Why did (notably) Java and C# decide to have a static method as their entry point – rather than representing an application instance by an instance of an Application class, with the entry point being an appropriate constructor which, at least to me, seems more natural?
This has been asked before...
F# comes out of the box with an interactive REPL. C# has nothing of the sort and is in fact kinda difficult to play around without setting up a full project (though LINQpad works and its also possible to do via powershell).
Is there something fundamentally different about the languages that allo...
Hey guys. Sorry to bother you with such a simple question that I've found on google many many times... but, is something like double *p = new (std::nothrow) double[HUGENUMBER GOES HERE] supposed to set p to NULL if it cannot allocate enough memory?
@ManofOneWay I don't understand (I missed the original conversation) what is making it so difficult (and I'm not entirely sure what you're trying to do either).
So you trade computation for better memory access.
user1174868
@RMartinhoFernandes I really wanted to solve it on my own but I can't, I will never get it no matter how long I work on it if I only do it on my own. I don't know enough about programming to learn it on my own
my dumb computer just crashes because it can't allocate the necessary memory. I already looked through examples () of how to use the new(std::nothrow) and how to handle it, but my mac just decides to say I have an error I quit.
@MooingDuck Indeed the amount of computation goes up a bit, but if you're sorting massive arrays that are many times larger than cache. You can probably get away with a 4-way or 8-way split at the top level. (or even more)
@RMartinhoFernandes What's making it so difficult is that I suck at C++. What I'm trying to do is to have a consistent way of using bitvectors. 1d bit vector is working nicely with std::vector, but for 2d bitvector it isn't that nice anymore. Sure do a x*y 1d std::vector is fine, but I still have to wrap it into some class. So I'm making BitVector and 2dBitVector classes
@jmlopez The reason is that modern memory management subsystems actually don’t allocate memory, they provide it once you actually access the memory, no sooner
@MooingDuck if you allocate memory and the OS decides to allocate it when you access it later, another process may already have sucked up all RAM. This may happen just before you set the memory to non-zero.
Recursion in computer science is a method where the solution to a problem depends on solutions to smaller instances of the same problem. The approach can be applied to many types of problems, and is one of the central ideas of computer science.
"The power of recursion evidently lies in the possibility of defining an infinite set of objects by a finite statement. In the same manner, an infinite number of computations can be described by a finite recursive program, even if this program contains no explicit repetitions."
Most computer programming languages support recursion by allowing...
I don't understand why this is upvoted so much, using standard language features (in this case, a simple struct) is much cleaner and quicker than invoking boost. — KomodoDave3 mins ago