std::unique_ptr<int> a(new int);
std::unique_ptr<int> b(new int);
a = b; // error: cannot make copies
a = std::move(b); // ok, moving is fine
a = std::unique_ptr<int>(new int); // ok, rvalues are moved
Oh, I'm not entirely sure about that bind thing. I haven't used bind yet, so I can't vouch for it. It's just something I would try if I had your problem.
I am a little confused if it possible an how to use a variadic tuple as an argument in a function and how to initialize it.
template <typename T, Arg ...>
void foo (int a, std::tuple<T, sizeof(Arg)> TupleTest);
...
foo(TupleTest(2, "TEST", 5.5));
How could that be impl...
I feel like it should include something about your goals. Mine will probably include text along the lines of "I'm looking for a position that leverages my existing skills and provides opportunities for professional development."
To come back to typedef vs builtin types and why the hell I even care: I'd like my output to handle char, char and char16_t, and char32_t as characters, not integers. I can't possible to that with typedefs, or can I?
For a moment there I thought I had deleted my gmail password from my password database. I almost panicked (it can't be found anywhere else, not even my mind). Turned out I just needed to scroll up a bit.
@RMartinhoFernandes So I'll have to rely on char* types being builtin, which is for now only true for GCC and clang. Damn. MSVC doesn't have any others I could rely on probably?
@Eloff If I wanted to say that I prefer an employer who actively encourages employee development (for example, by sending them to conventions), how could I do that without sounding cheesy? Or should I leave that kind of thing out of the personal statement?
Well, I probably have, because my account is from the time of the invites (when it was only 1000MB of space!), but the account I used to get the invite at the time is long gone.
@robjb you should express an interest in learning/self-improvement, but you don't have space to be more specific. You have to keep it short because people don't spend long reading resumes.
is there a zero-overhead struct-and-member approach that can emulate missing builtin types, but otherwise keep their properties (specifically char16_t and char32_t? Perhaps an abomination of enum class?
here's the wording for the literals (euh, character literals): The universal-character-name construct provides a way to name other characters. hex-quad: hexadecimal-digit hexadecimal-digit hexadecimal-digit hexadecimal-digit universal-character-name: \u hex-quad \U hex-quad hex-quad
I agree with @RMartinhoFernandes here, it's good, but somehow sounds like you prefer going to conventions than working. There has to be a better way to say that.
"Keeping up-to-date on current technologies is critical for any software developer; just send me to the occasional convention to keep me happy." <= now?
@RMartinhoFernandes yep, you should never ask for undeserved upvotes. You could word it like: "If you liked this response please accept it" if they do not accept an answer for a while.
I used to ask for accepts if the OP is new and says "thanks!" or "this solves it" and I have the highest voted answer by a large margin... But even then I feel kinda dirty doing so.
So now I only do it, if it denies me the enlightened badge.
@robjb small companies don't care, big companies ask you to be creative and show how much you love your work, except MS, then there are the medium companies that started giving a fuck and then realize it doesn't matter at all.
You can wear something other than blue jeans? That's physically possible?
I never read "Where the Wild Things Are", but I already like its author, Maurice Sendak. Q:"Why don't you do Wild Things 2? Wild Things 1 was such a success" A: "Go to hell! Go to hell. I'm not a whore."
Almost all questions and information on both SO and "Google" describes how different licenses works and what license to choose for your work?
But how do they work in reality.
Almost everyone I have spoken to have vastly different thoughts of how they work, including hard core open source devel...
Why can't a license text be just something like "Do as you please, but give me credit". Why the fuck do we need legalese? Is this not enough to describe things? Sometimes I think lawyers invented legalese just to make sure normal people would need them.
@RMartinhoFernandes you could technically never give a license and only have that text on your sourcecode. If someone violates you could sue him in the basis that he does not have a license to use it.
There is nothing wrong, it is simply vague and prompt for abuse, therefore man invented legalese, a combination of an overly formal language with every single permutation mankind has think of doing covered.
Just think of it as hacking, you want your code to be secure and manage everything properly; it is the same situation with contracts and you don't want people to hack their way out of a contract.