but some of the symbols are terminals (not able to broken down into smaller units), I guess like int keyword, and others are nonterminals, which can be replaced, but by what?
@renatofernandes the length keeps track of the number of nodes it knows about. The length only changes when you add or remove to the middle or end of the list. Which functions do that?
but as I'm reading it, he's paraphrasing Herb, who works on the MSVC team, and at least half of what he's saying is a very good fit to what MS has stated previously
I hate my coworkers. Here's some java code:
prompts = new PromptPlayable[new_prompts.size()];
prompts = ((PromptPlayable[]) new_prompts.toArray(new PromptPlayable[0]));
Mmm. Watching it more times, it is possible that the curve tightens very abruptly.
@MooingDuck in fact, now that's definitive: it is not a continuity error, just the last part of the curve is 'drifted' so hard precisely where the camera cuts over, that it was hard to see where all those blue barrels were coming from all of a sudden :)
@renatofernandes produces a new ilist where in is the first element and il is the rest. If il has a length of 2, what is the length of the newly created list?
@renatofernandes increment? No. You do not need a counter. If il has length 2, the new node's length is 3. If il has length 42, the new node's length is 43. so r->length = ????;
@renatofernandes protip: you just wrote a function called ilength
@renatofernandes I... can tell. Do you understand what the ilist looks like in memory?
@renatofernandes You really need to talk to your teacher about this. I already feel like I'm helping you cheat with the massive amount of hints I've given.
Oh gee, I've been making ridiculous claims about return type inference. Just fixed one of my answers, I'm sure I have other wrong answers and comments.
EDIT: oops, I just realized that there's a scoping difference between the trailing-return-type specifier and the return statement. Specifically:
auto f(int a)
{
char r[sizeof(f(a))+1];
return r;
}
Kaboom!
Previous answer:
It's unfortunate that the language does not provide a synta...
In C++11 lambda can deduce their return type if the body consists of only a return statement. A proposal is the works to remove this restriction, and apparently it's already working in GCC.
Is there a reason this couldn't be extended to all auto returning functions?
Has this extension already b...
@renatofernandes if r is a node (not a pointer), it accesses the length member. However, for your code, all inodes are pointers, so in this case, it's a typo. You should have r->length
@renatofernandes ah, that's the problem. The trick is "don't count". Because that's slow. Simply remember how long each list is. If you make a list with three elements, it should have a int length member set to 3. Then you never have to count.
Right. So if you were writing that concatenate function, you'd set the length of the brand-new list equal to the length of the left half plus the length of the right half, right? You'd use the length of the pieces.
Now if the left list is just a single node, and the right list has length y, what the length of the combination?
Remember you're trying to figure out r's length, which you don't know, from the right-hand list, which you do know, and carries its own length with it.
@Moshe: His description of the effects of buffer overrun is also terrible (or about 30 years old). You cannot crash Word by writing to a wild pointer in your own program. We have this thing called virtual memory. You can't touch Word's memory from your program no matter what value you put in a pointer or array index, because your pointer doesn't hold a physical memory address, but goes through a mapping.
= Invalid read of size 4
= at 0x80484C7: ilength (ilist.c:46)
= by 0x8048484: icons (ilist.c:18)
= by 0x8048660: main (ilistui.c:15)
= Address 0x8 is not stack'd, malloc'd or (recently) free'd
= Process terminating with default action of signal 11 (SIGSEGV)
= Access not within mapped region at address 0x8
= at 0x80484C7: ilength (ilist.c:46)
= by 0x8048484: icons (ilist.c:18)
= by 0x8048660: main (ilistui.c:15)
= If you believe this happened as a result of a stack
= overflow in your program's main thread (unlikely but
Please remember that most folks in my class aren't hanging around C++ chat rooms with professional programmers. I happen to do that. Then again, I've been writing code for a lot longer than most people.
@renatofernandes If you don't have a goat at disposal, you can also sacrifice a goto. Browse through some old code of yours and replace a goto by higher-level control structure.
@MooingDuck That doesn't make it even remotely comparably useful.
@TonyTheLion Constructors can't return values. So even if you did ejaculate error codes throughout your codebase, you could never indicate construction failure.
@MooingDuck Even then... you'd have to think hard about what to do when you, say, resize a vector and there's a problem with the copy half-way through, or when you can't get enough new memory.
@MooingDuck Yes, I know. Their solution is: The user guarantees that there is enough memory so that allocations never fail, or otherwise it is UB.
@MooingDuck Also, that doesn't address how range construction works if object constructors can throw. Basically, it goes all the way down to say, nothing must ever throw.
@KerrekSB oh, here it is: "The allocator calls a user-callback upon failure, whereby the user callback frees up memory in an application-specific way."
I actually wish the STL did this, with the default being throw stuff
Has anyone played with BGL? Originally, I planned on using graphviz in my project and then I discovered BGL - its power leveraged through generic programming is really compelling
@KerrekSB I've always wondered why constructors didn't return a reference to themselves. Syntactically it seems like they do. That doesn't address error handling in any way however