Sorry, I wasn’t paying attention. It’s somewhere in clause 5 Expressions, look for the bit about new expressions. Of course it is likely to refer to 8.5, so that’s always relevant.
I see nothing justifying MSVC, I might post a question if someone has an idea or knows the problem has been reported already (is there a bugzilla-like for MSVC? I suppose that isn't public)
@rubenvb Why is it unrelated? Direct init includes both direct-list-init and direct-non-list-init.
If you follow the reference, there is then a definition of direct-init that in turn redirects to list-init for a braced-list initializer. That’s all the pieces, innit?
Reference is correct for n3690 aka C++11. I’ll quote.
A new-expression that creates an object of type T initializes that object as follows: — If the new-initializer is omitted, the object is default-initialized (8.5); if no initialization is performed, the object has indeterminate value. — Otherwise, the new-initializer is interpreted according to the initialization rules of 8.5 for direct-initialization.
> If there are fewer initializer-clause s in the list than there are members in the aggregate, then each member not explicitly initialized shall be initialized from its brace-or-equal-initializer or, if there is no brace-or-equal-initializer , from an empty initializer list (8.5.4).
Internationale Spieltage SPIEL, often called Essen after the city where it is held, is an annual four-day game trade fair held in October (Thursday to the following Sunday) at the Messe Essen exhibition centre in Essen. Many german-style board games are released at the fair.
Unlike the other major German game fair, the Nuremberg International Toy Fair, Spiel is open to consumers as well as publishers and designers.
The fair typically releases turnstile attendance (the number of times a guest enters, i.e., a single visitor who attends all four days would be counted as four attendees), not actual...
Guy knows how to post a followup question as a separate question. Then yanks it while I'm answering and adds a gratuitous "Thanks, that's helpful" comment, instead of upvoting?
@AndyProwl: does an avoidance of long functions really hold up in practice? I sometimes feel like breaking things up into tiny functions makes the code overall longer and harder to understand. like adding too many layers of abstraction makes things harder to understand sometimes
The Release Candidate of Visual Studio 2013 update 4 is here. Download Visual Studio 2013 Update 4 RC Visual Studio 2013 Update 4 KB article Announcement on Brian Harry's blog, Visual Studio and TFS 2013.4 (Update 4) Release Candidate ...(read more)
Whenever I write a loop, I always use closure if it's appropriate by way of a self-executing anonymous function. I will typically write my searching loops as follows:
var i = 0, length = myArr.length,
fe = null;
for (; i < length; i++) {
if ((function (el) {
if (el.searchCon...
@Sofffia lol, the irony of that statement in context of LRIO parting message is rather amusing. They're right... you can't win, anything you do will piss people off
any hypothetical discussion that may have taken place in the comments section of a YouTube video because we all know that real discussions never take place there for any video, anywhere, any time.
it's not like the people are gonna be stupid enough to think that 0 comments == 0 negative comments.
they're gonna watch the video and have an opinion about it and it's not really gonna be influenced by how many dislikes there are or what random Internet trolls think about it
I'm arguing that a video where all negative feedback is hidden can influence people into thinking anything other than what the negative feedback would have showed
and you're telling me that "people are not that stupid"
Anne is playing at the 'Three Tuns' tonite. That means that the food provided for the darts team will be huge, suspicious-looking sausages and chips that, if wrung out, could provide enough oil to keep my Fiesta going for a month.