@AndyProwl AFAIK, here's a constant onslaught of Indian chat rooms where the young boys hang out and try to find a girl. (They are aborting female fetuses there like nowhere else, you know.) The mods are closing them when they get aware.
@R.MartinhoFernandes This week we had a small victory. The police checked on two of their construction sites and found illegal aliens working there. We made a splash in the news about it. :)
the only situation it'd be relevant is if you're linking using two different definitions of the containing type, and then a linker error seems perfectly acceptable
@nightcracker Working on it. I just wanted to sanity check that this private/protected thing really was part of the problem, because it's too crazy to believe.
anyway, access control information is definitely included in MSVC's mangled names. If you run a demangler on the name, it'll reconstruct the access control too
@thecoshman just to clarify - I was not saying I like it - just that Python works this way and is not 'strongly typed' in that regard. For example Swift started like this and removed this ability (to do if something to test if something != nil)
@R.MartinhoFernandes contrived example that was not very good :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum of course not. But you should write code so that it is easy to read. After all, in five years time, you are almost certainly not going to recall wtf it was trying to do, if it is even you who is having to support it.
First of all - a lot of times code is written more that is read. I have a lot of python code that automates stuff I wrote once and haven't read since and I use it on a daily basis.
Second of all - I generally agree, I value explicit code more than short code.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I doubt it. Sure you may have an example of something you wrote once, but I find it hard to believe most of the code you work on has not been read over since it was first wrote and had to be modified/fixed/expanded in some way.
Even if you just have to read over it to work out you don't have to modify it.
@thecoshman oh, it's not most of my code. I read most of my code more than I write it, but there is still a lot of code I wrote once and haven't really read.
@BenjaminGruenbaum so it's a non-point... I'm talking about the general case, which as you just agreed, would be that code is read more than it is wrote, so you should favour easy to read code more than easy to write.
Some people find list is not None and len(list) != 0: very crufty compared to if list
So objects get a default 'falsey' value, the funny part is how it's always very frowned upon in JS and PHP for example but is considered good practice and pythonic in Python.
Say, if you push, then amend the last commit and push again, it won't work. But if you use -f it forces the remote to have the same history as you have now.
@Xeo Lemme guess - you copy out a bit, then you need the externals, and the headers, and libraries, and they you suddenly realise you have copied everything.
I'm miffed that I have to do a C++ project for my high school computer class. My curriculum prescribes that I write a practically useful program all by myself from scratch using certain features like files. My computer teacher on the other hand, has decided it be best if he just gives students copies of programs and he's making the students memorize it for the viva voce'. I was assigned "Library Management System" and I have the ugly code with me right now. Should I fix it up?
Mhh, firstly what I have with me is just a txt file of messy code full with bad practices and possible errors. Could someone link me to a C++ stylistic guideline that everyone agrees with?
> The 50-year-old man had qualified as an insurance salesman shortly before [sawing off his finger] in February 2010 and took out four separate insurance policies - with special clauses covering finger injuries - for himself.