@CatPlusPlus Because the other people with accounts on HN are also morons
> > Most of the unsafe C++ code is written by the "C with C++" sub-community that are mostly C refugees forced to use a C++ compiler. > I haven't seen any evidence for this. A lot of vulnerabilities are found in modern C++11.
Maybe read some badlet C++ code???¿¿
> I think there's a reasonable argument to be made that C++11 is less safe than C++03 in terms of use after free, because of features like move semantics and lambdas.
Oh yeah, because move puts your object in invalid state and because we always capture by ref in lambda. Right. I forgot about that.
I always known abs() was a disaster in C/C++ because of all the fugly overloads and variants like llabs(). I just found out that std::abs(long long) returns a double. That makes it an epic disaster.
Someone at work asked how to take the absolute value of some internal fixed point number object. That escalated all the way to my manager who pointed them to me. Now I know why it escalated.
@OneRaynyDay Not really--but VS 2012 makes pretty liberal use of the permission for one standard header to include any or all other standard headers. More recent versions are much closer to each header defining only what it's required to define. You need to include <iterator>.
Ah, thank you :) I didn't know see this discrepancy in the change. Thanks @JerryCoffin ! I don't know why Visual Studios compilers are always changing in their specifications :(
also annoying because auto&& [x, y, z] is another form of decomposition and so forth and so on, so even more pollution if you want to start handling all that
I’m never surprised that a new feature is not SFINAE-friendly (or requires-friendly these days I guess), but I’m always disappointed cc @R.MartinhoFernandes @Xeo @Rapptz
@milleniumbug It would only be quadratic if you were restricted to using two features together. Since you can use essentially all features together, it's more like factorial.
So, the biggest language we can verify has no more than 14 features...
mmh, you remember the good ole days of : boost::non_copyable? cc @sehe
these days I sometimes use : move_only or equivalent
I thought it might be helpful if move_only kept track of its state to catch use-after-move bugs in non-release mode
I’m under the impression that copy/move elision prevents some asserts from firing though
now I’m not sure if that kind of instrumentation is useful at all
the nuclear option is to check the invariant in the destructor, but that prevents the type from being literal. I’m not sure if I would use a non_literal_move_only
I recently thought about chandler's compiler talk where he said something like "C++ is not fast, languages cannot be fast. C++ just gives you the tools to take performance into your own hands". Now I think it is wrong. You can implement the same algorithm in say C++ and Python and it will just be faster in C++.
I think I'm way too easy to impress with smart-sounding sentences.
@fredoverflow The usual definition is that it's acceptable to miss some specified percentage of deadlines by up to some specified amount. Hard real time doesn't necessarily involve people dying either--it could just be things like fines that are unacceptable.
@fredoverflow As with most arguments about languages, it means: "I disagree with you, but if there are any facts to support my position, I'm too ignorant to be aware of them."
But if you only have 12 episodes to make and the ongoing manga has 30 chapters now, you're pretty much guaranteed to have a cliffhanger or gecko ending
@Mysticial @StackedCrooked I take it back, don't read Meikyuu. The cliffhanger at the end of the Grand Route is just the worst. Wait for Rakuen to come out.
Visual Basic is tolerable until you reach the edge of its tiny standard library; I had to copy-paste code that converted between 5 standard classes and performed GUI math just to resize images
@Ven Don't need to do that. I've been watching it. I marathoned the first like 5 episodes then threw a fit over whatever cliffhanger was at the end of that because the next episode wasn't out yet.
Also copying each character into an std::array is barely any different than creating an std::string, unless you are intentionally avoiding dynamic allocation
Intentionally avoiding dynamic allocation and preserving the size information so I can abuse it later on for slimmer generated assembly code when doing comparisons.
These extra compares are killing me.
If I don't use recursion, I can't early exit.
If I do use recursion, I overflow the fucking stack.
@Xeo I don't exactly remember where in the story it cuts between the two series. I heard good things about it. When I looked into it, I found it had a 1st season. So I had to marathon that and half the second season to catch up to live.