well, I guess you could argue that if you where to catch the bad index with an exception, it would be before passing it to the code that actually uses it, such as the code that reads in user input.
I used to write and sell C compilers for microcontrollers. I knew if I got a support call and the guy didn't know what a stack pointer was, it would be a long day.
@DeadMG it's useful to know more than just what each instruction does. Recognize a stack frame, for example, being able to determine where each function parameter is pushed on the stack and such. All that depends on knowing not just x86 asm, but knowing how assembly works
which you can just as well learn from ARM or MIPS asm
@DeadMG not really. It presupposes knowing that there is such a thing as a stack frame, and knowing that parameters can be passed on the stack or in registers.
once you understand those fundamentals, it's fairly easy to look up the calling convention for your particular system. And the thing about inlined functions is that not every function is inlined
@DeadMG I disagree. You pick up a lot of small low-level factoids from doing C++, but I dare say I learned some useful things from my asm class that I didn't alreadyk now from my C++ coding
@DeadMG and once again, you're moving the goalposts. My claim was that having a working knowledge of asm is useful, because @CatPlusPlus claims to have learned some asm at university, and also believes he has learned nothing useful there
@DeadMG maybe. I found it useful. That could be because (1) my university is better than yours, or (2) I'm better at applying what I learned there than you are. I can't tell you which of those is true.
@Feeds I don't understand the following: "The reason, of course, is that the compiler must cater to the possibility that x is an alias to an element of v, so it cannot store x in an internal register as it might otherwise have done. "
but if there's one thing that characterizes most of the terrible questions on SO, it's that the OP lacks the fundamental knowledge to get anywhere on his own.
and of course, you don't always post SO questions for everything you don't know. It might simply mean that certain solutions to your problem never even occur to you
@DeadMG It's ok. I agree with you that the current formal education system is an excuse for failed professionals to teach how not to fail, when they have no experience in that much.
@DeadMG and people who say "I know absolutely nothing of asm, but I need to debug this disassembly" have not accurately self-assessed their knowledge. If they did, they would try to learn some basic asm first
@CatPlusPlus The most I got out of professions teaching programming concepts, is how to NOT do things, by avoiding what they did. Simply put, all education classes are giving society is a laziness for self-education.
@jalf That's never what you get. What you get is a stupid degree that requires you to suck up to a grad student teaching English 102, which should be writing fluffy paragraphs 102, a bunch of general science information you throw out before you finish your final, a bunch of advertisement for other degree offerings, and a few generic classes on technical writing (done too generic to help with documentation of source), and an ethics class with a professor basically saying "Don't be an asshole"
Then you get to the meat of your degree, which focuses too much on teaching a specific technology, and giving you A+s for projects that work, rather than teaching good architectural skills in design.
@RMartinhoFernandes No, I had a great education. I'm talking about the pitfalls of the concept of education in general. In other words my education was the best that education can offer, which still sucks at accomplishing anything.
what would be much better taught is general knowledge, like, "Don't use global variables", "You ain't gonna need it", "Memory indirection is slow", etc.
today, I ask you about LR parsing, tomorrow, I tell some other guy about DirectX shaders, and the day after that, he tells you about, I dunno, OpenGL shaders
And that doesn't teach a person how to develop good code, that teaches a DO-NOT list, which will end at some point and leave people hanging when a new problem is discovered.
@Etienne i mean a virtual something that directs messages from different people to one another and has a topic that determines the general direction of thought in it
I've Created dynamic array, and I added values ​​to the values ​​of the array like that.
int *pArr;
pArr = new int[10];
for(int i=0;i<10;i++){
pArr[i] = i+2;
}
delete[] pArr;
// After deletion I can find the value of the array items.
cout << pArr[5] << endl;
As you see i...
I'm thinking more generic, like "Don't use what you don't need". "Simplicity is best". "Keep up on technology". "What's wrong with this program". "Common pitfalls of developers in all languages". "Discrete Math". "Computation". Optional Matrix based maths. At least some background in statistics.
@DeadMG Then we need more than one CS degree. We need degrees with far more electives that must be taken in a path together. Like instead of choosing each elective, you choose a branch of electives.
@RMartinhoFernandes well need and "need". i think it helps. at least it helped me, and my students. and good old niklaus wirth designed pascal to be easy to translate manually to assembly, by students. which they did.
@EtiennedeMartel In my first week at work ever, I fixed a performance issue by changing an O(N^2) algorithm to a O(Nlog N) one. That knowledge came from university.
I remember as a student (1983?) doing things with variant records in Pascal in order to do pointer arithmetic, and not understanding any of the asterisks * in Systems Programming Language (SPL for HP3000). The syntax of SPL was at wrong level of abstraction. And not well explained by the docs.
@RMartinhoFernandes So basically, you did a quick google search on sorting algorithms, read from a book on algorithms, or asked a question on SO. I fail to see how that gave you an advantage over some other Joe.
@RMartinhoFernandes No, I'm saying the classroom has been obsoleted by the availability of information. The classroom either needs to be in the hands of industry, or it needs to be a generalized study of 2 years.
Oh @RMartinhoFernandes you should not have reminded me of student days, with terminals. One fellow student did a practical joke on me. He'd switched the keyboards for my terminal and the of someone I was working with. When we came back after a pause and sat down at the terminals, what appeared on the screens didn't quite match what we wrote... Huh???
I got a technical degree in CS in college, and the stuff I learned there was much more useful than the stuff I would end up learning later at the university level. In college, I learned about programming in a few languages, some basic concepts, and most importantly, how to learn.
@bamboon I don't. I spent one year in college repeating high-school (because I took college level in high school and the college didn't like that). I spent one year in college learning some math. Then I spent two years in college learning relevant information in my field, of which was mostly theoretical and didn't apply because I got a job at a company that doesn't design anything.
I don't need the 1 year of repeating high school. High school needs to step up and deliver calculus to all students. I don't need the 1 year of general studies, I simply don't care if I can impress a English professor who can't really tell me how to fix what I didn't do right (English as an art is fluffy. They can't even tell you how to write, they can just write red ink and look like they teach something). I needed that good Senior year.
Senior year, I took a class in statistics, which changed my entire outlook on data in general. I took a class in discrete math, which helped me with formulating systems. I took a class in computation, which helped me in understanding how to create state information, and the difference between stateful and stateless. I took a class in .NET, which helped me in languages that I use in my job.
@RMartinhoFernandes But, it's the college philosophy that nurtures bad teachers. The teachers themselves weren't bad (the ones that had a hand in teaching the useful classes I took), but the college concept of well-roundedness led me to being taught writing by a Grad student that "can't get an A in her own class", mostly because she doesn't have a discrete method for recognizing a good paper.
@KerrekSB listen to James Kanze. he really knows what he's talking about. but also keep in mind that he's one of the few who has depth experience with garbage collection in C++, so that some of his opinions don't square well with what most C++ devs think.
@RMartinhoFernandes Senior year is the last year in college. Whether that's your third (if you took 18+ hours), fourth (if you took min hours), or fifth (if you took more than required, or failed a few classes).
@KerrekSB Reference counted objects are about it. Also objects that represent GUI elements. I can't think of more, but I'm tired + a large pint of beer for dinner...
@KerrekSB heh, i meant along with dinner. which was a pretty advanced chicken thing. at first it was impossible to find the chicken, underneath all the cheese sauce and mushrooms and bacon
@KerrekSB ... uh.... You only need destructors to release held resources. Which is memory. You mean: Destructors have nothing to do with the owner's memory.
So, if you have a static create function, then for this self-destructive pattern to work you'd require the caller of create() to not acquire responsibility?!