I used the -static-libgcc in the first place because there were some other issues with dynamically linking the libgcc which I can’t reproduce now, of course …
@sehe Incidentally I’ve also cornered the (unrelated) issue with the grammar and I’ll probably edit my question to replace the PEG grammar with a working Spirit.Qi code …
The Williams tube better called the Williams-Kilburn tube (after inventors Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn),http://www.computer50.org/mark1/notes.html#acousticdelay Why Williams-Kilburn Tube is a Better Name for the Williams Tube
developed in 1946 and 1947, was a cathode ray tube used to electronically store binary data.
It was the first random-access digital storage device, and was used successfully in several early computers.
Williams and Kilburn applied for British patents on Dec. 11, 1946 and Oct. 2, 1947, followed by US patent applications on Dec. 10, 1947 () and May 16, 1949 ...
can you imagine having this to store your data on ?
you can't. "pure Win32 API" is just a set of functions provided by Windows, which you can call. You can't write a program in "pure Win32 API", any more than you can make a pie out of "pure oven"
@RavikaJain the win32 API is just a bunch of functions. If you think you can do anything with nothing more then win32 API you are either a freaking genius or a freaking idiot
@RavikaJain Programs are written in a programming language. The Win32 API is not a programming language. Therefore, you can not write programs in the Win32 API
You can write programs in C++, using the Win32 API
am I missing something, or is the boost Matrix class more or less just containers. I don't see any functions for doing much more then storing Matrices.
well now, I would have to simply assume that your Exam involves Matrices. Though I would hazard a fairly strong guess that most exams have nothing to do with matrices. I think I will go with my assumption here though... yeah, not good
In C++, the problem with explicit casting is that it effectively tells the compiler to shut up, because you (think you) know what you are doing. If you stick to implicit casting whenever possible, changing types of the involved objects has a higher chance of resulting in a diagnostic.
We had another case of fun-flagging yesterday. I know someone has said that before, but I forgot whether you gods can see who flagged a message. So can you?
@Shog9 Thanks. Now that you say this, I seem to remember having heard exactly that before. (Very likely by you. Sorry.) Also, I deliberately didn't vote on the flag (I had a hunch), but pinged for you instead, but it was still dismissed within a few dozen seconds.
@Shog9 I still feel that fun-flagging is a real nuisance here in the chat. On SO, I can easily ignore the menu giving me access to the list of flags to be validated, but the number popping here in the chat is too intrusive for me to ignore it. — Which would Ok, actually, if fun-flagging trolls would face immediate punishment. As it is, until a mod/god arrives and has a look, they have all the fun at the cost of the whole of rest of the chat.
@CollinHockey But when you click on flagging a message box pops up, and you need to confirm your action, whereas stars are applied immediately. So accidental flagging is very unlikely to ever happen.
it seems like they have a harder time switching between read and write mode, even though large sets of reads and writes are at least on par with spinning drives - at least ours do
my work machine has some encryption stuff running on it that might be affecting things
IMO, SSDs don't have a very good place inside laptops. Much more wear on the disk than a typical desktop computer. And SSDs don't take wear as good as spinning disks
@Xeo ? Where did you get the 'much more wear' part? Doesn't make sense to me. Besides, the same optimizations that you should apply to your desktop help out for your laptop
@sehe Well, at least IME laptops tend to be rebooted much more often than desktop PCs, which poses an additional wear. Also, the swap thingy, but that can be alleviated by adding a HDD
@KonradRudolph that is what everybody is saying, though I havn't seen any up to date statistics. one thing when buying SSDs is to buy good models with good controlers(like intel, samsung or crucial drives), the quality spread is definitely higher on SSDs than on HDDs. I won't force anybody to buy them, but everybody who is not using one, is just punishing himself in my oppionon.
They've integrated our company phone book with Outlook so people's badge photos show up with your email. I thought that would be nice, but it turns out having your co-workers stare at you while you type them email is really disconcerting.
This is not a question about how to use inline functions or how they work, more why they are done the way they are.
The deceleration of a class does not need to define a function as inline, it is only the actual implementation of the function. (EDIT by this I mean, when I do my class foo{} bit, ...
I still say this is backwards. You use inline because you want to put the definition in the header. You don't put the definition in the header because you declared inline -- the solution to that last 'problem' is to not declare inline.
the last bit is difficult. i did once try to put [windows.h] in a namespace. practically you need to include the four or five C lib headers that it uses, first. and be prepared to fix up things with each new version...
Microsoft tried that with [gdiplus.h], which is a C++ header-only module wrapping the low level C interface. But -- it uses the "min" and "max" lowercase macros from [windows.h] :-)
Hey everyone, is somebody here familiar with mutexes in windows? I have some cross-compatible code but it seems that th windows variant doesn't work properly
user1182183
4:57 PM
when I aquire the lock on windows
user1182183
the given time to wait in miliseconds is like 'ignored' and I need to use WHILE to aquire the lock
@JohnSmith i did that thing on my calculator in high school, using Cramer's rule (is that the name?). i didn't understand why it was so sloooooooow. yes they must exist
Is the std::stack interface incomplete in the context of new move semantics?
I'm thinking, the old reasons for having separate pop() and top() was that the copy construction for top() could throw.
But now std::stack could be designed with a popped() method that would be safe for movable element type, and for types where copying is guaranteed noexcept
@MooingDuck I haven't thought too much about the whole idea. In any case consider that many functions and function templates have their exception-safety contracts in terms of the exception-safety of e.g. copy construction or move construction of another type. Interface is already affected to some extent.
@LucDanton so you'd change the definition of queue to require the held type to have a nothrow copy or be movable, simply so you can have that one function?
isn't about SO, but i think an experienced c++ programmer can help me http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9791727/cant-get-data-from-vector-inside-another-vector
std::set is an ordered container, so if you're allowed to iterate over the set and muck with the internal state of the items in it, you may cause the sorting order to change, thus leaving the set in an inconsistent state. To prevent this, std::set::iterator::operator-> returns a const std::set...
@Prætorian your answer is correct, but does not address his issue: "cannot convert from 'std::_Tree_const_iterator<_Mytree>' to 'std::_Tree_const_iterator<_Mytree>'"
@MooingDuck I thought the problem might be that he hasn't specified the default argument std::less<Board> explicitly too, but it compiles without errors on VS2010 either way
@Prætorian I don't disagree that the code posted by the OP compiles without errors, and he probably also has the issues you discuss.
But he has an error message in his question which seems to be the cause of his post, which is not addressed by your two answers. (not that we have enough information to do more than speculate)
@MooingDuck Look at his latest edit, now he has std::lessfor the comparer in one set and std::greater in another and he's trying to convert between the two!
In mathematics, the word sign refers to the property of being positive or negative. Every nonzero real number is either positive or negative, and therefore has a sign. Zero itself is signless, although in some contexts it makes sense to consider a signed zero. In addition to its application to real numbers, the word sign is used throughout mathematics to indicate aspects of mathematical objects that resemble positivity and negativity, such as the sign of a permutation.
The word sign is also sometimes used to refer to various mathematical symbols, such as the plus and minus symbols an...
Hi! I'm extending a program that compiles and runs just fine. however when I integrate my code into the existing code base it crashes at runtime with a Segmentation Fault. However, the crash occurs in the original code base before any of my code is ever executed. However when I compile the original code base without my changes I can't get it to crash.
I'm at a loss trying to figure out what kind of error might cause this kind of behavior
I have written a few class files that extend classes the old code base uses. I modified the original sources by adding a few includes and adding an adding an addition case to a switch statement
The original program makes use of a "Processor" class that I have extended into a new class. During execution the original program checks a switch statement to see what kind of class to create an instance of. I simply added an additional case to that switch statement with my class
The original code base has children of this same processor class that get created in this same switch statement
@slayton The only thing that comes to mind is that you added global/static variables (This includes logging) that changed the global state of the program, causing the crash.
@slayton yeah.... that probably means there's a race condition that only happens sometimes, and your global/static/whatever has rearranged the code to cause it to trigger more often.
If I merge a local Git branch to master and then push master to a remote repository, will the remote repository "see" that a branch existed? Or will all the commits in that branch just appear inline with those made directly to master?
I noticed that a comment thread on an old answer had many comments completely off topic. I removed mine, but what do I do about the others? Should I flag them as "off topic"?