Brett L. Trotter wrote: > I forgot that C++ doesn't support jagged arrays like C# so I created > this great little jagged array with the 2nd dimension 0 terminated (mask > of 0 isn't really useful anyway, so I used it like null) so that I could > figure out how many were in each degree. I've been googling and IRCing > and trying to figure out if there's a way to initialize a vector of > vectors as a constant in a class header file or something that would > hold these constants and coming up short on answers. Do I need to dump > all my data to a file and read it in? That seems poor for minimizing the > initialization delay. Is anyone willing to point me in the right direction?
1. You can initialize multidimensional c arrays at compile time: int a[2][2] = {{1, 2}, {3,4}}; 2. If I cared abound speed (like you do), I wouldn't use vector of vector, rather a single long c-style array. (I'd use code to make it appear as it if is a 2-d array eventhough it's 1-d.) And I'd use Stream.read and Stream.write to read/write it to disk which will be very fast. Using the example above: int n = Rows * Cols; int* a = new int[n]; // fill the array here using code std::ofstream s("array.bin", std::ios::binary); s.write(reinterpret_cast<const char*>(a), n * sizeof(int)); // subsequent loads will use the binary file: std::ifstream s("array.bin", std::ios::binary); s.read(reinterpret_cast<char*>(a), n * sizeof(int)); Chris _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio