@Abyx I don't know any C++. Im a second year apprentice and most of my working day is spent maintaining a 2003 access vba .mdb database application. When I get to do C, its only in the context of writing a hardware driver for a scanner.
> Die Software an der du beteiligt wärst ist eine Server SW, die als Hintergrunddienst läuft (Deamon) und welche man mit folgenden Keywords verbinden kann: Cloud, Open Source, Netzwerksicherheit, Multi-Threaded und Encrypting.
> “The streak of consecutive records started in May 2015,” Sanchez-Lugo told me. We’ve now lapped ourselves, and are starting to break records set within this same streak, last year.
@Feeds The atom bomb there seems relevant to the cancer research, if we accept feminism==cancer as Milo Y. (I cannot remember his name's spelling exactly) says. :)
@wilx But there's an important difference in that both Manhattan and Apollo, being primarily engineering problems, had costs with bounds that could be estimated.
With cancer, you cannot have an expectation of a time frame.
I also feel like the Manhattan Project needs to be put into context: it was funded at a time where the world's largest economies where engaged in total war. There were already plenty of otherwise important things being cast aside in the budgets.
Total war shifts resource allocation in highly abnormal ways.
(The same doesn't apply for Apollo)
@ratchetfreak I think curing cancer would be impressive as fuck for most people.
Hm. I want initializer_lists that aren't called such (since that would give the wrong idea), but behave basically the same. Guess a using-alias might do.
@Columbo having read through the 2015 draft standard I don't see any mention of this non-reference-reference type of which you speak (section 5.2.8). I merely see the words "l-value which refers to an object of static storage duration". If I were interpreting this to build a compiler I would expect that to mean a reference. Is there some other text elsewhere that clarifies this? — Richard Hodges1 min ago
Hello, I was wondering where would be a good place to learn about range v3 (github.com/ericniebler/range-v3)). The documentation (ericniebler.github.io/range-v3) is IMHO not enough to understand how to extend it. There are a bunch of proposals and talks, but I can't find something that looks like a written tutorial or manual. Many thanks!
@ThePhD someone measured that 3 increments were faster than adding 3, but that only applies in assembler, for a C++ compiler those should be the same thing assuming i being int
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can probably work on it tomorrow, actually, since I just finished my presentation yesterday and tonight is just finishing the creative stuff.
In computer science and logic, a dependent type is a type whose definition depends on a value. A "pair of integers" is a type. A "pair of integers where the second is greater than the first" is a dependent type because of the dependence on the value. It is an overlapping feature of type theory and type systems. In intuitionistic type theory, dependent types are used to encode logic's quantifiers like "for all" and "there exists". In functional programming languages like Agda, ATS, Coq, Epigram and Idris, dependent types prevent bugs by allowing extremely expressive types.
Two common examples of...
I'm not sure what I'm doing wrong with this JavaScript. I'm still very new to it so it's possible that I have just messed up everything.
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function(){
function emailTrainer(trainersName, userName, domainName){
var tName = tr...
Just yesterday I was handling a series of flags from someone who thought it was ok to bulk-flag their own answers for moderator attention asking for votes. If I had obliged them and downvoted them all for being low quality, that would have been my first vote reversal ever. In the end, I had to abstain. So fret not - 10k users aren't the only ones with this problem. — BoltClock ♦Feb 24 at 15:45
array vs std::queue: which is better in terms of time and why?
I have written one graph processing algorithm in which frontier vertices are stored in std::queue and are accessed using push_back() and pop_front(). When I re-implemented the frontier with array with front and end pointers pointing ...
It appears there are a number of people who encountered the same issue.
Possible reported solutions include:
Changing the aspect ratio
Using manual grab
Changing anti aliasing
Reinstalling the game
After a bit of tweaking with the screen resolution, I was able to make the jump.
In my case, ...
Now I can't use C++11 because even though they added the stupid flag to the CMake file it doesn't fucking recognize the DUMB thing because it sucks and wadjhawdkwad
@JerryCoffin I might as well be using -std=turboc++ with this code. The default -std is some C++03 stuff and BUUHH.
The thing is, they SEEMED to want to include the chance to use C++11, but they didn't really check to see if set (CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 11)actually invoked the C++11 standard flag.
It only works on CMake 3.1 or greater, and they have CMake 2.8 on their grading and build servers, so fFFFFFFFfFfff.
Right, here's the problem: the CMakeLists.txt is not something I can control. While I'm given a local, they fix the CMakeLists.txt on the build server, so even if they copy my whole directory and access my CMakeLists.txt, they use their one to make the files and invoke make, not mine.
So they have the bad version with CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD that it doesn't recognize, and even if I fix it locally I have to adhere to what was posted and maybe see if I can bargain for them to change it... for the NEXT assignment.
Yeah. Even though my own CMakeLists.txt is available, they seem to use the one on the server, which is why I had to petition for them to add the new standard flag anyhow. But someone on the forum advocated a different solution from the add_defintions(-std=c++11) I did, which was the CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD one and that's the one they used.
I thought it wouldn't matter, but then I checked the version and FUCK.
I am going to, but they don't change the CMakeLists after people start submitting, so I gotta backtrack on this assignment and nuke some unique_ptr's and shit.
Though. I am the one to submit the grade, maybe poisoning the environment variable before executing the script through my machine might work, actually...
So I can just export in the shell and get away with it?
Hello, I'm in searching of some graph database for an crawler project. Any ideas? My first idea is OrientDB, but i not found an API for this in C++. Orientdb-C seems to be obsolete
Because you can create instances in different DLLs; they would need to have different delete code invoked on them.
So each pointer needs to carry around something to identify the DLL it comes from. There's no way around that. The function pointer for the delete code is the easiest such ID.
Hm. This makes me wonder how the initialization and destruction of function local statics works if their creation can be triggered from within different dlls.
@StackedCrooked In general when dealing with this, it's safest to require all statics, function-local or otherwise, to be explicitly initialized and destroyed.
(Typically done by exporting one function that initializes everything and one that destroys everything)
> Yesterday, a GitHub file dump revealed all the registered domains listed to the “.kp” country code top-level domain for North Korea. Essentially, it revealed that the hermit kingdom only has 28 websites.
No I swear :) This question is about how the language itself implements events. Would love an explanation for C++ or C#. I read (or misread, probably) that events use COM or something like that.
It'd be fun if Cilk Plus arrays sections made it into C then into C++. I'm pretty sure it would fuck the type system even more in some strange ways :D
user1881400
In my defense, I was asking because C# has odd interactions with events and async, prompting me to think that their implementation is different. So I tried asking the C++ lounge because C++ is lower-level, thus you would have a better understanding. However, C++ has nothing to do with the interactions between C#'s events implementation and async, thus the confusion boils down to (A) asking the wrong chatroom, and (B) poorly wording questions.
@milleniumbug Hmm, try-catch blocks can't follow through events firing, so once an event fires, you need another try-catch block if you want it to work. That's the specific oddity I'm thinking of. I found the solution some time ago, but was looking for differences in how events were implemented to see why they act strangely. (This is all C# tho)
@JoshuaLamusga I think examining how C# is working by examining C++ is a futile effort, so if your aim is that, then let me tell you that you're wasting your time
user1881400
Oh no, I figured that out when I got "u w0t m8" as a response, lol
"Regarding our relationship with C++, the committee is content to let C++ be the “big” and ambitious language. While some features of C++ may well be embraced, it is not the committee's intention that C become C++."
@TemplateRex Yup, I sometimes have fun reading C proposals. Apparently, the biggest new feature for C2x that people seem to like is the ability to specify the underlying type of enums, C++ style :p
@TemplateRex Even better:
> Most users of C view it as a general-purpose high-level language. While higher level constructs can be added, this should be done only if they do not contradict the basic principles.