@CatPlusPlus because the copy constructor should be noexcept
@CatPlusPlus and I could use make_shared on the std::string constructor, but this would make it look different from the const char* one, where it would obviously fail spectacularly
I also don't understand why you feel the need to store a pointer to a dynamically-allocated string. But in terms of external interface it's functionally the same as std::runtime_error, yes ([C++11: 19.2.6]).
@nightcracker Not deriving virtually from std::exception means you can't do use multiple inheritance sanely (doing so breaks catch(std::exception)). The standard classes don't, so they're off-limits as bases for exceptions.
Said "Tech Analyst" explained to her that "He may - and I'm sure we're going to be able to get some more confirmation on this as the hours and minutes go on - he may have been just a system administrator who knew his way around and how to hack things."
people joke about this, but it's a huge fucking deal because it's one of those moments where you realise how much bullshit they must spew about everything else
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Dammit.
I asked whether they didn't have a wooden table available.
@R.MartinhoFernandes but 90% of the time you're using either uniform_int_distribution or uniform_real_distribution for which there is no optimization to be had by storing some "distribution object"
@nightcracker Yes, someone also had lots of personal experience dealing with the problem of loop advancement and actually made a proposal with it as motivation.
Providing a my::randint(0, n - 1, g); function is trivial given std::uniform_int_distribution, but writing my::uniform_int_distribution in terms of std::randint is not as nice.
@Puppy They sacrificed a little convenience to gain much flexibility.
should I write template<class URNG> void random_bytes(unsigned char* buf, int buflen, URNG&& g) or template<class Iter, class URNG> void random_bytes(Iter begin, Iter end, URNG&& g)
I know the majority of my usage would prefer the first form
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think it's really a question of severity. Personally so far I haven't found <random> to be problematic, but I haven't used it that much.
@MartinJames You mean, "How could a utility that depends on the user to manage the number of threads manually, and manually handle exactly what every single one of them is doing, and manually handle all the synchronization, etc, possibly go wrong?".
it's like saying, "How could it go wrong? We only Standardized mmap and told everyone to go roll their own malloc."
@Puppy Well, that's like saying 'I was given a car and a can of petrol. I poured the petrol over the car and set fire to it. It didn't do me any good at all'.
@MartinJames That would be equally stupid if you went back in time five hundred years and gave those items to a peasant in Essex without any instruction or assistance.
@Puppy Yeah - B. hates it as well. Wants to go and play with the workmen who are carrying heavy bags etc. and trying to use power tools. He can't understand why he has to be kept in:(
My program have to create n childs. When a signal is recieved a child is created. Then the first child wait for the others n-1 childs. The second one wait for the other n-2 childs and so on until the last child run and finish immediately.
I write this code, but it don't work and i get nephews.
...
@R.MartinhoFernandes so whenever I write template<class T> auto f(T&& x) I should use remove_reference on T first? anything else I need to do to get typedefs?
@Puppy you're honestly saying that the stuff that exists is bad because you have lost patience dealing with bricks, and require prefab components? You're right to desire them (everyone does) but it's a strange reason to discredit the standard library bricks
so what I'm really saying is, they Standardised something nobody needed and ignored the things they really did need, like Unicode, parallel algorithms/data structures, or task-based model, or actor model, or something like that.
@Puppy Unless they didn't have it before. Which is pretty true. It's like a kit that they can use to 3d print a water purification installation at home.
Yes, it's involved, but it's not worthless.
@Puppy I think it's more correct that they slowly moving from things that are not immediately applicable to things that are.