I joined ACCU over the summer so I could get Overload and CVu. Overload in particular has had some excellent articles. (Also, it's fun to get mail from another country :-D)
UPDATE: For those feeling left out of the sticker party, details on how to obtain stickers are now on the blog!
Look what arrived in the mail yesterday - stickers! Thanks Jeff!
First, I put a StackOverflow on my black 2007 MacBook, my primary computer and the one I use to code and check Stac...
If your class totally owns the object passed to it, then you are best to make that explicit via the use of auto_ptr in all applicable cases. Having to construct the auto_ptr explicitly is the best case because it enforces that the API user knows that you own that object and reduces the likelyhood...
it's not that I disbelieve you, James
more that I find such a hole to be so unbelievably staggering, I can't quite accept that it's true
the last time I checked, a compiler had complete freedom to evaluate the expressions in whatever order it liked, but had no choice about completely evaluating one before another
and that partially evaluating one, and then another, was definitely illegal
@DeadMG: Even N3225 contains the non-normative note "The evaluations of the postfix [function-call] expression and of the argument expressions are all unsequenced relative to one another." (5.2.2/8)
Only the result of the expression matters. Consider a simpler example: (a * b * c) + (d * e * f). The compiler is free to evaluate t1 = a * b then t2 = d * e then t3 = t1 * c then t4 = t2 * f then t3 + t4. The same is true for the function call expression. In your example above, expr1 and expr2 are just subexpressions of the full function call expression.
(Sorry; I fixed the expression evaluations; I had my tn names mixed up at one point.)
How about, "the expressions are unsequenced in relation to one another, but each expression is evaluated in full before beginning evaluation of the next one."
I don't know what definition of "next" you have, but to me, when dealing with an order, say, of expression evaluation, it normally means that it's the one that is going to be evaluated after the one I just evaluated
So you are saying that after evaluating some expression, the next expression is going to be evaluated? How does that tell me anything? How do I know what the "next" expression is by looking at the source code?
the point of the change is not to define the order of evaluation for function arguments, it's to prevent compilers from partially evaluating them in pieces and destroying reasonable expectations of exception safety
I like C++ because programmers who've used it for years tend to be rather smart, and discussing with them is quite interesting, and you always learn something new. Unfortunately, I know only one C++ programmer in real life :(
I've installed chromium, but it deeply sucks that it uses my mother tongue (german) in its UI and for websites by default.
I want the english back, like firefox did. I'm using archlinux's default packages. I looked into the settings dialogs, but I found nothing useful.