 2018 17:46
aha, so they just coincidentally collide with -1 on my system?
Jan 16, 2018 17:44
then why ever use 0xffffffff instead of -1 when using unsigned longs?
Jan 16, 2018 17:43
well, i can see where this is going. so is "(unsigned)-1" guaranteed to be the max value of said unsigned data type?
Jan 16, 2018 17:41
but when could that ever happen?
Jan 16, 2018 17:39
is there any reason/benefit to having this: "#define flag ((unsigned long)0xFFFFFFFF)" over this: "#define flag ((unsigned long)-1)" ? i see both values being used in the same header file
 

Java

Dedicated to the discussion of the Java programming language a...
Jan 29, 2018 17:25
preferably, i would use a 2d array to store everything and then use the result of that formula as an index to point to a specific position in the 2d array, this would be totally fine if i could cast the 2d array to a 1d array but unfortunately that is not possible
Jan 29, 2018 17:22
i can do faster lookups that way when storing a ton of coordinates
Jan 29, 2018 17:19
yes, but you can store a 2d array with a 1d array by indexing using y * width + x
Jan 29, 2018 17:17
but what if i have a 1d array which is equivalent to a 2d array (with the use of y * width + x) and i want to get a specific row out of the 1d array, how could i do this?
Jan 29, 2018 17:11
well, too bad i guess
Jan 29, 2018 17:11
a special relationship between 1d and 2d arrays would've been nice
Jan 29, 2018 17:08
aren't primitive types supposed to be primitive?
Jan 29, 2018 17:07
yes
Jan 29, 2018 17:07
casting a 2d array to 1d
Jan 29, 2018 17:02
why isn't it possible to cast a 2d array of primitive types to a 1d array? what harm can there be done with that?
Jan 26, 2018 20:53
im trying to query a value from Thing within list but that requires me to create a new Thing, assuming Thing is the key now, if i just want to query something i have to do: "list.containsKey(new Thing(..value to query...))", is there no other way?
Jan 26, 2018 20:49
thanks
Jan 26, 2018 20:48
yes, i was unsure if that was the case
Jan 26, 2018 20:46
"If the hashCode() of two objects in a map return the same number, then equals will be called to determine if they're really equal."
Jan 26, 2018 20:45
the following post on stackoverflow indicates that equals can be called when using containsKey: stackoverflow.com/a/4611777/7107236
Jan 26, 2018 20:35
does that mean equals is only called when using HashSet and contains?
Jan 26, 2018 20:31
assuming the class Thing has overridden the "public boolean equals(Object obj)" method
Jan 26, 2018 20:29
Map<Integer, Thing> list = new HashMap<>();

list.put(1, new Thing(...));
list.put(2, new Thing(...));
...
Jan 26, 2018 20:26
and you call containsKey with an unused key, like this: "list.containsKey(-1);" does that guarantee to call the Things equal method while passing an Integer object that matches the keys specified with the put method from the code example?
Jan 26, 2018 20:22
if you have a hash map like this:
 

SQL

Got a SQL question? Any SQL flavor here, just ask. Indicate yo...
Jan 19, 2018 11:35
in what situation could using aliases take a performance hit?
Jan 19, 2018 11:32
i don't, it just seems weird to write that whole thing twice, imagine if it was 2 or 3 times longer. i thought that that is what aliases are for
Jan 19, 2018 11:28
so you can group by alias when using subqueries?
Jan 19, 2018 11:23
CREATE TABLE Payment (
  PaymentId int NOT NULL IDENTITY ,
  CustomerId INT  NOT NULL,
  StaffId TINYINT NOT NULL,
  RentalId INT DEFAULT NULL,
  Amount DECIMAL(5,2) NOT NULL,
  PaymentDate DATETIME NOT NULL,
  LastUpdate DATETIME NOT NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY NONCLUSTERED (PaymentId),
  CONSTRAINT FK_Payment_Customer FOREIGN KEY (CustomerId) REFERENCES Customer (CustomerId) ,
  CONSTRAINT FK_Payment_Staff FOREIGN KEY (StaffId) REFERENCES Staff (StaffId)
)
Jan 19, 2018 11:22
if i write the "DATENAME..." at GROUP BY it works but somehow i can't give it an alias
Jan 19, 2018 11:20
SELECT DATENAME(MONTH, PaymentDate) AS Months, SUM(Amount)
FROM Payment
GROUP BY Months;
Jan 19, 2018 11:20
the following gives me a 'invalid column name' error (sakila database):
 

C

C stands for Control.
Jan 16, 2018 18:26
thanks, the folks at C++ were saying the same thing
Jan 16, 2018 17:35
@Abra i think that if the standard ways of memory sharing are not providing the desired results, someone will have to really understand your situation and requirements in order to help you appropriately. your best bet might be writing a question on SO where you describe all of the details
Jan 16, 2018 17:14
is there any reason/benefit to have this: "#define flag ((unsigned long)0xFFFFFFFF)" over this: "#define flag ((unsigned long)-1)" ?
Jan 15, 2018 02:00
good night
Jan 15, 2018 01:11
well, you could use it like that at least
Jan 15, 2018 01:08
sharing memory between processes is quite straight forward, you just have to create a memory map, the system handles the paging and creates a shared object that is accessible to all processes, the other process simply opens the memory mapping with the use of the shared object and receives a pointer to memory, from that point on the memory pointer basically works the same as a file pointer