> JSON encoder (but not decoder) has been replaced with a new one. This one is written in pure Python, but is known to outperform CPython's C extension up to 2 times in some cases. It's about 20 times faster than the one that we had in 1.6.
> Specialized list implementation. There is a branch that implements lists of integers/floats/strings as compactly as array.array. This should drastically improve performance/memory impact of some applications
If "a funtion" were compiled separately, the mismatch would not be detected, "the function" would return a double that main would treat as an int... In the light of what we have said about how declarations must match definitions this might seems surprising. The reason a mismatch can happen is ...
So taking a look at anything isn't going to really help, assuming it's something I can help with in the first place and it's something I really care about
@RMartinhoFernandes Unfortunately the only mention of category theory in that article is one final sentence "I will not talk about category theory". Hm. It was a nice-enough article, but once again the necessity to keep the level just below where it belongs ruins a clean exposition.
Every time someone promises to "explain monads", my interest is piqued, only to be replaced by frustration when the alleged "explanation" is a long list of examples terminated by some off-hand remark that the "mathematical theory" behind the "esoteric ideas" is "too complicated to explain at this...
Oh, then you need to ditch the variable name from the cast!
And add the parenthesis around the function pointer type, to make it a cast.
/* Writing: cosine = (double (*)(double)) dlsym(handle, "cos");
would seem more natural, but the C99 standard leaves
casting from "void *" to a function pointer undefined.
The assignment used below is the POSIX.1-2003 (Technical
Corrigendum 1) workaround; see the Rationale for the
POSIX specification of dlsym(). */
*(void **) (&cosine) = dlsym(handle, "cos");
@EddyPronk I think it'd be one of those cases where the signal to noise ratio on it is so poor it's basically useless though
@AndreasWederbrand I think that's considered bad form generally. Users do come back and accept things long after the question was asked quite often though
When it's a new user, and posts a comment like "Great! That solved it!" I usually point out to them how accepting an answer works (link to the FAQ). Otherwise I assume they know how the site works.
@EddyPronk for the last example I get test.cc:8:10: warning: enumeration value ‘Green’ not handled in switch (and the same for Red) with -Wall -Wextra which is basically what you're looking for, just no warning about the extra ones
To check if the nodes in gcc are rich enough to find the type I probably need to build a debug version of gcc to explore. Not sure my 2Gb laptop can do the job.
@MrAnubis You could create a array2d class that stored the dimensions and then provided a suitable operator[] that took advantage of that knowledge to index manually into a 1d array.
here's the TOC so far of the potential new posting:
<ul style="list-style-type: none; list-style-image: none; ">
<li><a href="#intro">Introduction</a></li>
<li><a href="#linux_approach">How the Linux “all UTF-8” approach does not work in Windows</a></li>
<li><a href="#about_direct_io">About direct console i/o</a></li>
<li><a href="#portable_source_code">Portable source code should be UTF-8 with BOM</a></li>
<li><a href="#utf8_mode">The Visual C++ UTF-8 stream mode</a></li>
<li><a href="#utf8_mode_output">UTF-8 stream mode: the good (wide stream output)</a></li>
It's about console i/o in Windows he he
I covered the good and half the bad, so now i'm about to do the rest of the bad, plus the ugly
"If the BOM character appears in the middle of a data stream, Unicode says it should be interpreted as a "zero-width non-breaking space" (essentially a null character). In Unicode 3.2, this usage is deprecated in favour of the "Word Joiner" character, U+2060.[1] This allows U+FEFF to be only used as a BOM." - Wikipedia
well, I need to start a process with elevated privileges, and calling ShellExecute with the runas verb, which seems to be the normal way to do it, seems to clear the process' environment, so some stuff is missing from the path, and it can't find a bunch of dlls...
@AlfPSteinbach Let us know when you post that, I am curious to read it. I pretty much never do windows stuff and have never messed with UTF explicitly.
@RMartinhoFernandes I just bought the first one based on our conversation the other day, if I don't like it you will be punished...with bad SO questions.
C++11 makes numerous additions to the list of Unicode code points allowed in identifiers (§E). This includes the byte order mark, which is included in range FE47-FFFD.
Consulting a character browser, this range includes a whole bunch of random stuff, beginning between WHITE SESAME DOT and PRESE...
can anyone point me in the right direction? I have a thread that listens on a port and dispatches handler threads for incoming connections (those threads do the real work which might take anywhere from a few seconds to a few minutes). What is a good way to gracefully close the app? I dont mind worker threads to be stopped, the only thing is that they need to be stopped gracefully (stop work, save intermediate results, exit).
Saving intermediate results rules out fast closes. Might not even bother implementing interruption at all except for the tasks longer than a few seconds.
What sort of application is this? On most systems that can go to sleep like that, the OS handles the work. I've never heard of a server that could resume a suspended task.
currently what i am thinking is a global worker counter and a run flag guarded by a critical section... each worker will check the run flag from time to time and if set to false, gracefully quit and decrement the worker counter. Listener quits when worker counter reaches zero.
@Potatoswatter a very specific kind of server. Actually the task istelf in this case is just a connection between the server and a client where the client submits queries and the server answers. The connection is permanent, thus it may take hours till the client asks all the questions it has. So replace "save intermediate results" with "needs to inform the client that it is exiting" and it should be clear :)