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  • Need help converting a C++ header file to delphi

    - by grzegorz1
    I need help with converting c++ header file to delphi. I spent several days on this problem without success. Below is the original header file and my Delphi translation. ///////////////////////// C++ header file //////////////////////////////////// if _MSC_VER 1000 pragma once endif // _MSC_VER 1000 ifdef DVP7010BDLL_EXPORTS define DVP7010BDLL_API __declspec(dllexport) else define DVP7010BDLL_API __declspec(dllimport) endif define MAXBOARDS 4 define MAXDEVS 4 define ID_NEW_FRAME 37810 define ID_MUX0_NEW_FRAME 37800 define ID_MUX1_NEW_FRAME 37801 define ID_MUX2_NEW_FRAME 37802 define ID_MUX3_NEW_FRAME 37803 typedef enum { SUCCEEDED = 1, FAILED = 0, SDKINITFAILED = -1, PARAMERROR = -2, NODEVICES = -3, NOSAMPLE = -4, DEVICENUMERROR = -5, INPUTERROR = -6, // VERIFYHWERROR = -7 } Res; typedef enum tagAnalogVideoFormat { Video_None = 0x00000000, Video_NTSC_M = 0x00000001, Video_NTSC_M_J = 0x00000002, Video_PAL_B = 0x00000010, Video_PAL_M = 0x00000200, Video_PAL_N = 0x00000400, Video_SECAM_B = 0x00001000 } AnalogVideoFormat; typedef enum { SIZEFULLPAL=0, SIZED1, SIZEVGA, SIZEQVGA, SIZESUBQVGA } VideoSize; typedef enum { STOPPED = 1, RUNNING = 2, UNINITIALIZED = -1, UNKNOWNSTATE = -2 } CapState; class IDVP7010BDLL { public: int AdvDVP_CreateSDKInstence(void **pp); virtual int AdvDVP_InitSDK() PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_CloseSDK() PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetNoOfDevices(int *pNoOfDevs) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_Start(int nDevNum, int SwitchingChans, HWND Main, HWND hwndPreview) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_Stop(int nDevNum) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetCapState(int nDevNum) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_IsVideoPresent(int nDevNum, BOOL* VPresent) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetCurFrameBuffer(int nDevNum, int VMux, long* bufSize, BYTE* buf) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetNewFrameCallback(int nDevNum, int callback) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetVideoFormat(int nDevNum, AnalogVideoFormat* vFormat) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetVideoFormat(int nDevNum, AnalogVideoFormat vFormat) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetFrameRate(int nDevNum, int *nFrameRate) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetFrameRate(int nDevNum, int SwitchingChans, int nFrameRate) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetResolution(int nDevNum, VideoSize *Size) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetResolution(int nDevNum, VideoSize Size) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetVideoInput(int nDevNum, int* input) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetVideoInput(int nDevNum, int input) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetBrightness(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetBrightness(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetContrast(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetContrast(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetHue(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetHue(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetSaturation(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetSaturation(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GPIOGetData(int nDevNum, int DINum, BOOL* value) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GPIOSetData(int nDevNum, int DONum, BOOL value) PURE; }; /////////////////// delphi /////////////////////////////////////// unit IDVP7010BDLL_h; interface uses Windows, Messages, SysUtils, Classes; //{$if _MSC_VER 1000} //pragma once //{$endif} // _MSC_VER 1000 {$ifdef DVP7010BDLL_EXPORTS} //const DVP7010BDLL_API = __declspec(dllexport); {$else} //const DVP7010BDLL_API = __declspec(dllimport); {$endif} const MAXDEVS = 4; MAXMUXS = 4; ID_NEW_FRAME = 37810; ID_MUX0_NEW_FRAME = 37800; ID_MUX1_NEW_FRAME = 37801; ID_MUX2_NEW_FRAME = 37802; ID_MUX3_NEW_FRAME = 37803; // TRec SUCCEEDED = 1; FAILED = 0; SDKINITFAILED = -1; PARAMERROR = -2; NODEVICES = -3; NOSAMPLE = -4; DEVICENUMERROR = -5; INPUTERROR = -6; // TRec // TAnalogVideoFormat Video_None = $00000000; Video_NTSC_M = $00000001; Video_NTSC_M_J = $00000002; Video_PAL_B = $00000010; Video_PAL_M = $00000200; Video_PAL_N = $00000400; Video_SECAM_B = $00001000; // TAnalogVideoFormat // TCapState STOPPED = 1; RUNNING = 2; UNINITIALIZED = -1; UNKNOWNSTATE = -2; // TCapState type TCapState = Longint; TRes = Longint; TtagAnalogVideoFormat = DWORD; TAnalogVideoFormat = TtagAnalogVideoFormat; PAnalogVideoFormat = ^TAnalogVideoFormat; TVideoSize = ( SIZEFULLPAL, SIZED1, SIZEVGA, SIZEQVGA, SIZESUBQVGA); PVideoSize = ^TVideoSize; P_Pointer = ^Pointer; TIDVP7010BDLL = class function AdvDVP_CreateSDKInstence(pp: P_Pointer): integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_InitSDK():Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_CloseSDK():Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetNoOfDevices(pNoOfDevs : PInteger) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_Start(nDevNum : Integer; SwitchingChans : Integer; Main : HWND; hwndPreview: HWND ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_Stop(nDevNum : Integer ):Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetCapState(nDevNum : Integer ):Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_IsVideoPresent(nDevNum : Integer; VPresent : PBool) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetCurFrameBuffer(nDevNum : Integer; VMux : Integer; bufSize : PLongInt; buf : PByte) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetNewFrameCallback(nDevNum : Integer; callback : Integer ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetVideoFormat(nDevNum : Integer; vFormat : PAnalogVideoFormat) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetVideoFormat(nDevNum : Integer; vFormat : TAnalogVideoFormat ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetFrameRate(nDevNum : Integer; nFrameRate : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetFrameRate(nDevNum : Integer; SwitchingChans : Integer; nFrameRate : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetResolution(nDevNum : Integer; Size : PVideoSize) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetResolution(nDevNum : Integer; Size : TVideoSize ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetVideoInput(nDevNum : Integer; input : PInteger) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetVideoInput(nDevNum : Integer; input : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetBrightness(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetBrightness(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetContrast(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetContrast(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetHue(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetHue(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetSaturation(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetSaturation(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GPIOGetData(nDevNum : Integer; DINum:Integer; value : PBool) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GPIOSetData(nDevNum : Integer; DONum:Integer; value : Boolean) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; end; function IDVP7010BDLL : TIDVP7010BDLL ; stdcall; implementation function IDVP7010BDLL; external 'DVP7010B.dll'; end.

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  • C++ Thread Safe Integer

    - by Paul Ridgway
    Hello everyone, I have currently created a C++ class for a thread safe integer which simply stores an integer privately and has public get a set functions which use a boost::mutex to ensure that only one change at a time can be applied to the integer. Is this the most efficient way to do it, I have been informed that mutexes are quite resource intensive? The class is used a lot, very rapidly so it could well be a bottleneck... Googleing C++ Thread Safe Integer returns unclear views and oppinions on the thread safety of integer operations on different architectures. Some say that a 32bit int on a 32bit arch is safe, but 64 on 32 isn't due to 'alignment' Others say it is compiler/OS specific (which I don't doubt). I am using Ubuntu 9.10 on 32 bit machines, some have dual cores and so threads may be executed simultaneously on different cores in some cases and I am using GCC 4.4's g++ compiler. Thanks in advance...

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  • Making sure unsigned int/long always execute in checked context in C#

    - by theburningmonk
    Has anyone found it strange that the default context for uint and ulong is unchecked rather than checked considering that they are meant to represent values that can never be negative? So if some code is trying to violate that constraint it seems to me the natural and preferred behaviour would be to throw an exception rather than returning the max value instead (which can easily leave important pieces of data in an invalid state and impossible to revert..). Is there an existing attribute which can be applied to either class/assembly so that it always performs arithmetic operations in a checked context? I was thinking of writing one myself (as an aspect using PostSharp) but would be great if there's one already. Many thanks,

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  • Unsigned versus signed numbers as indexes

    - by simendsjo
    Whats the rationale for using signed numbers as indexes in .Net? In Python, you can index from the end of an array by sending negative numbers, but this is not the case in .Net. It's not easy for .Net to add such a feature later as it could break other code perhaps using special rules (yeah, a bad idea, but I guess it happens) on indexing. Not that I have ever have needed to index arrays over 2,147,483,647 in size, but I really cannot understand why they choose signed numbers. Can it be because it's more normal to use signed numbers in code?

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  • String to Integer Smalltalk

    - by Anton
    Pretty simple question I need to get an integer from the user and I only know how to get a string from them. So if there is a way to get an integer from the user or to convert the string to an integer please let me know.

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  • PostgreSQL - can't save items - "type integer but expression is of type character"

    - by user984621
    I am getting still over and over again this error, the column age has the type integer, I am saving into this column integer-value, I also tried to don't save nothing into this column, but still getting this error... Could anyone help me, how to fix that? PG::Error: ERROR: column "age" is of type integer but expression is of type character varying at character 102 HINT: You will need to rewrite or cast the expression. : INSERT INTO "user_details" ("created_at", "age", "updated_at", "user_id") VALUES ($1, $2, $3, $4) RETURNING "id"

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  • Converting a string to an integer (Android)

    - by James Rattray
    I'm not 100% on how to do this so i'm asking... May seem stupid but... How do I convert a string into an integer? Background info: I have a textbox I have the user enter a number into... it then: EditText et = (EditText) findViewById(R.id.entry1); String hello = et.getText().toString(); gets the string 'hello' Now I want to convert it to a integer so I can get the number they typed in -will be used later on in code... Is there a way to get the edittext to a integer? -That would skip the middle man... If not, string to integer will be just fine... Thanks alot, James

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  • Fastest way to calculate a 128-bit integer modulo a 64-bit integer

    - by Paul Baker
    I have a 128-bit unsigned integer A and a 64-bit unsigned integer B. What's the fastest way to calculate A % B - that is the (64-bit) remainder from dividing A by B? I'm looking to do this in either C or assembly language, but I need to target the 32-bit x86 platform. This unfortunately means that I cannot take advantage of compiler support for 128-bit integers, nor of the x64 architecture's ability to perform the required operation in a single instruction.

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  • C: 8x8 -> 16 bit multiply precision guaranteed by integer promotions?

    - by craig-blome
    I'm trying to figure out if the C Standard (C90, though I'm working off Derek Jones' annotated C99 book) guarantees that I will not lose precision multiplying two unsigned 8-bit values and storing to a 16-bit result. An example statement is as follows: unsigned char foo; unsigned int foo_u16 = foo * 10; Our Keil 8051 compiler (v7.50 at present) will generate a MUL AB instruction which stores the MSB in the B register and the LSB in the accumulator. If I cast foo to a unsigned int first: unsigned int foo_u16 = (unsigned int)foo * 10; then the compiler correctly decides I want a unsigned int there and generates an expensive call to a 16x16 bit integer multiply routine. I would like to argue beyond reasonable doubt that this defensive measure is not necessary. As I read the integer promotions described in 6.3.1.1, the effect of the first line shall be as if foo and 10 were promoted to unsigned int, the multiplication performed, and the result stored as unsigned int in foo_u16. If the compiler knows an instruction that does 8x8-16 bit multiplications without loss of precision, so much the better; but the precision is guaranteed. Am I reading this correctly? Best regards, Craig Blome

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  • Properly removing an Integer from a List<Integer>

    - by Yuval A
    Here's a nice pitfall I just encountered. Consider a list of integers: List<Integer> list = new ArrayList<Integer>(); list.add(5); list.add(6); list.add(7); list.add(1); Any educated guess on what happens when you execute list.remove(1)? What about list.remove(new Integer(1))? This can cause some nasty bugs. What is the proper way to differentiate between remove(int index), which removes an element from given index and remove(Object o), which removes an element by reference, when dealing with lists of integers? The main point to consider here is the one @Nikita mentioned - exact parameter matching takes precedence over auto-boxing.

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  • How to convert from integer to unsigned char in C, given integers larger than 256?

    - by Alf_InPogform
    As part of my CS course I've been given some functions to use. One of these functions takes a pointer to unsigned chars to write some data to a file (I have to use this function, so I can't just make my own purpose built function that works differently BTW). I need to write an array of integers whose values can be up to 4095 using this function (that only takes unsigned chars). However am I right in thinking that an unsigned char can only have a max value of 256 because it is 1 byte long? I therefore need to use 4 unsigned chars for every integer? But casting doesn't seem to work with larger values for the integer. Does anyone have any idea how best to convert an array of integers to unsigned chars?

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  • error of integer overflow

    - by user308565
    This the part of my OpenGL code, I am getting an error for : struct Ball { float x; float y; float rot; float dir; bool rmv; Ball* next; }; Ball* curBall; void addBall() { if (balls==NULL) { balls=new Ball; balls->next=NULL; curBall=balls; } else { curBall->next=new Ball; curBall=curBall->next; curBall->next=NULL; } curBall->x=((float)rand()/(float)(RAND_MAX+1))*(ww-1) +1; curBall->y=((float)rand()/(float)(RAND_MAX+1))*(wh-1) +1; curBall->dir=((float)rand()/(float)(RAND_MAX+1))*(2*PI-1) +1; curBall->rot=((float)rand()/(float)(RAND_MAX+1))*(359) +1; curBall->rmv=false; } error : In function ‘void addBall()’: file.cpp:120: warning: integer overflow in expression file.cpp:121: warning: integer overflow in expression file.cpp:122: warning: integer overflow in expression file.cpp:123: warning: integer overflow in expression

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  • Security Risks of Unsigned ClickOnce Manifests

    - by Tom Tom
    Using signed manifests in ClickOnce deployments, it is not possible to modify files after the deployment package has been published - installation will fail as hash information in the manifest won't match up with the modified files. I recently stumbled upon a situation where this was problematic - customers need to be able to set things like connection strings in app.config before deploying the software to their users. I got round the problem by un-checking the option to "Sign the ClickOnce manifests" in VS2010 and explicitly excluding the app.config file from the list of files to have hashes generated during the publish process. From a related page on MSDN "Unsigned manifests can simplify development and testing of your application. However, unsigned manifests introduce substantial security risks in a production environment. Only consider using unsigned manifests if your ClickOnce application runs on computers within an intranet that is completely isolated from the internet or other sources of malicious code." In my situation, this isn't an immediate problem - the deployment won't be internet-facing. However, I'm curious to learn what the "substantial security risks" of what I've done would be if it was internet-facing (or if things changed and it needed to be in the future). Thanks in advance!

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  • 8 byte Integer with Doctrine and PHP

    - by Rufinus
    Hi, the players: 64bit linux with php 5 (ZendFramework 1.10.2) PostgreSQL 7.3 Doctrine 1.2 Via a Flash/Flex client i get an 8byte integer value. the field in the database is an BIGINT (8 byte) PHP_INT_SIZE show that system supports 8byte integer. printing out the value in the code as it is and as intval() leads to this: Plain: 1269452776100 intval: 1269452776099 float rounding failure ? but what really driving me nuts is ERROR: invalid input syntax for integer: "1269452776099.000000"' when i try to use it in a query. like: Doctrine_Core::getTable('table')->findBy('external_id',$external_id); or Doctrine_Core::getTable('table')->findBy('external_id',intval($external_id)); How i am supposed to handle this ? or how can i give doctrine a floating point number which it should use on a bigint field ? Any help is much appreciated! TIA

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  • Implicit casting Integer calculation to float in C++

    - by Ziddiri
    Is there any compiler that has a directive or a parameter to cast integer calculation to float implicitly. For example: float f = (1/3)*5; cout << f; the "f" is "0", because calculation's constants(1, 3, 10) are integer. I want to convert integer calculation with a compiler directive or parameter. I mean, I won't use explicit casting or ".f" prefix like that: float f = ((float)1/3)*5; or float f = (1.0f/3.0f)*5.0f; Do you know any c/c++ compiler which has any parameter to do this process without explicit casting or ".f" thing?

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  • Integer variables at WIX

    - by Hila
    I would like to install a feature according to the brand. So in my brand.wxi I defined: <?define brand.FeatureLevel = 1 ?> And in my wxs I wrote: <Feature Id="FF" Title="FF" Level="$(var.brand.FeatureLevel)"> <ComponentRef Id="..." /> <ComponentRef Id="..." /> </Feature> This definition works fine (wheather I've placed 0 or 1 as FeatureLevel). My only problem is a warning I get at compilation time: The 'Level' attribute is invalid - The value '$(var.brand.FeatureLevel)' is invalid according to its datatype 'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema:integer' - The string '$(var.brand.FeatureLevel)' is not a valid Integer value. Is there a way to fix this warning? Can I define integer variable? I couldn't find a way...

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  • Java Integer: what is faster comparison or subtraction?

    - by Vladimir
    I've found that java.lang.Integer implementation of compareTo method looks as follows: public int compareTo(Integer anotherInteger) { int thisVal = this.value; int anotherVal = anotherInteger.value; return (thisVal<anotherVal ? -1 : (thisVal==anotherVal ? 0 : 1)); } The question is why use comparison instead of subtraction: return thisVal - anotherVal;

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  • Python, a smarter way of string to integer conversion

    - by Hellnar
    Hello I have written this code to convert string in such format "0(532) 222 22 22" to integer such as 05322222222 . class Phone(): def __init__(self,input): self.phone = input def __str__(self): return self.phone #convert to integer. def to_int(self): return int((self.phone).replace(" ","").replace("(","").replace(")","")) test = Phone("0(532) 222 22 22") print test.to_int() It feels very clumsy to use 3 replace methods to solve this. I am curious if there is a better solution?

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  • define integer array fortran

    - by Praveen
    Hello friends, I am a newbie in Fortran. Can any1 tell me how to define an integer array in prior. E.g. I want to define an array with no.of days in 12 months. like... integer,allocatable(12,1) :: days days=[31,28,31,30,31,30,31,31,30,31,30,31] Is this syntax correct? If not, please let me know the correct one. Thanks Praveen

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  • Beautify Integer values for comparing as strings

    - by Zahra
    Hi. For some reason I need to enter my integer values to database as string, then I want to run a query on them and compare those integers as strings. Is there any way to beautify integer numbers (between 1 and 1 US billion as an example) so I can compare them as strings? Thanks in advance.

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  • Correctly assigning value to a Core Data attribute with an integer data-type

    - by Gordon Fontenot
    I'm missing something here, and feeling like an idiot about it. I'm using a UIPickerView in my app, and I need to assign the row number to a 32-bit integer attribute for a Core Data object. To do this, I am using this method: -(void)pickerView:(UIPickerView *)pickerView didSelectRow:(NSInteger)row inComponent:(NSInteger)component { object.integerValue = row; } This is giving me a warning: warning: passing argument 1 of 'setIntegerValue:' makes pointer from integer without a cast What am I mixing up here? --Edit 1-- Ok, so I can get rid of the warning by changing the method to do the following: NSNumber *number = [NSNumber numberWithInteger:row]; object.integerValue = rating; However, I still get a value of 0 for object.integerValue if I use NSLog to print it out. object.integerValue has a max value of 5, so I print out number instead, and then I'm getting a number above 62,000,000. Which doesn't seem right to me, since there are 5 rows. If I NSLog the row variable, I get a number between 0 and 5. So why do I end up with a completely different number after casting the number to NSNumber? --Edit 2-- Ok, so I'm realizing that there is some fundamental idea that I don't understand. I now understand that the 60 million + number can be cast back to the correct 0-5 number by using integerValue. So, it seems my question is how can I save an integer between 0-5 to the attribute if the NSNumber that is returned is over 60 million? Do I need to be using a different data type?

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  • negative values in integer programming model

    - by Lucia
    I'm new at using the glpk tool, and after writing a model for certain integer problem and running the solver (glpsol) i get negative values in some constraint that shouldn't be negative at all: No.Row name Activity Lower bound Upper bound 8 act[1] 0 -0 9 act[2] -3 -0 10 act[2] -2 -0 That constraint is defined like this: act{j in J}: sum{i in I} d[i,j] <= y[j]*m; where the sets and variables used are like this: param m, integer, 0; param n, integer, 0; set I := 1..m; set J := 1..n; var y{j in J}, binary; As the upper bound is negative, i think the problem may be in the y[j]*m parte, of the right side of the inequality.. perhaps something with the multiplication of binarys? or that the j in that side of the constrait is undefined? i dont know... i would be greatly grateful if someone can help me with this! :) and excuse for my bad english thanks in advance!

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  • Converting a size_t into an integer (c++)

    - by JeanOTF
    Hello, I've been trying to make a for loop that will iterate based off of the length of a network packet. In the API there exists a variable (size_t) by event.packet-dataLength. I want to iterate from 0 to event.packet-dataLength - 7 increasing i by 10 each time it iterates but I am having a world of trouble. I looked for solutions but have been unable to find anything useful. I tried converting the size_t to an unsigned int and doing the arithmetic with that but unfortunately it didn't work. Basically all I want is this: for (int i = 0; i < event.packet->dataLength - 7; i+=10) { } Though every time I do something like this or attempt at my conversions the i < # part is a huge number. They gave a printf statement in a tutorial for the API which used "%u" to print the actual number however when I convert it to an unsigned int it is still incorrect. I'm not sure where to go from here. Any help would be greatly appreciated :)

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