Here's the code for the thread pool if anybody has a similar need to create one (author shows as webadm because that's my sign-in name to my computer): http://pastebin.com/Eqv0AkHF
@Moshe A thread pool is a collection of always-running threads which are available to queue tasks to so you don't need to keep creating/destroying threads manually. Basically automated thread management.
@Xeo I'm taking this class in Uni, but I haven't gotten the book yet. We're going really really slowly. I know how to program, but not in C++ - yet. The first semester was really simple. I'm obviously missing fundamentals. That's why I hang out here.
The copy initialization syntax (T t = foo;) is considered to involve conversion, whereas the direct initialization syntax (T t(foo);) is, well, direct initialization. A constructor marked explicit can't be involved in conversions.
Could someone please explain the following compiler error to me:
struct B
{
};
template <typename T>
struct A : private T
{
};
struct C : public A<B>
{
C(A<B>); // ERROR HERE
};
T...
Follow-up question to this one.
Basically, in the following code, why does the compiler think that the B inside A<B> in Cs constructor refer to the (inaccessible) constructor of the B base class?
struct B{};
template <typename T>
struct A : private T{};
struct C : public A<B>...
$ cat test.cpp
struct B {
B();
};
template <typename T> struct A : private T {};
struct C : public A<B> { C(A<B>); };
int main() {}
$ g++ test.cpp
test.cpp:1:10: error: 'struct B B::B' is inaccessible
test.cpp:5:28: error: within this context
$ cat test.cpp
struct B {
private:
B();
};
template <typename T> struct A : private T {};
//struct C : public A<B> { C(A<struct B>); };
int main() {
B x;
}
$ g++ test.cpp
test.cpp: In function 'int main()':
test.cpp:3:5: error: 'B::B()' is private
test.cpp:8:7: error: within this context
Yeah, I think you put too much faith in GCC error messages. I wouldn't expect consistency for error messages across two similar yet different scenarios.
I need a cross platform solution for clearing the console in both Linux and Windows written in C++. Are there any functions in doing this? Also make note that I don't want the end-user programmer to have to change any code in my program to get it to clear for Windows vs Linux (for example if it h...
[ Note: In a derived class, the lookup of a base class name will find the injected-class-name instead of the
name of the base class in the scope in which it was declared. The injected-class-name might be less accessible
than the name of the base class in the scope in which it was declared. —end note ]
[ Example:
class A { };
class B : private A { };
class C : public B {
A *p; // error: injected-class-name A is inaccessible
::A *q; // OK
};
—end example ]
Do not read while not eof()1. That's not a proper reading loop.
Read while reading succeeds.
int x;
while ((x = in.get()) != EOF)
{
cout << x << endl;
}
Testing for in.eof() will not guarantee reading will succeed. When you test for in.eof() you're actually testing if the pre...
Because iostream::eof will only be set after reading the end of the stream. It does not indicate, that the next read will be the end of the stream.
Consider this (and assume then next read will be at the end of the stream):
while(!inStream.eof()){
int data;
// yay, not end of stream yet, now...
@sehe That's exactly it, yes. Although thanks to C++11 facilities, a hypothetical pure C++11 Boost.Fusion would be much, much more compact than the current version.
I keep reimplementing some Boost features for the reason that perfect forwarding makes it painless and allows me to use move-only types. And as an added benefit, the result is quite compact.
So far that's bind (arguably almost a re-done std::bind, not so much Boost.Bind), named parameters, optional, expressions (instead of Boost.Phoenix), unique_function (more of a side addition to std::function than a replacement), and those tuple algorithms.
@sehe Not sure how to go about it. So far I've been using GCC snapshots which make my code break each time I upgrade. I'd at least like to have Clang compile my code before doing anything important with it.