If a variable is declared as static in a function's scope it is only initialized once and retains its value between function calls. What exactly is its lifetime? When do its constructor and destructor get called?
void foo()
{
static string plonk = "When will I die?";
}
P.S. For those w...
@BarrettAdair Erase a first time, then a second time. In my example, a copy of p is erased first and held inside f then in turn a copy of f is erased and held by g.
@LucDanton Here's a vtable implementation of the technique applied to member function templates. It's intrusive, but not for the user.
"self" is just an example member. There are obvious concerns about object lifetime/copies/const correctness, but at least I know now that a vtable implementation is possible.
That is, achieving type-erased covariance using member function pointers.
1. I'd like to have a modern library for immutable strings, a la C#/Java. 2. I have a couple of cool ideas with templates that cause a lot of code bloat that may or may not be worth the executable size hit
"Strings and other concrete objects are typically expressed as immutable objects to improve readability and runtime efficiency in object-oriented programming. Immutable objects are also useful because they are inherently thread-safe.[2] Other benefits are that they are simpler to understand and reason about and offer higher security than mutable objects"
@VermillionAzure Sometimes I want str.erase(...) to leave the underlying string alone, and return a new string with the specified character removed instead. Make sense?
Anyway that's the gist of immutability. It took a while to wrap my mind around the difference between const and immutability when I first learned the word
@BarrettAdair From what I remember, it is an efficiency of design concern ultimately: immutability is supposed to result in more correct design and is less error-prone
@fredoverflow But the question is can we quantify how we do things differently? Is there any study on how different paradigms manage to complete the same computational tasks with a formal language?
@VermillionAzure I think there was a study that concluded dynamic typing lets you get stuff done more quickly or something. Apart from that, there's not much science going on in computer science.
@VermillionAzure Well, the problem is that no two programmers are alike, and programmers change over time. In contrast, every electron in existence behaves the same, so physics is a lot easier to study. At least I imagine :)
@fredoverflow I want to say this is bullshit because software engineering deserves the same if not more sophistication that we give to the physical engineering fields
There is no reason why computer science cannot be more empirical
@fredoverflow Well... I once asked a question on UserExperience.SE, and some guy gave an answer that has strictly nothing to do with the question, and I never managed to get the answer deleted or downvoted into oblivion, even after the answerer admitting that he didn't understand the question and that his answer wasn't answering the question.
Among other things these are called Radial Menus, Pie Menus... You may think you have never encountered one of these, but probably you have played some game that implemented a variation of it.
Pros
Can be triggered anywhere and all options are near reach. This is very relevant to minimize inpu...
@Morwenn ah damn I thought I was clever by doing some advanced stalking
> Nobody warned me that being an adult would mean wasting my waking hours updating Linux on a set of lightbulbs, rebooting them until they’d take the latest firmware. The future is great.
I don't get spelling bees, probably because I am terrible at spelling words correctly. But still, with the aid of computer who needs to remember how to spell things correctly?
It just looks like some German native who learned English as a second language and keeps forgetting English words mid-sentence thought their idiolect was SAE.
At least "gesellschaft" is a particular type of social relationship that is left unspecified. It's possible that English lacks a word to describe that particular relationship and speakers would just loan the German word to be precise, but why would an English speaker use "taoiseach"?
This old question has come up again, this time sparked by a heaping pile of flags in a room dedicated to Gujarati Android developers. But the question isn't new; two years ago, this was the lament:
This isn't one of our language Q&A sites. We don't allow anything other than English on the ma...