Not on Project Euler, but on chat rooms, like this one :troll:
It was very funny in the beginning, however it is not anymore after seeing that I don't achieve anything by doing that, except tiny and short living boost of happiness.
I think it's fine. You may what to clarify why you think that resetting your rep and badges would help the situation (vs. simply walking away from the site and leaving your account as is).
@jalf I trust you have read stacksbi.wordpress.com/2011/03/20/sbi-is-leaving? I'm out of the game, too. Last year, I haven't made half the rep I used to make. That doesn't mean I can't enjoy the company here, though. And having 50k rep does have its advantages.
> Find the maximum total from top to bottom in triangle.txt (right click and 'Save Link/Target As...'), a 15K text file containing a triangle with one-hundred rows.
it has to find min distance between two vecs[ one dot presents x, another y and together they form XY triangle like computational object] which is almost identical to finding max
I has all the telltale signs: silly macros, massive pile of #includes at the start. Then there's a loop that loops only for a certain time, and there's checks for ONLINE_JUDGE which the UVA online judge defines.
@JohannesSchaublitb What did you mean about the Madrid meeting?
including implicit this, like in auto begin() -> decltype(m.begin());. it was necessary to support "this" here, since we a 'const' member function "begin" would need to access "m" over a const access path
you just cannot have the constness of the member function be transferred to the member select expression. because basically the "member" itself is not part of any member select expression as the right operand of it.
@RMartinhoFernandes the "member" in this case is just found using ordinary unqualified name lookup, and since in declarators the class is not considered complete, "member" must be declared before used there (this also applies with the new rules where you can use "this", btw. not the complete class scope is accessible).
I just noticed that every modern OO programming language that I am at least somewhat familiar with (which is basically just Java, C# and D) allows covariant arrays. That is, a string array is an object array:
Object[] arr = new String[2]; // Java, C# and D allow this
Array covariance are a h...
> If a console process is being debugged and CTRL+C signals have not been disabled, the system generates a DBG_CONTROL_C exception. This exception is raised only for the benefit of the debugger, and an application should never use an exception handler to deal with it.
> If the debugger handles the exception, an application will not notice the CTRL+C, with one exception: alertable waits will terminate. If the debugger passes the exception on unhandled, CTRL+C is passed to the console process and treated as a signal, as previously discussed.
I need to create a function that has one parameter which is a multi-dimensional array with two dimensions being user-specified, e.g.
int function(int a, int b, int array[a][b])
{
...
}
How would I do that in C++ ?
I need to create a function that has one parameter which is a multi-dimensional array with two dimensions being user-specified, e.g.
int function(int a, int b, int array[a][b])
{
...
}
How would I do that in C++ ?
> there is no implicit conversion from T[h][w] to T**. If such an implicit conversion did exist, the result would be a pointer to the first element of an array of h pointers to T (each pointing to the first element of a line in the original 2D array), but that pointer array does not exist anywhere in memory yet.
I'm just wondering if there was a function that allowed the program to actually speak. I think there is a similar function in vb. so for example, say<<"I can speak";
Or something similar.
Thanks!