diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'intellect-framework-from-internet/starts/biscuit/2.cpp')
-rw-r--r-- | intellect-framework-from-internet/starts/biscuit/2.cpp | 110 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 110 deletions
diff --git a/intellect-framework-from-internet/starts/biscuit/2.cpp b/intellect-framework-from-internet/starts/biscuit/2.cpp deleted file mode 100644 index 15c9481..0000000 --- a/intellect-framework-from-internet/starts/biscuit/2.cpp +++ /dev/null @@ -1,110 +0,0 @@ -#if !defined(VALCT) - #define VALCT 2 - #define VALS ["1","79"] -#endif - -/* 179 */ -#if defined(IDX) - #undef IDX -#endif -#define IDX 0 -#if defined(VAL) - #undef VAL -#endif -#define VAL "1" -#define ARG "79" -// This Intellect Approach Can Easily Preserve All Life Within It -// you just don't delete the programs you generate, instead replacing their habits with references to reuse -// -// let's make it! - -#include <iostream> -#include <fstream> -#include <string> -#include <vector> - -#include <sys/stat.h> - -using namespace std; - -// problem: how does a .cpp file reference another file with a number -// answer: use #includes or interpret the whole shebang as numbers - -// please provide for handling a parameter next. -// -// concept: dynamic values aquirable from inside code, i.e. what-number-called-me what-number-comes-after-me -// thinking the code would likely evolve to handle some inputs differently -unsigned long new_number = 1; - -int main() -{ - string ofname; - unsigned long ofnum; - { - struct stat sb; - do - { - ofnum = new_number++; - ofname = to_string(ofnum) + ".cpp"; - } while (-1 != stat(ofname.c_str(), &sb)); - } - - { - ofstream outfile(ofname); - vector<string> vals; - while (true) { - string val; - cin >> val; - if (val == "") break; - vals.push_back(val); - } - // when a file runs, it has numbers on input, it also has numbers equal to it - // we want to generate run-code with new numbers from input - // so we generate something with numbers equal to it, and output that - // we have one ref for the whole shebang - outfile << "#if !defined(VALCT)" << endl; - outfile << " #define VALCT" << " " << vals.size() << endl; - outfile << " #define VALS ["; - for (size_t index = 0; index < vals.size(); ++ index) - { - if (index > 0) outfile << ","; - outfile << "\"" << vals[index] << "\""; - } - outfile << "]" << endl; - outfile << "#endif" << endl; - for (size_t index = 0; index < vals.size();) - { - outfile << endl << "/* " << vals[index] << vals[index+1] << " */" << endl; - outfile << "#if defined(IDX)" << endl - << " #undef IDX" << endl - << "#endif" << endl; - outfile << "#define IDX " << index << endl; - outfile << "#if defined(VAL)" << endl - << " #undef VAL" << endl - << "#endif" << endl; - outfile << "#define VAL \"" << vals[index] << "\"" << endl; - outfile << "#define ARG \"" << vals[index+1] << "\"" << endl; - string fname = vals[index] + ".cpp"; - ifstream code(fname); - size_t ctrd = -1; - while (ctrd != 0) { - char buf[256]; - ctrd = code.rdbuf()->sgetn(buf, sizeof(buf)); - outfile.rdbuf()->sputn(buf, ctrd); - } - index += 2; - } - } -// read numbers inputs -// open files having the numbers as the names -// cat them all to a gcc process -// execute -// run the output -} - -// karl obvious knows what he was doing ... -// ... we were just helping him out of his issue -// [do you want another one karl?] -// what things make / not make issue? -// karl says everything makes an issue; this seems accurate -// |