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How do I initialize a member array with an initializer_list?
You can construct an std::array just fine with an initializer list:
std::array<int, 3> a = {1, 2, 3}; // works fine
However, when I try to construct it from an std::initializer_list as a data me...
Well I am currently working on g++ - arm and since the itoa function isn't standard its not provided with the standard library, the boost libraries will cause too much overhead on the puny embedded processor I am working on, so I need some simple solution.
Ok, here's the gist. You make a loop and repeatedly take the remainder of division by 10. That's how you get each digit. With each iteration, you divide the original number by ten to basically "shift right".
Zero is always zero, so it doesn't matter. But in a recent discussion with my friend he said that octal literals are almost unused today. Then it dawned upon me that actually almost all integer literals in my code are octal, namely 0. Is 0 an octal literal according to the C++ grammar? I'm just c...
@MartinhoFernandes I'm pretty sure a lot of those instantiations are superfluous because your header already contains the type definitions and the implementation has the member defintions. Those are total specializations, not partial. (Your operator<< do need the explicit instantiations since it's defined in the implementation though.)