In a purely functional programming language a function should always return the same value given the same arguments. So this would make a current_time() function impossible to implement.
I agree with everything Greg wrote, but I'd like to add: It can even get worse than this! Foo 2.0 could introduce a function Quux() that is an unambiguously better match for some of your calls too Quux() than the bar::Quux() your code called for years. Then your code still compiles, but silently ...
@muntoo Even though I used std::string everywhere I do feel that it violates the DRY principle somewhat. I think adding a using std::string at the top of a cpp file could be better practice. But in the end it's more convient to write always std::string. And it's always correct.
@coder9 You really should strip the code of the parts that are not relevant, and describe what kind of things you're running on which thread. Otherwise people will have a hard time trying to help.
Do you know about OpenGL rendering contexts? I could be wrong, but I believe each thread gets its own context, so you would probably need to take care of that too.
> Explicitly prefixing everything doesn't do any harm, takes very little getting used to, and has objective advantages. In particular, it makes the code easier to interpret by the compiler and by human readers - and that should probably be the main goal when writing code.
I just installed VirtualBox (from Oracle) in Windows 7, and created a virtual machine with latest Ubuntu.
Here in Firefox I can use the left Ctrl key, while the right one doesn't have any effect. However, I can't use the AltGr key (also known as Right Alt) to produce e.g. curly braces like {} (I...
@FredOverflow well from my pov it just makes things unreadable and verbose. also you don't want to qualify e.g. swap. you want to not qualify it, both for readability and for correct operation.
@TonyTheLion eh, he shows that it costs ~6 ns to create an exception frame, and then he concludes that "it's almost free". Even though he also points out that it takes 24 times as long as a function call. 6 ns can be an eternity if it's added to a tight loop
The problem with self-nomination is that those who would nominate themselves are rarely ever the kind that would be a service to the public to have in power. (stackoverflow.com/election)
also, annoying that there are some things he just skips over
like observing that exception handling gets more expensive in release builds, and then he just goes "well, we can see it generates a few more instructions, so that makes sense", without explaining/wondering why it suddenly generates those extra instructions
In C++, what is the difference between:
void func(MyType&); // declaration
//...
MyType * ptr;
func(*ptr); // compiler doesnt give error
func(ptr); // compiler gives error i thought & represents memory address so
// this statement should correct as ptr is only a poin...
Given a function with signature std::string ConvertToString(T);. How can you create a std::vector<std::string> from a std::vector<T> using std algorithms instead of manual loop?
The short answer is: the "you only pay for what you use" principle still applies exactly as before, e.g.
#include <iostream>
template <typename T>
void func1(T& v) {
v = -10;
}
template <typename T1, typename T2>
void func1(T1& v1, T2& v2) {
func1(v1); func1(v...
Is that a reasonable argument for a "don't stress about template bloat"?
I made a deal with my compiler long ago - "I'll write well defined code if you worry about all the little details like should this be unrolled/inlined etc." it's working pretty well so far.
almost like Dijkstra's dream (or invoke any other famous person of your choosing here to back up your cause)
I'm a little confused by the difference between Java and Android Java. Let's say I have an Activity class AndroidX. There is no main function and there is no AndroidX() constructor as we know it. I realize that onCreate() most probably initializes the AndroidX Activity, but why is there no main? ...