FOS-X is a cute assembly language and I really wish he'd fiddle with real assembly language because there's so much he'd learn about documentation and what types of byte code exist
Research is about finding solutions. Development is about applying them to problems.
That's why R&D go together.
Will existing problems impact the solutions being tested? sure. Will there be solutions that come up without any problem to readily test them on? sure.
I think research is a potentially productive form of leisure. The same as spending 5 hours staring at a wall deciding how to design your software classes
@BartekBanachewicz There is at least one thing I don't like with std::array: Clang being annoying whenever you try to initialize it with a single pair of braces. Not the current topic though, by I felt it was important to mention it ._.
Scratch that, you'd need to define a spectrum to display colours properly by wavelength. That's just horribly indirect and inefficient compared to HSV which is tied closely to what we perceive
I just understood another thing that I believed was true that actually is not: vector reallocation factor of 2 is not, in fact the worst reallocation factor because the argument that it just barely prevents using the freed storage just isn't true.
I don't know why it takes me years to understand these things, but right now I feel clever enough that I want to write a blog thing collecting all the things I thought were true but after long reflection are not.
@BenjaminLindley: No, I'm not. Those elements won't exist in the set after the std::move call. There is no way for me to observe modifications to those elements. I am trying to take them out of the set. I see no reason why the standard library implementation can't make it work. I accept now that it doesn't, but I see no reason why it couldn't be made to. Indeed, that seems to be what merge will do. — Lightness Races in Orbit12 hours ago
but it is irrelevant because first you don't only have 1 vector, second the argument only holds in virtual memory, not in physical memory, and virtual memory is still many magnitudes bigger than physical memory
it's true that you don't only have 1 vector, but it's also true that you don't know in advance that the other vectors will leave enough free space.
for reallocation factors under phi you know it will be available.
and for virtual memory vs physical memory, the extra size doesn't really help here, since the virtual memory you used to be using still maps to some physical memory
so you are still consuming more physical memory than necessary
@nwp He hit the "problem" that iterators do not allow you to modify the container itself (which is necessary for actually removing the element from it).
Which is well known (and probably explained on the first few pages of every chapter on iterators ever written).
@nwp It's not a design problem at all; he just didn't understand how the operations worked. The fact that the library didn't offer the function he wanted is relatively immaterial in this case- it's simply a matter of proposal/etc
@Puppy I read it as "there must be a way to move elements from one set to another", which I deem reasonable. He tried iterators and failed, because iterators don't support that. He asked how to do it instead. Nothing in there indicates "doesn't understand C++ or the operations". (ignoring the apparent assumption that std::move moves)
@nwp My point was that LRiO doesn't know C++ if he doesn't know that limitation :P (Also I'm not convinced it's actually a bug, but that's a discussion for a different time.)
Yay, CI works better when I actually commit every relevant file.
@Griwes In the algorithms I write, I'm often happy that I can reassign stuff to them. On the other hand, if I couldn't do so, I'd probably just construct them again, so that wouldn't be a problem either. It would even probably make some things easier actually.
But I'd still need the variable name to refer to the moved-from memory location.
libstdc++ produces a #error if you attempt to use a C++11 feature without -std=c++11 so the error message would have been obvious had you forgotten the compiler flag.
OTOH, "The question is, does foo have a bar" generally receives a question mark because the embedded question clause is independent (hasn't become part of it's parent statement)
@nwp if it helps, it doesn’t get a question mark because it’s not a question. maybe more apparent if you swap out 'if' for 'whether': "The question is whether foo has a bar"
@LucDanton It boils down to the implicit concept of independent and dependent clauses. The dependent ones usually lose punctuation unless it prevents ambiguity. Unfortunately, the distinction isn't strongly enforced
@LucDanton What I mean specifically is that a dependent question clause or quotation will lose its sentence-level (wrapping) punctuation in most cases.