@Fred You're not really selling it very well. So far, all you've done here is ask a Java question. Why should we care if you come back or not? You're welcome, like I said, even if I could, I don't want to ban anyone. But I won't cry myself to sleep if you decide not to come back
first ban, one hour second ban, one day third ban, one week forth ban, one month firth ban, one year sixth ban, one decade seventh ban, one century eight ban, we review our new world order, where the lounge rolls over all
I wasn't expecting some guys insulting me for using java lol, I enjoy C++ too, but the point is : every language has pros and cons so I enjoy all of them
@FredOverflow Neither did C or C++. They only existed for a theoretical optimization for a CPU that was only hypothetical. No compiler ever succeeded in taking advantage of it, even on the few CPUs on which it was possible.
@Fred I don't think anyone insulted you. People just expressed a strong dislike for Java, and said that they don't understand why someone would enter this room just to ask questions that have nothing to do with C++. I didn't see anything personal
@FredOverflow I don't have a problem with Java being more popular than Java. I just thought that spouting hatred towards the language makes it seem that way.
@DeadMG So you mean that Java and C++11 are allowed to have complex memory models, but it was overkill in C++03? Just making sure I understand where you're going with this :)
Early on, ad-hoc memory models were probably good enough. Especially before the language was standardized, the memory model was just "whatever works in the compiler you're using"
plus, it was likely unclear what made a good memory model. How strong should it be? What should it semantics be? There were so many weeeeird CPU architectures and setups back then that settling on one single formal model was probably difficult
hell, I spend most of my time thinking that my own little corner of it would be well served by spending a little less time jerking off about our not-actually-useful-at-all culture and history.
@FredOverflow hehe the funny part is, it's not even my boss that forces me to use it, I am my boss, sometimes I use C++, sometimes I don't use it; especially when production time can lead to higher price and.. the client will ask you why you don't do things simpler
@FredOverflow clients that are willing to pay for "Number1 perfection" then, I enjoy it so much
exactly, there is no longer a valid currency called the French Franc, thus there can not be an exchange rate for it... other then buying the coins as collection pieces I guess
@DeadMG clearly you would spend time making a domain specific language that makes it very easy to do exactly what you want, thus meaning the development time for the actual product is very small. We can ignore the billions spent developing such an obscure language... because we can
personnally I used to dev just for fun and still do it that way, but then with real clients a question that comes is "ok, I can do it.. but is there a lib that does it already and has been tested for 15 years ?" if so.. in which language the implementation is the better / easier / more supported
To me, Java is the opposite of a productive language. It's what I use if I want to spend a week writing boilerplate code and boring myself to death. If I want to get things done fast, it's certainly not the language I'd pick. But that's just my opinion. Don't worry, I won't take Java away from you. You can use it as much as you like. :)
@Fred Eh, I hate that the language is so painfully anemic. I hate how it has cultivated an ecosystem in which everything has to be hidden behind 14 virtual function calls, class hierarchies must be deep enough to drown in them, and your code must be as verbose as humanly possible
The facts that it's ridiculously slow at times, uses ridiculous amounts of memory, and produces fugly and painful UIs are just smaller inconveniences
@jalf I understand this pain... in college one of my teacher was expecting us to develop a basic battleship game and the group debugged the UI for a whole month before it was looking "correct", most of time ending with a big "PLAY" button that takes the whole screen
the thing was to not use absolute positions and constraints but rather use relative ones, then it's all fine with some layouts
@FredOverflow I am not going to judge whether this is true, but I can't help but have to point out that, even if it indeed is, C++ allows you to tune memory management in a way to prevent hat. When we ran into heap fragmentation problems in C#, all we could do about it is to recommend customers to buy more RAM. (And in order to make that wonder work we had to port to 64bit a bunch of very old C libs which are used by the C# parts.)
In C++, we'd written an allocator tailored to the application's special needs and be done.
At the end of the day, doesn't every language suffer from this at a fundamental level? As long as you release what you allocate, you ultimately have to rely on the OS to keep the heat in a usable state. Of course something like Java or C# can minimize it a bit by making a few larger allocations for the GC'ed heap, within which they're in full control, but any allocations outside that (the large object heap in .NET's case) still run into the same issues
newer allocator designs suffer much less from fragmentation, not to mention the possibility of zero-fragmentation allocators like memory arena/object pool
@DeadMG I seem to recall a couple of SO questions about very simple, and apparently well-behaved code which nevertheless fragmented the heap on Windows badly enough to eventually run out of memory
All it did was repeatedly allocate and then free a vector of a certain size, or something like that. Was really surprisingly simple
@jalf Of course they all do. That's why I value a language that admits as much and allows me to plug into the thing and fiddle with it when I know better than a general-purpose allocator does.
@jalf With a 64bit application, you'd have to fragment one hell of a lot of memory to exhaust your virtual address space. And as far as I'm aware, it's not possible to fragment your physical address space under virtual memory schemes.
"warning: unmappable character for encoding UTF-8" followed by printing the "unmappable character" in question, which not surprisingly, rendered as �. Genius.
As was said, you can't assign arrays in C++. This is due to the compiler being a meanie, because the compiler can, it just won't let you do it...
... unless you trick it ;)
template <typename T, int N>
struct square_matrix {
int data[N][N];
};
square_matrix<int, 10> a;
square_m...
Mwahhahahaa.
Everyone is "there are 2 options", and they're missing the best one.
It's strongly recommended to know C if you want to know C++ good. With C# is not the same, in my opinion you could learn C# without knowing C++ but it's harder...
I actually feel bad posting "yet another singleton"... I wrote the following one many years ago and had recently found another application for it. We had many threads, each running the same function that requires the use of a boost::asio::io_service instance. It was best that all threads shared t...
In software engineering, double-checked locking (also known as "double-checked locking optimization") is a software design pattern used to reduce the overhead of acquiring a lock by first testing the locking criterion (the "lock hint") without actually acquiring the lock. Only if the locking criterion check indicates that locking is required does the actual locking logic proceed.
The pattern, when implemented in some language/hardware combinations, can be unsafe. At times, it can be considered an anti-pattern.
It is typically used to reduce locking overhead when implementing "lazy initia...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Doesn’t matter, this still works, and you can cart it off into an (automatic) destructor of a main-local object. See updated answer
In the Christopher Nolan movies we saw Batman whisper/rasp his way through them, presumably to conceal his voice to stop people recognizing him as Bruce Wayne. Having people recognize his voice is obviously not generally a problem in comics given it's all written, but have they ever addressed th...
@thecoshman I'm sure the cat would simply reply that the same thing in text form has loads of advantages, like greppability, and less time consumption.