I think you'd have good grounds for a complaint with with the Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education if they don't take your letter seriously
Thanks GCC. If I ask to stop compilation after the first error, it shows "blah blah is ambiguous" and doesn't show the possible choices, because normally it shows those messages as if they were errors.
> @Mooing Duck - Thanks, a hash will be the way to go if I have to line these up myself, as I suspect and DeadMG's helpful comment helps reinforce. – Brian Stinar 11 mins ago
The helpful comment in question is:
> OpenGL's API sucks balls. What's new? – DeadMG 18 mins ago
I am attempting to use the glSelectBuffer(GLsizei size, GLuint * buffer) method to select objects in a slightly different way then I believe is supported in C++ for OpenGL 3.1. Selection works great if I do everything as is specified online.
Instead of a GLuint*, I would like to actually store p...
Relatively simple question about handling destructors properly...
First I've got a class that's something like this:
class Foo {
public:
ReleaseObjects() {
for (std::map<size_t, Object*>::iterator iter = objects.begin(); iter != objects.end(); iter++) {
delete (*it...
every once in a while VS2010 will just stop compiling, giving me weird errors, or the program will stop working for no reason....and the next day everything is back to normal
Intercourse, Alabama, is an unincorporated community located at a crossroads in Sumter County, Alabama, USA. It is named for the traffic intersection of the town's crossroads (called "intercourse" at that time) at the site of the general store. Over the years, the community has identified itself by other names.
References
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@ManofOneWay Because Denmark has >5.5 million inhabitants spread over >40,000 km², so I'd expect there to be a lot of kindergartens quite far from any given place to be in the country?
@CatPlusPlus "range exclusive". Hmm, I'll assume it makes it an empty range. But I'm pretty sure it does something completely different in some other context.
Can someone appreciate this beautifully-aligned comment I just made?
/*
* This file provides functions to interface with
* low-level terminal properties such as size and
* input mode. Because the system libraries make
* use of macros, D can't just use them directly.
*/
i'm trying to come up with a concrete reasoning why to use a pointer over a reference
as a return type from a function ,
my reasoning is that if inadvertently a null value is returned to a reference type
it could not be checked , and could lead to run-time errors
int& something(int j)
...
@LucDanton Sure you could document the interface requiring immutable semantics. Wouldn't that be a stretch though? It is certainly not common. Most of the time you write an interface with only read operations, you're actually writing a IReadableFoo.
(I've been bitten by this kind of bad naming before.)
@LucDanton Ah, but then another "problem" arises :) Wouldn't interface IMutableFoo : IImmutableFoo { void Mutate(); } be something reasonable (except for the crazy naming, which is the "problem" I'm referring to)?
@RMartinhoFernandes For some 'meaning' of reasonable, yes. But since I use inheritance to solve problems/write API and not describe 'elegant' taxonomies, arguably no.
We had that on NodaTime. Though the culprit was the API we were porting, which already had that kind of immutable/mutable inheritance thing there (well, when the language gives you only lemons, you cannot grab the tequila and party). Originally we decided to go with the naming IFoo/IWritableFoo, but ended up scratching it and keeping only the immutable API, so the naming problem just vanished.
Either is fine imo. Although I'd use a word to further separate the list of people you remember and those you don't, e.g. "me, and also some more people...".
I.e. either you group yourself with the list of people you remember or with all contributors.