On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 10:06:46PM -0500, Tristan Van Berkom wrote: > On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 9:50 PM, Brian Lavender <br...@brie.com> wrote: > > I guess the list stripped the attachments. The code is included in this > > message. > > > > Hi, > First of all it would be helpful if you told us what is the problem with > your code, off the bat I could tell you that the way you pass a pointer > to an array of pointers is foreign to me, I think I would have just used > "GArray ***arrays_p;" for that argument. > > But on the other hand, you could just save yourself that headache and > use a GPtrArray of GArrays (you could even get carried away and whip > up an api that updates the values of ptrarray->pdata[i] = garray->data > and have a real indexable array in C...).
This would seems like the most robust solution, but before I go down that path, let's see if I can figure this out. I have some other code centered around it, and i would like to see if I can just push it forward for now. Basically, my current problem is that I can't seem to create a subroutine that will load the following arrays of arrays. How do I put my load code in the subroutine? #include <glib.h> #define NUM_ARYS 5 void load_array( GArray *garrys[NUM_ARYS] ) { // put the load arrays stuff here. } int main() { GArray *garrays[NUM_ARYS]; gint i,j, storevalue; // Change the following so that I call // load_arrays(garrays); // instead of the following // start for (j=0; j < NUM_ARYS; j++) { garrays[j] = g_array_new (FALSE, FALSE, sizeof (gint)); g_printf("Load Array %d\n", j); for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) { storevalue = (i + 103) % ( (j +1) * 2 ); g_array_append_val ( garrays[j], storevalue ); g_print ("load idx %d value %d\n", i, storevalue ); } } // end for (j=0; j < NUM_ARYS; j++) { g_printf("Array %d\n", j); for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) g_print ("index %d value %d\n", i, g_array_index (garrays[j], gint, i)); } for (j=0; j < NUM_ARYS; j++) g_array_free (garrays[j], TRUE); } -- Brian Lavender http://www.brie.com/brian/ "There are two ways of constructing a software design. One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies. And the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies." Professor C. A. R. Hoare The 1980 Turing award lecture _______________________________________________ gtk-app-devel-list mailing list gtk-app-devel-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-app-devel-list