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Thought about programming

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  • C Chris Losinger

    int Foo(thing &a, thing &b, thing &c, thing inputThing)
    {
    ...
    return 0;
    }

    in C++ anyway, it's not obvious if a, b and c are output, or if they are simply passed by reference to avoid unnecessary overhead. yes, adding "const" to them would clarify status as input-only, but const-correctness is something i don't see a lot of. if C++ allowed something like:

    int,thing[] Foo(thing inputThing)
    {

    return 0, {a, b, c};
    }

    it would be obvious that a, b and c are outputs. C# definitely improves on the clarity aspect with the "out", "ref", etc. keywords, but it still isn't ideal. -c


    There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

    Smaller Animals Software

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    Shog9 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #16

    Chris Losinger wrote: const-correctness is something i don't see a lot of. Sad but true. Well, as Colin suggested, this may be one of those things that would prove to be useful once possible. "How to return multiple values" certainly seems to be a common question for those learning to program, so perhaps it's intuitiveness would make it worthwhile...

    ---

    Shog9 Life seems pretty easy when it's from my easy chair And you're burnin up inside and no one cares...

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    • J Jamie Nordmeyer

      Interesting. I'll have to read that more fully when I get the time. Thanks. :) Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

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      Nemanja Trifunovic
      wrote on last edited by
      #17

      An example from the site: tuple add_multiply_divide(int a, int b) { return make_tuple(a+b, a*b, double(a)/double(b)); }

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      • N Neville Franks

        Isn't this what STL pair is all about. Neville Franks, Author of ED for Windows. www.getsoft.com Make money with our new Affilate program

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        Chris Losinger
        wrote on last edited by
        #18

        pair will get you 2. how do you do 3, 10 or 50? -c


        There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

        Smaller Animals Software

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        • J Jamie Nordmeyer

          This is not a question about how to do something, per say, but is a question of opinion. Still, if anyone feels this post is ill placed, let me know, and I'll move it. :) I noticed a language on SourceForget the other day called Nice, that had an interesting feature called Tuples. Essentially, it allowed you to do this:

          (int, int) FooBar()
          {
          return 5, 10;
          }

          My question is what do you think about this in a language. Most of our languages have thus far only supported a single return value, where as Nice allows an arbitrary number of values to be returned. Thoughts? Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

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          Tim Smith
          wrote on last edited by
          #19

          Yup, sounds good. Only would need it once in a blue moon. I would rather have the compiler vendors spending time working on a better compiler than the standards group sitting around trying to justify their existence. IMHO, C/C++ has really come to the end of their extensible lifetime. It really needs to be rebuilt from the ground up and not have new features just hacked onto it. Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

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          • C Chris Losinger

            pair will get you 2. how do you do 3, 10 or 50? -c


            There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

            Smaller Animals Software

            N Offline
            N Offline
            Neville Franks
            wrote on last edited by
            #20

            Chris Losinger wrote: pair will get you 2. how do you do 3, 10 or 50? I thought he only wanted 2. Someone else mentioned boost tupples. In my vast experience a pair is the most common requirement here by far.:) Neville Franks, Author of ED for Windows. www.getsoft.com Make money with our new Affilate program

            J 1 Reply Last reply
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            • C Chris Losinger

              pair will get you 2. how do you do 3, 10 or 50? -c


              There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

              Smaller Animals Software

              T Offline
              T Offline
              Tim Smith
              wrote on last edited by
              #21

              std::vector :omg::rolleyes::laugh: Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

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              • T Tim Smith

                Yup, sounds good. Only would need it once in a blue moon. I would rather have the compiler vendors spending time working on a better compiler than the standards group sitting around trying to justify their existence. IMHO, C/C++ has really come to the end of their extensible lifetime. It really needs to be rebuilt from the ground up and not have new features just hacked onto it. Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

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                C Offline
                CodeGuy
                wrote on last edited by
                #22

                Tim Smith wrote: IMHO, C/C++ has really come to the end of their extensible lifetime. It really needs to be rebuilt from the ground up and not have new features just hacked onto it. Hear, hear. Brandon

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                • C CodeGuy

                  Tim Smith wrote: IMHO, C/C++ has really come to the end of their extensible lifetime. It really needs to be rebuilt from the ground up and not have new features just hacked onto it. Hear, hear. Brandon

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                  Tim Smith
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #23

                  LOL... Sometimes it is more scary where people agree with me. :eek: Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

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                  • S Shog9 0

                    Chris Losinger wrote: both are forcing you to work around limitations of the language. Well, yeah, and C# lets you do properties with get and set methods automatically called at appropriate times. But how much of this is a big advantage? Can you provide an example where code clarity is increased significantly by being able to return two values?

                    ---

                    Shog9 Life seems pretty easy when it's from my easy chair And you're burnin up inside and no one cares...

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                    F Offline
                    Fazlul Kabir
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #24

                    Shog9 wrote: C# lets you do properties with get and set methods automatically called at appropriate times. But how much of this is a big advantage? I think "properties" let us write code in a more "human readable" fashion. Compare the two sets of statements below: myForm.BackColor = red; Color clr = myForm.BackColor; and myForm.setBackColor(red); Color clr = myForm.getBackColor(); But I agree, these choices are merely based on convenience, that's all.

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                    • T Tim Smith

                      std::vector :omg::rolleyes::laugh: Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

                      C Offline
                      C Offline
                      Chris Losinger
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #25

                      laugh it up... what if you want to return 7 values, not all the same type? A: a "struct" is a workaround.


                      There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

                      Smaller Animals Software

                      T 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • J Jamie Nordmeyer

                        This is not a question about how to do something, per say, but is a question of opinion. Still, if anyone feels this post is ill placed, let me know, and I'll move it. :) I noticed a language on SourceForget the other day called Nice, that had an interesting feature called Tuples. Essentially, it allowed you to do this:

                        (int, int) FooBar()
                        {
                        return 5, 10;
                        }

                        My question is what do you think about this in a language. Most of our languages have thus far only supported a single return value, where as Nice allows an arbitrary number of values to be returned. Thoughts? Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

                        T Offline
                        T Offline
                        Tomas Petricek
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #26

                        This looks nice but how do i call this function ? (int, int) a=FooBar(); //?? int b=a??+a??; :confused: i'm only pointer to myself

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                        • S Shog9 0

                          Colin Davies wrote: The best way to find out how useful something is, isn't to add it, but to remove it. True, that. :) One of the things i miss most in VB are C's +=, *=, &= etc. operators... Never something i would have wanted prior to using C, but sure conspicuous when absent now...!

                          ---

                          Shog9 Life seems pretty easy when it's from my easy chair And you're burnin up inside and no one cares...

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                          Nick Parker
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #27

                          Shog9 wrote: One of the things i miss most in VB are C's +=, *=, &= etc. operators... Sadly I miss those as well.


                          Nick Parker

                          Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted. - Albert Einstein

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                          • C Chris Losinger

                            laugh it up... what if you want to return 7 values, not all the same type? A: a "struct" is a workaround.


                            There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

                            Smaller Animals Software

                            T Offline
                            T Offline
                            Tim Smith
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #28

                            That is what the VARIANT was for. :) Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

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                            • T Tim Smith

                              That is what the VARIANT was for. :) Tim Smith I'm going to patent thought. I have yet to see any prior art.

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                              C Offline
                              Chris Losinger
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #29

                              ah.. the VARIANT. the deepest chasm in the Valley of Dangerous Practices. i fear the VARIANT and all its evil offspring. nothing but pain and suffering down that road.


                              There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

                              Smaller Animals Software

                              J 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • J Jamie Nordmeyer

                                This is not a question about how to do something, per say, but is a question of opinion. Still, if anyone feels this post is ill placed, let me know, and I'll move it. :) I noticed a language on SourceForget the other day called Nice, that had an interesting feature called Tuples. Essentially, it allowed you to do this:

                                (int, int) FooBar()
                                {
                                return 5, 10;
                                }

                                My question is what do you think about this in a language. Most of our languages have thus far only supported a single return value, where as Nice allows an arbitrary number of values to be returned. Thoughts? Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

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                                P Offline
                                peterchen
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #30

                                People will start doing something like "(int, (int, int)) FooBar, and end up as LISP programmers with the wrong compiler.


                                If I could find a souvenir / just to prove the world was here   [sighist]

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                                • C Chris Losinger

                                  Shog9 wrote: Eh, what's wrong with... both are forcing you to work around limitations of the language. what you really want to do is "return 2 values". it's similar to the way you can do "OO" in plain C by clever use of function pointers and structures to simulate objects. but, it's nothing like C++, where OO is built-in. -c


                                  There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

                                  Smaller Animals Software

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  Jamie Nordmeyer
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #31

                                  Well put, Chris. Zat's what I was thinking. Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

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                                  • N Nick Parker

                                    Shog9 wrote: One of the things i miss most in VB are C's +=, *=, &= etc. operators... Sadly I miss those as well.


                                    Nick Parker

                                    Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted. - Albert Einstein

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Jamie Nordmeyer
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #32

                                    Well, most of the users on here use C#, but VB.NET has included these operators. Unfortunately, ++ and -- aren't used (why, I don't know), and you can't overload them. Doh!!! Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

                                    N 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • J Jamie Nordmeyer

                                      Well, most of the users on here use C#, but VB.NET has included these operators. Unfortunately, ++ and -- aren't used (why, I don't know), and you can't overload them. Doh!!! Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

                                      N Offline
                                      N Offline
                                      Nick Parker
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #33

                                      Jamie Nordmeyer wrote: Well, most of the users on here use C#, but VB.NET has included these operators. Unfortunately, ++ and -- aren't used (why, I don't know), and you can't overload them. Doh!!! I know, as am I. I have only used VB.NET a few times, only enough to answer a few questions in their forum.


                                      Nick Parker

                                      Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted. - Albert Einstein

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • N Neville Franks

                                        Chris Losinger wrote: pair will get you 2. how do you do 3, 10 or 50? I thought he only wanted 2. Someone else mentioned boost tupples. In my vast experience a pair is the most common requirement here by far.:) Neville Franks, Author of ED for Windows. www.getsoft.com Make money with our new Affilate program

                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        Jamie Nordmeyer
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #34

                                        But using a Tuple object, we're still returning only 1 value... an object. The idea of the tuple as presented in Nice is that you're physically returning 2, 3, or n number of values. You're not wrapping them in an object to fake it, you're physically passing back an int, and then a float, or whatever. Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

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                                        • C Chris Losinger

                                          ah.. the VARIANT. the deepest chasm in the Valley of Dangerous Practices. i fear the VARIANT and all its evil offspring. nothing but pain and suffering down that road.


                                          There's one easy way to prove the effectiveness of 'letting the market decide' when it comes to environmental protection. It's spelt 'S-U-V'. --Holgate, from Plastic

                                          Smaller Animals Software

                                          J Offline
                                          J Offline
                                          Jamie Nordmeyer
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #35

                                          I haven't thought about Variants since I started using .NET. Now, to have them return to my memory... AAAAARRRRGGGHHH!!!! :omg::omg::omg::wtf::wtf::wtf: :-D Jamie Nordmeyer Portland, Oregon, USA

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