@VinayakGarg I've never seen a predicate defined like that, that's interesting. I'm still deciding if I dislike that or am doing that for now on for multiple predicates.
Quiz question: If I wanted to change all the names of member variables in a project (a big project) to m_* if they weren't already named that way, would it be a massive pain or easily achievable? Any tools exist?
@DeadMG I've never seen a generic prioritized operator that I was really happy with. Namely, when comparing strings, they all iterate two or three times. (premature optimization)
@VinayakGarg So for the record std::tie comes from the tuples part of the Standard library -- we're using the fact that std::tuple<A, B, C> has a lexicographical ordering (iff A, B and C have orderings themselves).
@DeadMG in the general case yes, but maybe there should be a thing that checks for int T::compare(const T&), and only uses operator< and operator== as a fallback?
@MooingDuck I'm saying that your proposed change is an extreme micro-optimization that wouldn't lead to any real performance benefit, and even if it did, it would only be in a niche.
Hey guys, anybody free to help with libcurl and C++
user1182183
hey does anyone know where the SVN config file is on google code? I tried to upload a file called 'config' into the root directory of the SVN and into the /.subversion/ directory but it's not being applied, or at least the HTML pages don't show
@MooingDuck if assign one buffer as another, I'd rather have it assign the data, and subsequently upload that do it's own gpu resource, rather than duplicating the other buffer
@DeadMG but, ID3D11Buffer** is exactly what that struct business returns, and what I get from &gpu_buffer
@MooingDuck yea, if I do gpu_buffer1 = gpu_buffer2; I want that to just assign the cpu_data, it shouldn't make both gpu_buffers use the same gpu resource
std::vector<T>& operator= (std::vector<T> other)
{
cpu_data = std::move(other); //prevents making copy if not needed.
mark_dirty();
return cpu_data; //I still disagree about the return type
}
I think I actually wanted to write an assignment operator for gpubuffer = gpubuffer, and then it's fine if gpubuffer = vector (of matching type) returns gpubuffer
so, without a default constructor, I guess I can only initialize arrays by doing GPUBuffer<...> array[] = {GPUBuffer<...>(..., ...), ...}; ? that'll be fun with those template arguments :p
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Hmm...I wonder if it would be worthwhile to do a "make" that's a bit like Clang -- a library instead of a packaged executable. That way IDEs (and such) that almost all see to get it wrong could use a pre-built library that has at least some chance of doing things right.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I might have bitten more than I can chew. I'm trying to generate the 2^N signature variants (lvalue ref/rvalue ref) of a RemoveReference<Args>... pack.
I was under the impression that accessing an union member that's not active is undefined behavior, but I can't seem to find a solid reference (other than answers claiming it's UB but without any support from the standard).
So, is it undefined behavior?
@melak47 at least in norway, "family" about a product is code-word meaning "cheap". most often that means low quality. sometimes it means good value though.