@RMartinhoFernandes: It means you have 24hrs(after bounty period ends) to decide which answers best answers your question after which the highest voted answer created after the bounty started with at least 2 upvotes will be awarded half the bounty amount.
I'm having some trouble with multi-layer pointers. Basically I'm reading point locations from a file and using them to map out polylines.
I'm trying to create a dynamically allocated data structure that will change depending on the information contained in the file.
Each file is structured like...
In plain C++ you can use the arguments of main:
#include <iostream>
int main( int argc, char* argv[] )
{
using namespace std;
cout << argc << " arguments:" << endl;
for( int i = 0; i < argc; ++i )
{
cout << "[" << argv[i] << ...
@Nils Not at all. I didn't know the difference either, but now I do. I just thought that the entry in the C++ FAQ might be worth linking as additional input.
@Nils it doesn't generate same code in your example. with a good compiler it generates same code when all that's used is the side effect of incrementing.
the definition is visible, after all, so in common cases (such as a for loop, where the return value isn't used at all), it should be pretty easy to optimize out
btw, another reason why it might not be faster is just today's superscalar OOO CPUs. They're pretty good at hiding costs. Post-increment might mean an extra memory write, but there's no dependency on it, so it might actually be free even if the compiler doesn't optimize it
@jalf: geez would have been so much better to read them earlier...but hmm i am a self taught programmer, without any background, so i can't say i should've started early
well it's a lot of hard work. i have to sprint to grocery store to buy ingredients, then cook, eat and wash up before posting next pic. not sure if i can keep this up.
In plain C++ you can use the arguments of main:
#include <iostream>
int main( int argc, char* argv[] )
{
using namespace std;
cout << argc << " arguments:" << endl;
for( int i = 0; i < argc; ++i )
{
cout << "[" << argv[i] << ...
where the comment indicates he (or she) has completely misunderstood what he (or she) has done, or what I have written, and I don't know exactly what is misunderstood?
@AlfPSteinbach: From what i have seen for some period of time is, You are a bit cursed or unlucky, most of the times OP accept your answers but even they themselves don't upvote them.
In plain C++ you can use the arguments of main:
#include <iostream>
int main( int argc, char* argv[] )
{
using namespace std;
cout << argc << " arguments:" << endl;
for( int i = 0; i < argc; ++i )
{
cout << "[" << argv[i] << ...
Oh my. Initialization and assignment. Well, that's confusion for sure!
To initialize is to make ready for use. And when we're talking about a variable, that means giving the variable a first, useful value. And one way to do that is by using an assignment.
So it's pretty subtle: assignment is on...
Oh you might see +1 on both on both of them because I am going to upvote them now.
@sbi I've read Asimov, but not in something like 30 years. No, I don't remember the name (about the only names I remember from him at all are one or two from the Foundation series).
@MrAnubis I don't think so. Although for all practical purposes it makes no difference, I think a ctor is a function identified by the class' name, or something like this.
But I'm not good in C++ standard legaleeze.
> Daneel is the most commonly appearing Asimov character.
BTW, @Alf, the two songs you linked to on youtube are blocked to me. ("Unfortunately, this UMG-music-content is not available in Germany because GEMA has not granted the respective music publishing rights.")
@sbi Yup -- I read never read an entire Robot-series book (tried once or twice, but always had better things to do). I read the original Foundation trilogy, but none of the others. In short, I'm not at all sure I've ever read anything that would have included that particular character.
in above case if base (constructor) is simple function than there is no need to place typename , and if constructor name is type then we need to place typename
@JerryCoffin can you please tell me that line in simple words?
OMG templates in c++ is most confusing and hard part(
// Mr. Anubis <- demo
struct Huh
{
template< class Type >
Huh() {}
};
int main()
{
//Huh o;
//Huh o = Huh::Huh<int>();
}
In this code, since there's no way to refer to the constructor, there's no way to specify the template argument. Hence it cannot be called. That's a bit absurd, and I can't say I really understand why it should be this way.
i'm just wondering. she added me on google+, but suddenly all her messages disappeared from my stream. but she's still there. and now there's link to facebook, with the image on top.
what with my earlier confusion over Als here, I feel like, well, confused
Both will and should indeed return the same value.
From MSDN:
The sizeof Operator
The sizeof operator gives the amount of storage, in bytes, required to store an object of the type of the operand. This operator allows you to avoid specifying machine-dependent data sizes in your programs.
siz...
@ManofOneWay Well, there's absolutely no reason why it shouldn't work and it often works for me. The only reason it wouldn't work is because you did it wrong.
@ManOfOne: it's like, maybe rice pudding tastes very wrong, even though it's like some other pudding in some ways. it's like, it's just pudding. there is no reason the rice pudding should taste wrong -- until you reveal that you had lots of salt in it.
Rather unlikely, if it's a redefinition error. If there are evil macro definitions you should get syntax errors instead. Missing include guards maybe, so that a header file got included twice?
Provide QUALITY books and an approximate skill level. Add a short blurb/description about each book that you have personally read/benefited from. Feel free to debate quality, headings, etc. Books that meet the criteria will be added to the list. Books that have reviews by the Association of C an...
@RMartinhoFernandes Proof that men really are deeper than women. Men look for hot and smart -- women look for hot and rich (yes, I'm being sexist again -- oh well!)
Ah, I just remembered something. What is the difference between void foo(const &T) and void foo(T const&), or has it the same semantics?
Once I read of a rule of thumb like "const always refers to the left-most thing next to it", so it might be more consistent to put the const& on the right side.
So, I realize that const T& and T const& are identical and both mean a reference to a const T. In both cases, the reference is also constant (references cannot be reassigned, unlike pointers). I've observed, in my somewhat limited experience, that most C++ programmers use const T&, bu...