It might be immoral to go "if we pick a high enough price point, we can maximize the number of people who pirate our product". But I don't see how it can possibly be immoral to go "We need to cover our costs. We know that X corporations need our product, and they will pay whatever we charge. So price it so that those X corporations will cover our costs"
@Als but how do you know what will happen? How can ISO know the effects on piracy that their pricing will have? They can guess, but nothing more than that
@RMartinhoFernandes: So eventually all individuals who want to have an standard of the language they work in and find it insanely high priced are at blame?
@jalf: Just saying that the co's are target audience doesn;t change the fact that most dedicated deveolpers of the language will have a copy of it too.
Once again, me wanting a private jet doesn't mean corporiations producing them have an obligation to make it affordable to me. I just don't figure in their calculations
@Als The people who use the language generally rely on textbooks
written by people who could afford the standard
Or employe by companies that could afford the standard
@x4d33746153706c306974 I do NOT condone using things learned as hacker to go perpetrate illegal activities, if you are doing that, then I have no further business talking to you
@Als It's true enough. First, we aren't "typical" C++ programmers, and second, it doesn't matter if it is an accurate description of individual C++ programmers
because ISO is, once again, a group of large entities with a common interest in standardizing the C++ language. Their concern is to make sure that MSVC, Clang and GCC do the same thing when fed the same code. They're not concerned about how you or I learn about the language
@Als, remember that ISO is little more than a meeting room for the C++ industry. They can agree to standardize the behavior of the language, but they all have financial stakes in the industry, and the last thing they want is for ISO to compete with them
Companies represented in the ISO committee might be running a business selling C++ textbooks. They'd be hurt big time if people just bought the standard instead ;)
It's like with gotos. The rule is "don't fucking do it", and if you run into a situation where it is appropriate, you might have to bend the rule. But don't rephrase the rule into "it's ok to do it"
Today while I was in one of the chatrooms, I noticed a lot of posts being flagged in some other chatroom(I have the necessary 10K rep to vote on flagged posts) but the flagged post just shows the particular post that is flagged and no information or way to seek the information in the context in w...
@TonyTheTiger ah I think it is analogous to the rule "The previous value shall only be accessed to determine the new value to be stored"
in the paragraph about side effects in between two adjacent sequence points
and "If the value being stored in an object is accessed from another object that overlaps in any way the storage of the first object, then the overlap shall be exact and the two objects shall have the same type, otherwise the behavior is undefined." defines the conditions under which you can access the "previous" value.
so I think that my second example with the + before it is equally UB
in C++03 at least
I think in C++0x too
But I'm unsure whether the rules are actually related the more I look at it. I think they are actually separate. and that a + here makes no difference.
@x4d33746153706c306974 As @RMartinhoFernandes just showed, there might be a specialization which defines z to have another type (or to not exist at all)
I was just going through all the possible Undefined Behaviours in this thread, and one of them is
The result of assigning to partially overlapping objects
I wondered if anyone could give me a definition of what "partially overlapping objects" are and an example in code of how that could po...
@TonyTheTiger > Escape sequences in which the character following the backslash is not listed in Table 7 are conditionally-supported, with implementation-defined semantics.
Now those things are implementation-defined, not UB!
@jalf This being C++, I'm sure even a simple type-safe null pointer will have its quirks and problems. We just didn't have time enough to run into them.
@Mahesh I hadn't heard of him, no, but I searched for the names when I saw them at youtube, so I know why you ask. I suppose he just isn't known in the western world.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, good point. It's high time I posted a new version anyway, there's quite a few things I have added.
@TonyTheTiger Oh, is there a list of things causing UB? (And if not, can we make one?)
@sbi well, that nullptr solved a problem with using perfect forwarding in cases where the NULL macro was being passed, if the thing being forwarded accepted a pointer in the args, and NULL was passed, it was being deduced as type intwhich is not compatible with the pointer type
@RMartinhoFernandes hmmm, yea that's why I wondered what the issue was
@sbi yep and I've been studying it, and asking questions :) Heheh
@TonyTheTiger I know what it is for: All I'm saying is that I don't believe that it is a simple enough concept for C++ to not to be able to sneak in few quirks and problems
@TonyTheTiger Perhaps I know, but this might be the last warm and sunny weekend this year, and I am in the process of leaving the house and go to my garden. :) Sorry, but I will not look at code now.
@ManofOneWay AC++ is 250 very condensed pages, showing a style of C++ programming that became significantly more mainstream with this book. It's worth every cent spent on it, if you can afford it, buy it now, and a C++11 book later.
Maybe this clause from 8.5.4.5 explains it (my emphasis):
An object of type std::initializer_list is constructed from an
initializer list as if the implementation allocated an array of N
elements of type E, where N is the number of elements in the
initializer list. Each element of that ...