This is weird. This program gives different output in edit-view than archive view. The final line is Dec: abc def in edit-view and Dec: abc\tdef in archive view.
I think my love for bash ends here.
@vidit void*, union, boost::variant, boost::any, pointer to common base class, ... You have several options.
However, if you're gonna use void* then I wonder if you will later still know what type to cast them back to.
I think it would be a stack, but could it be a skip list, bst, or queue?
it makes sense for it to be a stack since we can keep pushing onto it and popping off. But would a queue be better since it adds them in the order they come in?
My instructor defined the function remove() as:
struct node
{
node *next;
int value;
}
int IntList::remove()
{
node *victim = first;
int result;
if(isEmpty()) throw listIsEmpty();
first = victim->next;
result = victim->value;
delete victim;
return result;
}
Where fir...
> I think the perfect programming language is C1000. It is largely the same as the current C99, but with scattered bits of refinement over the millennium.
Really! I JUST WANT HELP! PLEASE JUST HELP ME :(. MY WEBSITE MEANS EVERYTHING TO ME AND I WANT TO HAVE THE HOMEPAGE SOON! PLEASE JUST HELP ME :...(..... — b255030 mins ago
@Mysticial I suppose as they've defined constructive, it may not be. On the other hand, based on how I'd normally define the word, I'd say it really is.
@StackedCrooked Not really, since I follow meta, I watched the entire deletion audit play out in March.
And I saw all those top bike-shed questions drop off one-by-one.
Come to think of it, I might have actually benefited from it since at one point, but the loop and denormal-float questions were in the top 50 because so many top questions were deleted or locked.