Most I tried didn't trigger a flush. In the end I still don't have an example which breaks my assumptions. I don't mean examples that directly mess with the stream buffer (rdbuf)
void f(std::ostream& os) {
// Stream as a parameter so whichever stream you start with, this works
os.setf(std::ostream::unitbuf);
// Now EVERYTHING flushes unless there's an exception or the stream is in an error state
}
> POSIX.1 permits pthread_cleanup_push() and pthread_cleanup_pop() to be implemented as macros that expand to text containing '{' and '}', respectively
well, if you could suspend the thread, change the instruction pointer to a stub that throws, maybe. but it would be hard if your cancel was at the exact moment it was in a function prologue or epilogue
because it might not unwind properly. you'd have to have intimate knowledge of the exception tables, if table based
and, what if you cancel a thread when a destructor is runnning. isn't it possible for the implementation to get messed up and just std::terminate almost right away because it thinks a second exception happened while unwinding? (because it got canceled in the middle of an unwind)
yeah the OS doesn't care, but won't the stdlib freak out and std::terminate because it thinks it is still unwinding, the next time an exception happens
I am not making tons of sense am I
I remember weird issues with terminate calls if I tried to interfere with a thread that was unwinding
yeah, I just realized that, threads should be separate. I can't explain it myself
oh I remember... I had a stackful coroutine implementation, if it switched contexts while an unwind was running, the implementation freaked. because the same thread was suddenly doing something else, which threw too. boom, std::terminate
@sehe I wanted to see if you could do coroutines on windows without fibers and without any help from the OS. Yes, you can, but exceptions are messed up without fiber local storage
@sehe So he's just going to look at the code? I think I can do that by myself :P I might check out the VODs if there are any, but won't be able to watch live.
Everybody knows how to declare an array with constant elements:
const int a[10];
Apparently, it is also possible to declare an array that is itself constant, via a typedef:
typedef int X[10];
const X b;
From a technical and a practical standpoint, do a and b have the same type or different ...
@doug65536 Basically, his idea is that you register a variable at some abstract type in one application and can access it easily with different applications
@fredoverflow For the non-typedefed version, clang prints the type as const int [10]. For the typedef version, it prints int const[10]. But it doesn't matter, because they're equivalent.
@Ven Okay, then the fix to my compiler is trivial:
data class ArrayType(var length: Int, val elementType: Type) : Type {
// ...
override fun addConst(): Type = if (elementType.isConst()) this else ArrayType(length, elementType.addConst())
// ...
}
> SQLite is ACID-compliant and implements most of the SQL standard, using a dynamically and weakly typed SQL syntax that does not guarantee the domain integrity.
> This is a feature, not a bug. SQLite uses dynamic typing. It does not enforce data type constraints. Data of any type can (usually) be inserted into any column. You can put arbitrary length strings into integer columns, floating point numbers in boolean columns, or dates in character columns. The datatype you assign to a column in the CREATE TABLE command does not restrict what data can be put into that column. Every column is able to hold an arbitrary length string.
> But SQLite does use the declared type of a column as a hint that you prefer values in that format. So, for example, if a column is of type INTEGER and you try to insert a string into that column, SQLite will attempt to convert the string into an integer. If it can, it inserts the integer instead. If not, it inserts the string. This feature is called type affinity.
@Morwenn I thought about that when they were adding regexes in TR1. How strange would it be to treat globbing as a different flavor of regex? On one hand, they clearly have quite different syntax--but on the other, the basic behavior and usage is pretty similar--supply a string, get an object, see if the pattern matches some string.
@JerryCoffin I thought of that too, but it seems just a bit too different to be a new flavour of regex. I guess that a dedicated parser would be faster.
But still, having such a things in the standard library would make the path stuff much more convenient.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ...and people wonder why I sometimes claim that Java was intentionally crippled. So many ideas that weren't bad at all, completely ruined by terrible execution.
Oh wtf. I'm getting a weird space-like character in my google doc. It works like a space, even in notepad, but coliru highlights it and printing it looks broken... coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/1c54b2813cee65bf
@R.MartinhoFernandes, do you have any idea what that is? You're the resident weird-characters expert.
@Xeo Some programs will let you escape it though. Wordstar let you use ctrl-p to escape other control characters, and was popular enough that a few still work the same way (not sure it's what happened here though).
// The following line compiles in my IDE:
char * p = "hello";
// But the same line fails to compile now with a type error:
char * p = "hello";
const int answer = 42;
// Anybody wanna guess why? :)
The only reason I guessed is because I remember how much my fellow students (or my students when I was a T.A.) were bummed everytime they tried to implement a mutating function, and had a segfault passing it a string literal
"so this is a special case, but it's a feature" -- "but what if I want to treat it like every other case in the set?" -- "well, you can't but the closest thing is this solution which adds a callback to this" -- "No that wouldn't work because you have a race condition" -- "yes but most of the time it doesn't fail" -- "what if I want something more reliable?" -- "You can repeat this piece code in every callback after this action".
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm editing directly in the webapp, and that doesn't seem to do anything there at least. For my colleague, it may have been Option+Space, but it shows up in some of my texts too - unless he edited those for some reason, which I kinda doubt.
I have a base class and a derived class. Each class has an .h file and a .cpp file.
I am doing dynamic_cast of the base class object to the derived class in the following code:
h files:
class Base
{
public:
Base();
virtual ~Base();
};
class Derived : public Base
{
public:
Deri...
Tinkering with pipes: read file stream, break into lines and only take first. #purescript https://github.com/felixSchl/purescript-node-pipes https://t.co/vmLnpyGxaz