@ManofOneWay It's not my work. I often make vegetable soup, but if I add meat then it's usually pieces of sausage, not chicken meatballs. It's very unplanned. :-)
Here's someone asking for something that doesn't exist, with problems ranging from "all hell breaks loose" to "several messages of errors". Is anyone able to help the guy find his paths?
@KerrekSB He started blabbering about how he needs to do such and such, but we're still working with the "hell breaks loose" description of the problem. Sigh. I'll have to give up if he doesn't fix that.
First, let's consider what static class means in languages that support it. It is says that the class has no object-oriented value, and that it exists solely for organization.
Because C++ doesn't have to shoehorn everything into the OO paradigm, it provides proper constructs to express this: na...
Yeah. I hate that. It's my biggest gripe with the language. I'd love to learn what the rationale for it was. I know Walter Bright is all about ease-of-implementation, but does it really help that much?
A singleton is supposed to be used when it's wrong to create multiple instances of a class (I have no idea when that situation arises, though). Sadly, it gets a lot more use than that, and is instead used as a replacement for a global, or worse.
Factories can sometimes be abstracted to create coherent hierarchies of classes. In that way they can add a level of consistency which might not be possible otherwise.
@KerrekSB If I get what you mean right, that's what I meant by emulation of polymorphic constructors.
You're basically calling factory.create_foo() for the same reasons you'd call a constructor (you need a new object) but what constructor gets called is determined at runtime.
@RMartinhoFernandes This is from Alexandrescu's book: If you have several parallel inheritance hierarchies (e.g. A1:A, A2:A, A3:A`; B1:B, B2:B, B3:B, but you only ever want to construct either A1/B1, or A2/B2, or A3/B3, then that's hard to specify within A and B themselves.
Right, that's what I mean. If the language allowed you to write B* b = new B(); and have it somehow create a B1 instead (no idea how that would look :), you wouldn't need factories.
You know, it's really annoying that I chastise my classmates for using global state and other kinds of things, and then they have to use crap like GLUT in class.
The first one is based on 2.0, but restricts itself to features that were not deprecated. The second covers 3.0. I don't know of any that covers 4.0. But the difference between 3 and 4 is nowhere near the difference between the deprecated and new APIs.
Learning 3.0 is not harmful. But learning the old API is.
Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a good C++ book. It is way to big and complex for doing this. In fact, it is so big and complex, that there are many bad C++ book...
> Consider throwing away your old account and rep to start all over with nothing. But don't do this to prove anything. Do it to learn. It doesn't matter when you reach your current rep again – or whether you reach it at all. When you feel the same resentment towards your new account you had felt towards the old, assume you have not learned enough, that you are repeating the old mistakes, and strife to become even more humble, more helpful, and less eager to gain rep. – me to genesis
> @sbi: So, do you think I should just logout, create a new account and try it again, from scratch? – genesis' answer
What should I have replied to that? "No, I was just joking"?
Well, I'm afraid that guy's beyond repair. I don't know what went wrong in his upbringing, but a 15yo banging his head against a community of grown-ups, unable to read the signs, or even open "suggestions" and adapting his behavior accordingly... Once they are in that stage, there's probably little left for outside intervention to fix.
I came home from work 12:30 last night, was in bed about 1:30, and had to get up early, because some guy was expected to be here at 7:00 to fix my heating. I knew that, would I get up at 6:30, the guy wouldn't show up before 8:00, but that, would I stay in bed just a tiny bit longer, he would certainly bang at my door at 6:50. Sigh. So I got up at 6:30, after 5hrs of sleep, being very grumpy. And guess what, the guy just rang the doorbell – at 5 to 8.
As always, Debbie knows all about those morning:
What's wrong? You look like you had a fight with your shoelaces and it ended in a tie.
@DeadMG Ain't much too fix. During the summer, the water pressure went down. He'll fill in some more water, and be gone in 20mins. I'm living in this apartment for >10 years, and it's always been the same after the summer.
@AlfPSteinbach Oh, yeah, this is definitely threatening to become one of those days!
@DeadMG I'm sure I could, if I had a hose long enough. But then, the company that passes as my landlord pays a company to maintain the heating, the guy give the system a quick glance for any visible problems before he disappears, and when he breaks something, he just gets more tools from his van and fixes it. I I break something while attempting to fill up water, I need to call my landlord and tell them I've broken something, and I bet they'll make me pay for the repair.
I'm a programmer for living, he fixes heating systems for a living. I suggest he stays off my programs, and I don't trespass on his terrain.
@DeadMG Well, I can end the contract within 3 months, but an apartment of that size for the price I pay is impossible to come by in this area of Berlin nowadays, so this remains a theoretical possibility.
@DeadMG I suppose I would have to pay thrice the money I pay now, for 20 years, to buy an apartment the size of mine. I simply do not have that money. Also, in 20 years my kids have all moved out, and what am I going to do with all those rooms then?
my parents are probably going to sell their house and pocket the rather large difference between a house the size of ours and a small retirement cottage
I guess that right now, it'd be a hell of a lot harder to buy than previously
especially if you have an existing cheap rent contract
I was to inject some code into some existing code the last few days. The code I had to write was simple, the problem was to find the proper spots to inject it. Then I ran into a monster of a function, about 250 LoC, all nested loops and branches, juggling about a dozen local variables which where constantly changed in order to influence the branching later on, into which most of my code was supposed to go.
Only, my changes didn't change anything. It turned out the function was only ever called for non-localized thingies, while the ones I was testing with were localized, and that there's an almost identical function doing the same work for localized thingies. OMG. Another 250 LoC, very obviously a simple copy-and-modify of the other function, and I needed to inject my code there, too.
Of course, the code being about a year old, the two copies had already started to drift apart in places they were supposed to be equal... (I bet they started to do that the day after the copying.) Such things make my toenails curl up in disgust. I mean, I can understand that, sometimes, you have to go in and do this shit because a deadline is due tomorrow. But you are supposed to fix this next week!
It turns out the guy who did this was the boss of R&D, so I had little chance to go over and yell at him. What's more, he explicitly forbid me to fix this, telling me to just inject my changes and be out of there in no time, ready to tackle the next task.
So I shrugged, injected my code, and was ready to go home last night by about 7pm. But it irked me, and it itched badly.
In the end, I decided to disobey. I stayed late last night and fixed this. It took about four hours to do that, which is a third of the time it cost me to dig through this mess for injecting my changes.
This all is now one function, not two, plus half a dozen helpers, most of them three-liners. Interestingly that one function has now only one parameter more than the other two, and is a little more over 100 LoC long. I could even reduce it further, but nobody here would see the point, so I don't dare to spend more time on this. Also, those were just 500 out of what's probably half a million LoC now, and I don't feel like going quixotic right now.
The biggest project I ever worked in had several MLoC. In C++. on single core machines back then, it took 50mins to compile the thing from scratch, and 10mins to link it.
Some of you here are likely to have that software installed. There's several million installations out there, I was told.
My previous flatmates beat that by large margin on a Java project two years ago. I remember them having a single file with 3kLOC that brought their IDE to its knees when open.
@sbi I know you don't like to give out many details, but can you at least tell us the platform?
@RMartinhoFernandes Most of the installations are on Win and Mac. A few are on almost any flavor of Unix you can think of. Those on Mac and Win are a plugin to a very popular software suite. That's were the millions of installations come from. :)
@sbi At my first company I worked on a project of similar proportions 10-15 million lines of code and almost 1hr build time. I had to work on PowerPC with Metrowerks Codewarrior compiler. Ugh..
@StackedCrooked I remember CW. A nice compiler for the time, and with MWRon and their mysterious Andreas (their compiler guru in Munich, which I never learned more about then his first name) we had the best support I ever saw. Sadly, MW ousted themselves from the market pretty efficiently.
@sbi It was a good and I think also fast compiler, but a horrible IDE (to my tastes). Alse we hit a symbol limit after a while and could compile the project anymore unless we did some strange workarounds.
@StackedCrooked Ah, that's bad. And I hated to work on the Mac, since it required me to constantly find the mouse under the mess on my desk. In Windows I can navigate by keyboard even programs I have never seen before. (Unless they are ported from the Mac, that is...) I had to do work on the Mac, though, since VC never supported two-phase lookup, and my lib code was full of templates. That combination made the Mac guys complain that nothing I ever checked in compiles.
I only had a bit more than 100kLoC in that big project, and almost half of that was test code. I wrote that in 7 years. But I ran a very tight ship. No redundancies, mostly achieved by templatizations to the point that made my cow-workers' eyes bleed. I'm sure some of them still hate me for this. Others are telling me they like working in my code, but feel bad for being unable to maintain its level of tightness.
@sbi It was quite common for use to sync the code-base on Monday morning and be greeted with many little compiler errors that result from the weekly merge on Friday night. It was actually a fun way to start the week.
In that big project, except for a silly bug in the very beginning (changing a vector I was iterating over), for the 7 years I worked in there only to produce 10-150kLoC, I never ever checked in a single crashing bug into the trunk. I found one about once or twice a year with my testing, and some of those might have been lurking for a while on a private branch I was developing a feature on, but I'm ashamed to even admit that, and certainly none of these ever got checked into the trunk.
Others produced many times as much code as I did. But it's not that their code was doing more than mine (however that could be measured other by gut feeling), and they all regularly got reports about crashing bugs.
@sbi some people are interested in economics, others in quality, and yet others in dominance. i think my main mistakes in the workplace have been to assume that nobody can be only interested in the latter. yet, they are.
@AlfPSteinbach Yeah, right, don't assert for stray pointers anymore, that will certainly prevent crashes...
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, but it's so much harder to do that accidentally.
@AlfPSteinbach I don't think there's a lot of dominance at work where I work. FWIW, I would enjoy going to a pub with my R&D boss. Of the other half a dozen developers, one I don't like (nor does he like me, but we do get along), two I'm indifferent about, and the rest are very nice chaps.
I never got into a corporate setting with a bad social climate. But that's no accident either, I'd like to think. I relinquished big money in favor of small companies. I like to be able to tell the boss that he just fucked up, have a yell at each other if necessary, and then slap each other's shoulders again.
FWIW, I still have a beer with a former boss of mine about every half a year.