> A declaration of a constructor for a class X is ill-formed if its first parameter is of type (optionally cv-qualified) X and either there are no other parameters or else all other parameters have default arguments. A member function template is never instantiated to produce such a constructor signature.
Always pass shared_ptrs by value. If you pass a reference, you might run into the problem that a call to a function of the object managed by the shared_ptr might just reset it, and now you've got a dangling pointer. If you pass by value, you ensure that the object will survive the current functio...
@Xeo I pass shared_ptr by reference all the time, it's fine if you remember to only pass values that are in your own scope or passed by reference to you the same way.
This article describes the calling conventions used on the x86 architecture.
Calling conventions describe the interface of called code:
* The order in which atomic (scalar) parameters, or individual parts of a complex parameter, are allocated
* How parameters are passed (pushed on the stack, placed in registers, or a mix of both)
* Which registers may be used by the callee without first being saved (i.e. pushed)
* How the task of setting up for and restoring the stack after a function call is divided between the caller and the callee
This is intimately related with the assignment of si...
@CatPlusPlus how about a single unifying desktop manager ? Not having to learn (or expect users to install libs from) another window manager to use your gui app?
Just moved house, Steam locked me out of my single-player games for two days before I could get 'net because it knew there was an update that it hadn't installed before I moved the PC
Follow-up question to [Does a casting to a pointer to a template instantiate that template?].
The question is just as the title says, with the rest of the question being my tries to achieve the goal.
The goal in my tries: Trigger a linker error on the call to check_error<char>.
// invo...
@CatPlusPlus lol , i figured you'd say that, all trig boils down to is an algebraic expression of the ratios of angles to their respective sides as a variable value that can be algebraically manipulated
@keithlayne yea. i've given up on the chase. i'd rather spend my time neatly wrapping up very messy windows C api calls that i use 1 time to do 1 thing to satisfy Xeo's desire to not see C code in this channel