Am 22.08.2012 05:45, schrieb Graeme Gill:
Till Oliver Knoll wrote:
Folks, I gave up checking for NULL pointers (C, malloc) or bad_alloc
exceptions (new, C++) a long time ago. I remember a discussion several
years ago (here on Qt interest?) about desktop memory managers actually
never
Answering my own question... Yes QNAM handles receiving compressed
responses no problem.
Would still be nice to know how to enable it for sending compressed
requests?
Tony.
-Original Message-
From: interest-bounces+tony=rightsoft.com...@qt-project.org
Lukas Geyer wrote:
The address space is expanded immediately but physical memory pages are
assigned at the moment the memory is accessed; either never, always or
at kernels discretion, depending on the implemented overcommit strategy [1].
Right, but malloc will return NULL if the address
On 08/21/2012 01:27 AM, Alex Malyushytskyy wrote:
For example one of our application on Windows ( this is the case when
Windows is more flexible than Linux)
- reserves the largest amount of continues memory we could afford
for data (leaving enough for your widgets ) using VirtualAlloc with
Den 21-08-2012 20:55, Stephen Chu skrev:
Is there a way to store a 64-bit internal ID in QModelIndex? The
function QModelIndex::internalId() returns a 64-bit number but there's
no way to put one in. The constructor takes only a 32-bit integer.
Hi Stephen,
Please forget all ideas of using the
On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 10:55 AM, Sensei sense...@gmail.com wrote:
If I change the font to Courier, or Times, or Andale Mono or
Xcode's Menlo, everything is OK, I've tested alignment with 10K lines.
When I use Monaco, the font I intended to use, lines numbers get
misaligned almost
On quarta-feira, 22 de agosto de 2012 16.53.26, Tony Rietwyk wrote:
Would still be nice to know how to enable it for sending compressed
requests?
You need to compress yourself and set the appropriate Content-Transport-
Encoding headers.
--
Thiago Macieira - thiago.macieira (AT) intel.com
Am 22.08.2012 09:44, schrieb Graeme Gill:
Lukas Geyer wrote:
The address space is expanded immediately but physical memory pages are
assigned at the moment the memory is accessed; either never, always or
at kernels discretion, depending on the implemented overcommit strategy [1].
Right, but
On Wednesday August 22 2012, Konrad Rosenbaum wrote:
For category 1 (real time, small memory FP) I can only suggest: separate
the processes. Have one that does the critical stuff in a deterministic
manner with pre-allocated memory and another process for the display - if
there is a memory
On quarta-feira, 22 de agosto de 2012 13.35.19, André Somers wrote:
Hmmm... Wouldn't it make sense to also check on the the d pointers
actually being the same? Or is that in qMemEquals?
Hint: please check before asking. Takes a couple of seconds...
static bool qMemEquals(const quint16 *a,
Op 22-8-2012 13:40, Thiago Macieira schreef:
On quarta-feira, 22 de agosto de 2012 13.35.19, André Somers wrote:
Hmmm... Wouldn't it make sense to also check on the the d pointers
actually being the same? Or is that in qMemEquals?
Hint: please check before asking. Takes a couple of seconds...
It looks like the current version of the ActivePerl (5.14.2 Build 1402
(64-bit)) has an outdated version of the GetOpt::Long module (2.35) which does
not have GetOptionsFromArray yet. The required version is 2.38. I just
discovered this myself while building Qt5 on a another PC…
$ perl
This seems like it would be slow, especially when you started using haddrist
swap space, unless you have that turned off. I think that it would be better to
just check against a limit yourself as to avoid allocating items that would be
swapped.*
*I have no idea how your application uses the
Jason H wrote:
This seems like it would be slow, especially when you started using haddrist
swap space, unless
you have that turned off. I think that it would be better to just check
against a limit yourself
as to avoid allocating items that would be swapped.*
Not at all, because the aim
Hi,
Could you please let me know which of the below configure options would be good
For building Qt5.0.
1.configure -developer-build -opensource -nomake examples -nomake tests
2. configure -prefix %CD%\qtbase -opensource -nomake tests
Thanks and Regards,
Ramakanth
-Original Message-
C++ on .NET functions as it does now, however the compiler introduces the
operator of ^ as a type modifier like * (pointer)
^ are handles to managed objects, as * are addresses of objects. The runtime
then handles dereferencing the handles for you. jsut like your compiler uses
the appropriate
Thanks to everyone who helped on the 64-bit internal ID question I
posted. I end up maintaining a copy of index-and-id mapping to work
around it.
Now I have a question on how to properly update the model. My model is a
read-only representation of a database. I am using a QTreeView to hold
the
I'd probably be using something like libQxt's RPC's functionality to publish
updates to you and incrementally adjust the model, a row at a time.
http://libqxt.bitbucket.org/doc/tip/qxtxmlrpcclient.html
From: Stephen Chu step...@ju-ju.com
To:
I'm looking for a scripting language with a debugger.
Binding to C/C++ should be simple and the debugger should be embeddable.
In times of Qt4 this would be QtScript and scripttools/debugging but this is
all done.
Is there such a combination in Qt5?
AFAIK QML could be used also as a scripting
Den 22-08-2012 20:29, Stephen Chu skrev:
Thanks to everyone who helped on the 64-bit internal ID question I
posted. I end up maintaining a copy of index-and-id mapping to work
around it.
Now I have a question on how to properly update the model. My model is a
read-only representation of a
From: Jason H scorp...@yahoo.com
C++ on .NET functions as it does now, however the compiler introduces the
operator of ^ as a type modifier like * (pointer)
^ are handles to managed objects, as * are addresses of objects. The runtime
then handles dereferencing the handles for you. jsut like
Hi all,
What are the best practices to return from a common dialog window?
At the moment I have already solved with a Slot connected to the closure of the
dialog,
that invokes methods to retreive data. But what are the best practices?
What are the pros and cons of every solution?
TIA,
JM
On quarta-feira, 22 de agosto de 2012 21.24.49, Peter Kümmel wrote:
I'm looking for a scripting language with a debugger.
Binding to C/C++ should be simple and the debugger should be embeddable.
In times of Qt4 this would be QtScript and scripttools/debugging but this is
all done.
And why
Harri Pasanen ha...@mpaja.com wrote:
I wonder why you say Linux is less flexible? Couldn't you just write a
custom allocator directly using sbrk()?
Also, 32 bit linux process leaves more application space free, so you
can easily reach 2Gb process size, while I recall windows XP having
issues
JM spaketh:
Hi all,
What are the best practices to return from a common dialog window?
At the moment I have already solved with a Slot connected to the closure
of the dialog,
that invokes methods to retreive data. But what are the best practices?
What are the pros and cons of every
It depends on functionality you need and type of your dialog (modal/modeless)
In any case I do not think appropriate time is when dialog is closed.
Check QDialog documentation for example at:
http://doc.qt.nokia.com/4.7-snapshot/qdialog.html
In general for modal dialog you might want to update
I doubt that implementing moveable private objects/pointers would be
[really] useful.
Firstly, Qt can't control the location of the memory block allocated
by new/malloc, so the assumption that some [random] reallocations will
improve the contiguity of allocated memory looks quite naive.
I'll take that as a compliment. I fully expected someone to raise the issues
you did. And I will counter them with the following comments.
Yes, Qt would be less predictable, but more predictable than .NET's allocator.
If you want GC-like features, it'll come at a GC-like price.
Next on when to
Hi Jason,
If there are 5 public objects whose d-pointers reference the same private
object address, how are you going to update them when you relocate the
private object?
I don't think .Net stores addresses, just handles, so the relocate only
needs to update the handle info. That's
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