@FredOverflow Drawing a blank on how to effectively make your two different array types react differently beyond simple type incompatibility. Also, it's 4am.
Tonight is the Austin C++ meetup. It's been around for 6 years, basically just a monthly laid back meeting of programmers who reserve some tables at a bar and drink and yak after work.
I'm trying to create a geekier spin-off of presentations and such, where people don't really socialize but are more technical. So I'll be pitching that ancillary meetup.
@DeadMG if reaction to me, it's too late for me to bother to figure out if what you're saying works or not. I'll assume probably right, but it's easier if you paste substitute "I'm sure it works code".
If you guys think you know something, learn how to teach. It's one thing to know a lot, and it's another to downvote and be a naysayer. Some people are kids, some speak English as a second language. And some do a lot more than just program. Solve, don't belittle.
I'll admit to having learned C before C++. I freely confess to recently figuring a bunch of nuances out to iostreams that I didn't know, because really... nothing I worked with dealt with file I/O. Especially not text file IO.
If you don't want to hear things you don't want to hear, it's easier to not listen to them than to try to talk down people. What are you expecting anyway?
Perhaps a hundred million castaways looking for a home.
If you're going to cite "Message(s) in a Bottle", yes.
Anyway, my only point is; I try fairly hard to share and improve on things, and I'd appreciate it if the people who know enough to teach me a thing or two would take at least a shred of the care I take with 1 rep kids to say "hm, this might make it better"
@DeadMG: Hello, please read the long and earnest response I wrote to a 1 rep guy who seems pretty earnest to learn more about programming, and consider taking some fractional amount of the care I took in trying to share what I know (be it small or large) with him in informing me.
@LucDanton: If you read any amount of code I write, or answers I write, you would know that a comment like "Why not make your whole code out of macros? It would still work." is an inappropriate and uninformative remark, and you made that remark after a chat in which I'd provided hyperlinks showing (I would hope) that I'm not an idiot. If you were making a joke, suffix it with something like :-) and if I don't get your joke I'll ask you about it.
Well, I suppose my "thesis" which I would actually not address to any specific individual, is this:
We are on the brink of some really interesting transitions, a totally different world from where I grew up learning programming (and I imagine totally different for several in the room as well)
I did not have a resource like stackoverflow, I had some random books that I could get my hands on, and many of those books were written with more of the agenda to sell books than to truly inform young kids how games were written.
Thus I was given books about BASIC and puzzling over why I couldn't achieve the effects of games coming on disks that were manufactured on drives with capabilities besides the one I was using (hence why I couldn't copy the games) and I didn't know there were cross-compilers and that these programs were not being written on the machine I was using.
So I'm quite empathetic to the n00bs, who might be young kids, in other countries, who visit this site. And to my mind, they're more important to the future than the lot of the self-important bitter aging programmers who are quick to dismiss or cut down those who don't know what they know.
I know it's tempting to treat this site mechanically, to let one's own momentary concerns eclipse any of that. But the thing is I know anyone who can fathom C++ must be smarter, bigger, better than that.
My blog is an afterthought in my life, it's got a fixed width...I haven't bothered to get involved in fixing it...but I'm enthusiastic about the prospects of what Wikipedia and StackOverflow are doing in the spirit of changing things. I'm not here to harass anyone, and if I share my work I expect the kind of courtesy I would show anyone who shared their work with me.
And you guys are smart enough to do better. The end.
@MrAnubis I'm afraid I don't happen to have a compiler that does auto handy, but you can generally find a broader audience by posting your code as a question than in the chat room.
can anyone tell me how to include the type library of an activex control installed in the system in our project and call the functions from the project.
@Pubby8 helping to make my point :) either one can be hardware or software. if that's the distinction you wanna make, it's useless
the difference, to me, is that in linux, a shell window / VT / whatever actually acts like an old-fashioned terminal and is controlled by certain sequences of chars and such. in windows, a console is generally a lot dumber, and you have to call api functions to do anything more than teletype-style output
the point was that I have absolutely no idea wtf you're talking about
you posted some code and a quote, which don't appear to be linked at all, with no source for either, explanation of what they are, or how they go together
Why does the Visual C++ compiler refuse to compile this code?
I obviously know that the error is:
Error C2864: Singleton<T>::p:
Only static const integral data members can be initialized within a class
but why? (i.e. is there a technical reason why it is not allowed?)
Is this com...
Hey @Luc, can you tell me what this is for: #define ANNEX_EXPAND( expr ) std::initializer_list<int> { ( (expr), void(), 0 )... }? For testing or something?
> error: default argument for parameter of type 'detail::indices<>' has type 'detail::cons_end<detail::indices<0u, 1u, 2u>, 3u>::type {aka detail::indices<0u, 1u, 2u, 3u>}'
I'm using boost::spirit to write a parser, lexer
here is what i want to do. i want to put functions and classes into data structures with the variables they use. so i want to know what would be the best way to do this.
and what parts of boost::spirit would be best to use for this?
the language...