What is it with people trying to force non-inheritability? Can't you just write a comment "This class was not designed to be derived from. If you do, it's your own fault." and be done with it?
No, the original intent was that standard containers be heritable. According to Stroustrup, the language simply didn't support it properly until C++11. (Inheriting constructors.)
I'm making a timeline in Wordpress, and I'm trying to make a post with the date January 12, 1800, but Wordpress doesn't allow me. Apparently, it doesn't let me post anything before the year 1970. Is there any way to fix it?
@FredOverflow well, I was wondering about that (let's assume of course you declared it virtual). If a destructor in an inherited class is provided (default or not), does it override or not?
Actually, there's nothing preventing an implementation from ignoring the virtual specifier if the function is final and doesn't override anything. (Except maybe ABI obligations, but not really.)
@TonyTheTiger The company was also hiring a director of development at that time. And they were also moving to Gent. Due to all this they didn't have time to hire me at that time..
10.3/6: "6 Even though destructors are not inherited, a destructor in a derived class overrides a base class destructor declared virtual; see 12.4 and 12.5."
@TonyTheTiger however, that was probably not a representative case. If you don't hear from them in the first 2-3 weeks then they probably weren't interested and didn't bother to let you know.
@FredOverflow The quote I pasted says they aren't inherited but they do override. So you can't define a class derived from one with a final destructor.
@FredOverflow We're talking about final destructors, which must be virtual… (Although as I mentioned, that virtual may not imply existence of a vtable.)
I work in a team of 20+ developers that includes a recent influx of newer members. Our coding standards state that the .First() extension method for IEnumerable should never be used, and instead that we should always use FirstOrDefault() and check for a null return.
I appreciate that some member...
Some organizations are gonna do stupid things no matter what the language or task, because they decided to hire people they had no faith in to begin with.
First of all, [] is not an array, it's a list. The issue here is how the attribute resolution and mutable variables work. Let's start with
class Foo(object):
a = {}
b = 0
c = []
This creates a class with three attributes — those are available either through class itself (Foo.a, for...
Running 16 test cases...
include/annex/channel.hpp(89): fatal error in "T annex::detail::channel_shared_state<T, Allocator>::pop() [with T = int, Allocator = std::allocator<int>]": std::exception: std::exception
annex/unit/channel.cpp(39): last checkpoint
*** 1 failure detected in test suite "annex"