Have you considered providing them with a C compiler and C++ code, or vice versa? I'd like to see their reactions when their little world comes crumbling down.
Applications are king. Data and usability take a back seat. Lion just came out and it's basically no different. I still have to move and resize windows to move information back and forth. The end-user has no realistic chance of customizing the processes to make workflow efficient. It's a day-t...
We obviously can't make everything constexpr. And if we don't make anything constexpr, well, there won't be any big problems. Lots of code have been written without it so far.
But is it a good idea to slap constexpr in anything that can possibly have it? Is there any potential problem with this?
@TonyTheTiger That gives a whole new meaning to the old "You owe me a new keyboard" meme: "You owe me a new keyboard because your code made me throw up." Not bad. I'm tempted to try this here.
> A cat got hit by a car and laid decomposing in the middle of the road. The road crew simply painted the double yellow line over the cat. It was there for quite a while, and got pretty bad with bloato-moto. Everytime you drove past, it would wave at you with its one arm proudly up in the air.
@TonyTheTiger "It's only 10:43am"? Boy, my alarm clock went off 7:00am today. I already was awake by then, though, cause one of my kids woke me half an hour earlier.
I encountered a line of code:
int a = 10;
int b = 40;
a = a+b-(b=a);
cout<<a<<" "<<b<<endl;
I cannot understand what happended to this code?
Can anyone explain for me??
Thanks in advance!
I encountered a line of code:
int a = 10;
int b = 40;
a = a+b-(b=a);
cout<<a<<" "<<b<<endl;
I cannot understand what happended to this code?
Can anyone explain for me??
Thanks in advance!
The octopus mimics the physical likeness and movements of more than fifteen different species, including sea snakes, lionfish, flatfish, brittle stars, giant crabs, sea shells, stingrays, flounders, jellyfish, sea anemones, and mantis shrimp. It accomplishes this by contorting its body and arms, and changing colour.
I just had an interview, and I was asked to create a memory leak with Java.
Needless to say I felt pretty dumb having no clue on how to even start creating one.
What would an example be?
I'd just be looping through, looking for the end of "namespace two" so I can partition those tokens off
maybe I could come up with some elaborate scheme to mark it in the lexer, or something
anyway
you're right, it probably won't be that much work, and I shall have invented a new kind of parsing grammar and a new parsing algorithm, which will likely already have been thought of by someone smarter than me
I am curious to know what happens when the stack and the heap collide. If anybody has encountered this, please could they explain the scenario.
Thanks in advance.
Operating systems are just a bunch of while(true) loops abstracted away so you don't have to deal with them. Then you complain if your program has 3 nested loops? Sir, your 3 nested loops are probably running within 4-5 nested loops that you don't see.
I've just learned about the CRTP Pattern and am looking for the original work. The reference of wikipedia says
Coplien, James O. in (1995, February).
"Curiously Recurring Template
Patterns". C++ Report: 24–27.
I also found it on ACM, however it's not available for download :( I wonder i...
Assuming you mean a CARRIAGE RETURN, it is ASCII 13 or Hexadecimal 0x0D (hence my username 0A0D). If you mean LINE FEED, it is ASCII 10 or Hexadecimal 0x0A. I will let you enhance your question more before I answer further.