@eazimmerman Since NASA has been gutted, we now need to have freelancers work for free and make code for us. We've created the website to allow the community an opportunity to give us stuff because we're awesome. Please note, this is not an effort to elect new hires.
@DeadMG I've just realized that not only is it pointless, it's impossible to make a file-backed allocator(like I planned), as the internals would "move" in virtual memory. pointer classes fix that mostly, but not if the user gets the address of a member of an object. Guess we have to leave it to the OS.
@DeadMG sure you can. virtual memory merely makes all memory accesses look the same no matter the type of memory. paging loads and unloads primary storage to backup storage. The first computers with virtual memory had "segmentation" rather than paging.
@DeadMG wikipedia: "In computer operating systems, paging is one of the memory-management schemes by which a computer can store and retrieve data from secondary storage for use in main memory. "
Is there a language that sucks at most as much as C++, is completely independent from a library implementation for all of it's language features, and have an existing compiler?
@DeadMG well, if the compiler code changes, the library code has to change equally so. You can't have initializer_list change without the compiler to match those changes...
The C++ core language defines no class types whatsoever. They are all in the library. You want magical class types complete with member names to pop out of nowhere.
According to " How to get around the warning "rvalue used as lvalue"? ", Visual Studio will merely warn on code such as this:
int bar() {
return 3;
}
void foo(int* ptr) {
}
int main() {
foo(&bar());
}
In C++ it is not allowed to take the address of a temporary (or, at le...
I've never figured out why OS's use scratch files. It seems like they could use any/all unused HD space. Why are they locked into files? Is it some limitation of the hard-drive's ABI?
I sometimes think that the worst trait programmers have is this urge to categorize everything. "No, that question can't be here, even though it's something programmers can answer, and this site has the most programmers reading it. It has to go in that box over there"
"fewer people will see it, sure, but I'll get a warm and fuzzy feeling inside, knowing that everything is in its proper place
in retrospect, any conforming compiler could ignore every #include <initializer_list> and insert its own internal representation, completely independent of the fact if that header is there or not.
@rubenvb I think the standard was carefully written such that the standard library can be entirely in the compiler itself, and not in files. Though I know of no compiler that does so.
I wish C++ had a better separation of language and library.
philosophically speaking, it's interesting that you're considered "easy-going" if you allow people to believe that it's right to copy mp3's, but if you believe in an invisible omnipotent, omniscient and deeply self-contradictory being, no one even bothers to mention it
@jalf well, I was raised half catholic, meaning my parent's parents were catholic and it seeped through a bit. I even went to a catholic school. I never saw the point of the religion thoush.
There's nothing against philosophy and everyone's opinion. The problem is that in order to form such an opinion, a lot of decent education is needed in order to form that opinion, and the will to respect other's differing opinions.
Since most experienced programmers agree that their language has serious defects in sometimes the most basic topics.
The strong points I'm looking for are:
Performance (do not discuss my metafors, these are examples only): I'm talking C/C++/Fortran speeds, not Go/Java/Python.
Genericity: templ...
I'm using Visual C++ 6, and my application builds and runs fine in debug mode, but I get these two Unresolved External Symbol errors when trying to build in Release mode:
OverUnderReportDoc.obj : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol "public: virtual int __thiscall COverUnderReportDoc::G...
@MooingDuck As I was opening the WebStorm IDE the "Tip of the day"-window appeared with the message: "The ⎋ key in any tool window moves the focus to the editor.".
@Xeo Given the rate the 1 - 1000 question is going. I'd you have a very good shot at getting 40+. And depending on if it holds once the US gets home from work, it may go >100. Nice ! :)