@RMartinhoFernandes The library defects ToC did have atleast a defect claiming that (i|o)fstream is missing wchar_t*, char16_t* and char32_t* constructors
AHH, I somehow fucked up my header search paths. D: GCC also tries to use libc++
Ugh
user406009
I assume Microsoft would be opposed to any major C++ POSIX abstraction. I remember hearing they spend a lot of effort de-posixing the C1X threading API.
I'm looking at [VC10's] unique_ptr and they do a couple things I don't understand:
typedef typename tr1::remove_reference<_Dx>::type _Dx_noref;
_Dx_noref& get_deleter()
{ // return reference to deleter
return (_Mydel);
}
unique_ptr(pointer _Ptr,
typename _If<tr1:...
@Xeo Two days ago I had to comment somewhere that using std::forward<not_template_argument_here> was stupid (after commenters "bullied" the asker to put that in the question).
Edit: I think the most likely use case for what I'm asking about, is when creating a function that receives a tuple of rvalue-references from std::forward_as_tuple().
The reason this question came to mind is because I was checking the members of objects passed to constructor initializers to see ...
Eventually I gave up on the question because everyone was trying to make out of it whatever they wanted to answer, instead of trying to figure out what the asker wanted an answer to...
Usually, parameter values are copied when being passed on. Using a reference may save memory, especially for big structs. However, in this case:
void foo( int parameter = 7 );
void bar( const int& parameter = 7 );
in the second declaration, what exactly will it do when the default value is...
The question is: Are those really the move constructor / assignment operator for the class? Or do they only look like that from the corner of your eye?
struct X{
X(X&&); // move ctor #1
template<class T>
X(T&&); // perfect forwarding ctor #2
X& operator=(X&...
Hm, yeah, you'd need an iterator to be well-defined for the 2D array stuff IIRC
Since you can't legally just keep advancing the pointer and get to the next row (although it will work everywhere). I could be wrong with that, though.
@RMartinhoFernandes I always thought that was Doug McIlroy. So I had to check. Google, no they all said Ken. Going to primary source "The UNIX Programming Environment", argh, they also say Ken (footnote on page 204). How did my memory get screwed up so badly?
ret is a pointer to pointer to float. When you dereference it, like this: (*ret), you get a pointer to float. When you take an index on that, like this: ( *ret )[ i ], that gives you a float. When you take an index on that, like this: ( *ret )[ i ][ j ], well, you're trying to index off of a f...
> Just remove the dereferencing of ret to fix that.
A Cadbury Creme Egg is a brand of chocolate manufactured in the shape of an egg. The product consists of a thick milk chocolate shell, housing a white and yellow fondant filling which mimics the white and yolk of a real egg. Creme Eggs are the best-selling confectionery item between New Year's Day and Easter in the UK, with annual sales in excess of 200 million and a brand value of approximately £50 million.
Creme Eggs are produced by Cadbury UK in the United Kingdom and by Cadbury Adams in Canada. They are sold by Kraft Foods in all markets except the USA, where The Hershey Company has t...
Mansaf () is a traditional Jordanian dish made of lamb cooked in a sauce of fermented dried yogurt and served with rice or bulgur. It is the national dish of Jordan.
Preparation
The lamb is cooked in a broth made with a fermented then dried yogurt-like product called jameed, and served on a large platter with a layer of flatbread (markook or shrak) topped with rice and then meat, garnished with almonds and pine nuts, and then sauce poured over all.
Cultural role
Mansaf is the most distinctive Jordanian dish, and it's the national dish of Jordan, thus Mansaf on the menu is the greatest s...
^ I wonder why this is the pride of Jordan. I hate it.
@Xeo If you put the baby phone right beside the door and put it at full volume, you'll stand in your bed when he passes by on bare feet.
@JerryCoffin I have taken to buy Lego mostly 2nd-hand. That makes it affordable to me.
And I never buy any Lego package to build one thing out of, only boxes and bags (usually by weight) of assorted bricks out of which can be built anything. Keep them on their toes!
The classic Fisher Yates looks something like this:
void shuffle1(std::vector<int>& vec)
{
int n = vec.size();
for (int i = n - 1; i > 0; --n)
{
std::swap(vec[i], vec[rand() % (i + 1)]);
}
}
Yesterday, I implemented the iteration "backwards" by mistake:
vo...
@RMartinhoFernandes No wait, I'm still not comfortable... dist(engine) yields a number between 0 and n - 1, right? Let's say n is 10, then you have a number between 0 and 9. Now if (i + 1) is 9, then the probability of 0 is twice as high as the probability of the other numbers.