Since I already started writing (again) using std::vector, what is the vector::reserve for? Does it reserve memory in bytes, or in terms of sizeof(T)*n?
@EtiennedeMartel Which is quite handy - a lot of C++11 (and TR1 before it) was originally part of Boost and/or referred to boost implementations in the spec.
For maintainability, I tend to make a project namespace with typedefs for whichever ones are available on the platform
@IDWMaster reserve is a number of elements - note that an implementation may reserve space for more than required, but it will have storage for at least arg elements
Beware the reallocation penalty of std::vector, especially in collections that grow frequently; also note that removing elements has no guarantee of freeing up the space they occupied.
std::deque can often be a better choice for truly dynamic-sized collections where random access is still important
I have to question the motivation at this point; if somebody wants to use BCL classes in C++ code, they have stl mirrors for at least all the containers. If they have a large .NET codebase that must be used verbatim, they should most likely use .NET
@Pubby i think much can be made better than the standard library, e.g. immutable strings and vectors with custom deleters and so on (not to mention iostreams). but it would be a huge effort. many people
@AlfPSteinbach I completely agree, but I don't think BCL is much better, especially for C++. I've been working on a library that's a replacement, but have been running into the same problems as IDW
If the apps haven't been written yet, they should be written with the interface appropriately separated from the logic/engine such that a native interface can be developed for each platform.
If Windows Phone has taught us anything, it's that using the same interface on different platforms sucks balls on all of them.
Anyway, Android is going to crush everything if it can survive the legal attacks by its competitors (because as we all know, if you can't compete, litigate).
Building for .NET has always been going to tie you to MS platforms. If you want to write portable code, you have to sart with a language that runs on the platforms you want to run on. If you don't know what platform you want to run on, you have a lot of design to do before you code.
If you need to write a portable platform first, you've got to have deep pockets and a near infinite timeframe for the projects that rely on it. Microsoft can do it. Sun can (well... could) do it. I pray every day that Adobe (read: Macromedia) never get there.
A programmer that makes good decisions about scalable data structures and algorithms and uses an appropriate language to get the job done is going to cost his business some $100k/a in salary. Compared to that, server clusters are cheap.
The following code works fine, but why is this correct code? Why is the "c_str()" pointer of the temporary returned by foo() valid? I thought, that this temporary is already destroyed when bar() is entered - but it doesn't seem to be like this. So, now I assume that the temporary returned by foo(...
> A temporary object is destroyed when the full-expression that lexically contains the rvalue whose evaluation created that temporary object is completely evaluated.
@keithlayne The CIA and FBI are both monitoring this room, as well as numerous other ... organizations. No one ever knows when a C++ programmer will blow themselves up.
The 10-20-Life law (Florida Statute [http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?mode=View%20Statutes&SubMenu=1&App_mode=Display_Statute&Search_String=775.087&URL=0700-0799/0775/Sections/0775.087.html 775.087]) is a mandatory minimum sentencing law in the U.S. state of Florida. It primarily regards the use of a firearm in committing a violent felony. The law's name comes from a set of three basic minimum sentences it provides for. An ongoing public service announcement campaign has accompanied the law since its passage under the slogan, "Use a gun, and you're done."
Background
As of 199...
@Fred for example, if you have a type ambiguity...I want to map read over a list of int strings and get back a list of Ints...I can't seem to do it without a lambda or simple function that just adds the type constraints. pl \x -> read x :: Int gives me (:: Int) . read, which seems to be illegal. :: doesn't seem to be an operator, I feel dumb.
Don't know, I only know Windows has been left out in the cold
LLVM doesn't do x86 setjmp-longjmp exceptions like GCC can, and the Win64 implementation is incomplete
Win32 needs a MSVC-incompatible dwarf2-like scheme, like GCC, I guess, because the MSVC-exception handling is patented
but Clang (without exceptions) works pretty well with MinGW-w64 and GCC's libstdc++.
on the MSVC side, work is being done to parse Visual studio headers (which mostly works now), but C++ is still off-limits due to name mangling issues (ie undefined references to the standard library)
That's everything in a nutshell :)
oh yes, dllexport'ing a class isn't implemented yet either :(
I'm not fit to fix that, I suck too much at C++ :)
oh yeah, that's the more interesting part of the question. C++11 adds a lot of features for more easily initializing containers (and other objects). If your compiler doesn't support that yet, you'll either have to add elements one at a time, or construct a temporary array to copy from, or perhaps use something like Boost.Assignment