@DeadMG True-ish. Though my latest acquisition in the field has been a Dutch translation of the Quran (that was supposedly a literary feat; I got stuck reading it so I cannot really vouch for it). It might not have been the best idea to try and read that in the train while commuting :)
@DeadMG Now that type of qualification is what I get when reading docs for Boost Meta State Machine - no holds barred, let's have it all- and ignore there isn't compiler support for the concepts
@DeadMG D does explicitely not impose GC IIRC. Likewise, you can go about threading in tradtional ways, and you can interface with C++ code. I haven't actually tried it, but I have seen my share of presentations by A. A10u
@DeadMG There is a severly small margin of applications that are hurt by that. Anyways, if that kind of stuff matters, you'd be targeting a realtime OS, with explicit control on CPU affinity for kernel threads as well
@DeadMG You should be writing a bootloader for every single program then. I think that might introduce some unnecessary complexities that are going to harm the other, real, application requirements
@FredOverflow It has toString, toHash, comparison operator, equality operator and a static factory method that makes objects from a string with their type name.
A problem of "value types" with external resources (like std::vector<T> or std::string) is that copying them tends to be quite expensive, and copies are created implicitly in various contexts, so this tends to be a performance concern. C++0x's answer to this problem is move semantics, which...
and more importantly, that would be a fact of vector, and if in C++03 you rolled your own linked list, you could always put non-copyable items into that, for example
I wonder if there'd ever be a reason for a class to be copyable, but not movable. Or neither. Is there actually ever a reason for a class not to be movable?
@RMartinhoFernandes Boost mutex has a pointer to a posix mutex (on a posix system). Moving the object doesn't change the inner pointer. I don't see the problem.
mutex m = make_a_mutex(); // global so everyone can have it.
{ // thread 1
mutex evil = std::move(m); // steals the pointer to the POSIX mutex
}
{ // thread 2
lock on(m); // oops, not the same anymore!
}
@FredOverflow yes and that's how I understand it. I just don't see why mutexes shouldn't have move semantics. So I was double-checking if we were talking about the same topic.
@FredOverflow I know that's an option. However, I then I thought that I can implement clone in terms of the copy constructor. And then I realized my silly mistake.
I guess that's why boost stores a pointer. But the standard library uses the "Don't pay for what you don't use" thing. So you won't need to use dynamic allocation if you don't want.
> The result of referring to copies of mutex in calls to pthread_mutex_lock(), pthread_mutex_trylock(), pthread_mutex_unlock(), and pthread_mutex_destroy() is undefined.
Many classes in the c++ standard library now have move constructors, for example -
thread::thread(thread&& t)
But it appears that std::mutex does not. I understand that they can't be copied, but it seems to make sense to be able to return one from a "make_mutex" function for example. (...
@StackedCrooked The difference is that HWND is a HANDLE. A handle does not equal the object. Pthreads mutex structures are the actual object and they become meaningless if they're not shared
@RMartinhoFernandes I agree that you'd be paying an extra cost in order to make the move semantics possible. So I agree that's a drawback. But I don't think it's inherently wrong.
@StackedCrooked True. But... given the fact that POSIX threads do not support HANDLE semantics, is good enough reason to say that it would be inherently wrong to assume so in the C++ standard library. You'd always have to pay for the additional abstraction layer. And that itself would be quite constly to make... threadsafe. Zing
@StackedCrooked Well. The point is moot. Mutexes are NEVER movable. Period. Like, it is technically impossible to have that. HANDLES obviously can be movable, since they trivially copyable.
@StackedCrooked: in fact what you are seeing is that WIN32 provides kernel-level synchronization primitives, whereas phtreads is a userspace implementation (IIRC)
Win32 also provides kernel-level abomination primitives.
> Recall the parable of John Doe the Microsoft Programmer who implemented the process suspend counts in Windows. These counts count down, but not up, so they’re half-semaphore, and half-condition-variable.
Since pthreads is in userspace, you'll have to deal with the guts. And yes it makes enormous sense that the C++11 standard accomodates the greates common divisor of threading APIs. I.e.: if API's can have unmovable/uncopyable implementations, then it would be a major fuck-up to require movability in the standard.
According to this site the static methods
static Point rectangular(float x, float y);
static Point polar(float radius, float angle);
invoke the private constructor Point (a non-static method) as reproduced below :
#include <cmath> // To get std::sin() and std::cos()
c...
@StackedCrooked True. But... given the fact that POSIX threads do not support HANDLE semantics, is good enough reason to say that it would be inherently wrong to assume so in the C++ standard library. You'd always have to pay for the additional abstraction layer. And that itself would be quite constly to make... threadsafe. Zing
@RMartinhoFernandes I do, partly. I do for the notion of inner classes sharing stuff with the outer classes. I don't really like it in the manner that C# has sealed, although I must admit that it allows for a certain robustness in the BCL
I think the point about inner/outer classes relating is a bit subtler though. I wonder when Java will have something (working) that comes close to a closure
@sbi I was comparing to another radio host, that whenever introducing elements of a story that was neglected (most often on purpose from opinion of the host), he would end his stories with "And that's the rest of the story". A nod to the website you linked, which contains more than the intended reference.
@RMartinhoFernandes I just noticed the last question I answered is yours. Does my code solve your problem? I think you just need to add an intermediate namespace under query with a using namespace std; directive inside.
@sbi It was a good link. Lots of good stuff in there. Interesting the concept of metafiction. I think the dark tower had that, when they ran into the author of their own story in another dimension and told him to keep writing, so they know what to do.
@Xaade When you like literature about literature you should read Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series (which I already advertised this morning). It's great.