I thought it might have been since you posted this and this and this. Mostly, I take the amount of confusion coming out as an indicator of the amount of confusion suspected inside :) My bad. Glad you got it
@sehe I tweeted that today, and someone Jeff follows retweeted it. Then Jeff retweeted it, too. Since then my interaction tab exploded. I have now >160 RTs and counting.
@SethCarnegie In all the ways that confusing the crap out of everyone is correct. You know, you have to consider that there is always a difference between what you think you say, and what others are hearing.
@sehe No, I usually have 100+ tabs open only. Also, with "the tab exploded" I was referring to the fact that retweet notifications are coming in almost faster than I can read them — on that one tab.
TBH I have my DELL mouse give up sometimes, I need to lift it and use a whole other surface texture to get it back to tracking movements again. Must be some kind of auto-recalibration thing that gets worst case behaviour on my desk top
@Xeo Well, there was one topic. You removed it, and installed a different one. That is usually referred to as "replacing". Which is all well, except this new tagline sucks.
A user with 197k rep, 19 gold badges, 315 silver and a shitload of bronze.. but to the below question he doesn't mention that the standard doesn't guarantee a certain character to be represented by a certain value?
The hexadecimal value for the caret character (^) is most often 0x5e (94 in decimal).
std::cout << static_cast<char> (0x5e) << " " << (char)94 << " " << (char)0x52;
output on my playform: "^ ^ ^"
I write "most often" because the standard doesn't guarantee...
@refp So. You linked twice. Look for yourself. I get how it happened, just pointing out you can change the first link next time, or make it not onebox :)
people who make mistakes with their manual memory management, solving one specific instance of it will not solve their actual problem, being that they are manually managing memory.
Wikipedia
What, exactly, do you not understand when looking at the Wikipedia page?
In computer science, an online algorithm is one that can process its
input piece-by-piece in a serial fashion, i.e., in the order that the
input is fed to the algorithm, without having the entire input
a...
@refp You're right. We should let them cause 999999 difficult to find bugs, solve one of them, and pretend we did a good job when we could assist them in eliminating all of them.
@DeadMG Apprentice: I'm trying to learn how to cook, but I always burn the rice when I try to make it.. how am I suppose to do it? DeadMG: You stupid cunt, don't boil your own rice - go and buy it from the shop down the road.. fucking moron.
@refp Not really. I'm fairly certain that pre-boiled rice possesses different nutritional properties and taste to rice you just boiled yourself. Unlike memory management, where every sane person just uses the Standard containers (or at max, rolls their own when they have very customized behaviour).
more equivalent would be "Apprentice: I'm trying to learn how to cook, but I always burn the rice because I smelted my own goddamn pot and it has holes in. Also I built my own cooker from scratch and it's unreliable and the heat sometimes goes way above instead of staying steady. How am I supposed to do it?"
@refp Learning what- the way that nobody does it and for good reason?
nothing to do with me, it's a simple question of "Use the Standard-provided components in the correct fashion and the problem is solved automatically."
@refp In a decade of writing C++ code, I have written maybe half a dozen delete statements. Also, I have not checked in a single crashing bug between Dec 2001 and summer 2008.
I'm more of a "yeah, I sure need that.. but I'm interested in how it's done, so I'm going to learn how to do it myself first/figure out how it is doing it, then use it"
do you think programmers have a stereo type of being "weird" - as in less socially capable or fit in less - and to what extent do you tink this is true?
@refp I have written my own STL containers. The first one I did was a vector replacement that did not dynamically allocate its own memory. (It used an automatic array.) It worked like a charm, until I discovered months later that, when used for UDTs, it failed to call their dtors. By that time I had already left the company I had this written for, and had to mail them and send them a patch. That was quite humiliating.
And STL container has quite a fat interface. That's a lot to implement, and you want to do it so that it's fast. It's easy to oversee something silly while doing that. If you add dynamic memory management to that, it's definitely not something the common newbie should attempt to do after a semester of C++.
I sent a quite serious mail to by bookers about upcoming fashion-weeks, and I get a text sayin': "we are drinkin champagne, want some? its sunday, not workday."
Ok, I have this sequence { {1, things}, {10, more_things}, {20, more_things} }. Each element represents a range from its number to the number of the next one (open at the end). Say, given 7 I want to find {1, things}, given 12 I want {10, more_things}, etc. Which one do I need?
(I already know, so think carefully before you fail to look smart)
@RMartinhoFernandes it's fucking sorted, and your description of std::upper_bound is wrong.. afaik it will return the first element that compares greater than needle
Quick question about c++11 or boost::bind: Can I bind the first parameter of a function without having to have placeholders for the rest of the parameters?
well the size of the list isn't actually known, but its assumed to be given by a different constant
I'm making a little RCP library for the heck of it, and I'm binding network commands to functions. The network command calls a function based on the command id and the number of arguments it passes with it. The bind function is a templated function that saves a lambda that takes a list of char vectors, decodes them, and passes them to the given function, gets the result, encodes it, and returns a char vector
I'll try the boost bind method. But can boost::function be cast to an std::function?
hi. I have a list of a unknown number of queues (depending on the usage of my application). Each queue has its own thread for reading and writing to it. I need to have a critical section for each of the queues, but I don't know how many to create since I don't know how many queues there will be. How to get around this ?
@RMartinhoFernandes I don't really understand how that would work. In order to access the critical section variable, I would need to access the queue, so I would be going in circles ?
lets look at this loop:
for(int i=0;i<100;i++)
{
//work to be benchmarked. is so complex that i<100 and jump time is small
}
and this two functions:
int for_a(int i)
{
if(i<100)for_b(i);
}
int for_b(int i)
{
//work to be benchmarked. is so complex that function call is neg...