It is easier to explain on an example so,
class base {
//....
}
class derived1 : public base {
//...
}
In my library, there is a pointer of base class. The user of the library have to make classes derived from either base or derived1 and assign pointer to that class.
How can I check what cl...
^ on gcc <array> appeared to be enough :< I wasn't even aware that `begin`/`end` was in <iterator> (I'd half have expected this to be in `<utility>` too
@LucDanton How would that work? How could the compiler supply the default value, e.g. when inlining, across a function pointer (taken from a stateless lambda) or, god forbid, a std::function<> wrapping a lambda?
With c++14 poly lambdas, there might be a loop hole with implicitly defined overloads without the default params, but somehow I feel this would create awkward surprises with generic overloading
@LucDanton I think the compiler gets the default value from the declaration (not the definition) and supplies it at the call site. {This explains the usual conundrum with virtual methods and default parameters}
The "Lounge<C++>" (sometimes known by other names) is not a C++ chat room, but a general chat room and venue for trolling, which happens to be populated mostly by SO users active in the c++ tag.
Blog? Anyway, that is my point. To me, the World storing both the data and drawing it violates it, so I was wondering if it either didn't apply, it was considered narrow enough, or holding memory is so common it isn't a defining feature.
@A.H. it has one single responsibility: in a small, compact volume, expose the most frequently used tools needed for... uh... someone trying to build a house in the middle of a forest.