@FredOverflow Also, the weakness of the Standard concurrency mechanisms compared to the offerings of TBB/PPL makes learning the Standard facilities a potentially unattractive prospect.
I'm woring against a model which consists of a number of different types (Properties, Parent, Child, etc). Each type is associated with a set of functions from a c api. For example:
Type "Properties":
char* getName(PropertiesHandle);
char* getDescription(PropertiesHandle);
Type "Parent"
P...
Hi, I am slightly modifying my question now. Given a bi-partite graph, disconnected graph, color it maximizing the colored nodes of 1 type and minimizing the nodes of the other color. Is there a known algorithm.
If I see this correctly, your only argument against unique_ptr is that Google Mock can’t work with them. This is a bad argument. A testing framework shouldn’t proscribe fundamental aspects of your design (granted, mocking always does this to some extent). — Konrad Rudolph7 secs ago
If I understand correctly the return type of std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now() depends on the implementation. So that means it can only be captured using auto or decltype, right?
Wait, I'm wrong. The return type is known. It's time_point<high_resolution_clock>. Let me test. Ok it workds.
@closevoters: as you could see at the time you voted, this question has a single, correct answer. in other words, what you were saying with your votes, was already refuted by the information available to you when you voted. please do comment and explain why you still chose to vote in an opinion that at that time you had to know was in direct conflict with reality? — Cheers and hth. - Alf1 min ago
^ Two of the silly-voters were from this Lounge: @ruben and @catplusplus.
@Nils i don't remember, sorry. i just remember that example being used by a functional language fan-boy. in response somebody linked to a proposal for boost which would make it possible to collect the memory via shared_ptr like thing, but i don't remember that either... :-(
@ecatmur Didn't have to use one so far.. but you could just use a strong reference from outside to the circ structure and weak references inside, right?
@Nils That's simple. You have a reference a to an array, then you say b = a.with(index, newValue). Now b is an array that has the new value at that index, whereas a still has the old value, but there is only one physical array in memory; there is some bookkeeping data added to a to make it remember the old value at the index. So a gets slower and slower each time the array is updated.
Because close-voting stops free information interchange. I.e. it stops learning. So it is fundamentally ungood, an evil that should only be used to stop more evil evil, so to speak.
If you really think the question is terrible and useless, why not just downvote it and add a comment explaining how it is useless. Which is communication. As opposed to stopping communication.
@NeelBasu why would it be a circular queue? Why would it pop automatically? Why would it leak memory?
Assuming we are talking about std::queue, then it behaves exactly like the C++ standard says it should behave. It doesn't say "you are allowed to implement it as a circular queue which leaks memory"
so if you implement it as a circular queue which leaks memory, you're doing it wrong.
> Rvalue references are still references, and as always, you should never return a reference to an automatic object; the caller would end up with a dangling reference if you tricked the compiler into accepting your code [...] Moving is exclusively performed by the move constructor, not by std::move, and not by merely binding an rvalue to an rvalue reference.
@jalf and yes it is syncronized but producer produces at a higher rate than consumer can consume. and I allow some elements to be lost from the queue. so that the consumer always get the updated one.
> There was a discussion what exactly "overwriting of an element" means during the formal review. It may be either a destruction of the original element and a consequent inplace construction of a new element or it may be an assignment of a new element into an old one. The circular_buffer implements assignment because it is more effective.
> It appears that finally, a decade after .NET 1.0 has been release[d], 3 interfaces IReadOnlyCollection<T>, IReadOnlyList<T>, IReadOnlyDictionary<T> will be presented by the .NET v4.5
> As commonly said, it is never too late to do things right, but in the case of an API with ascendant compatibility used by millions of developers world-wide, this proverb doesn’t fit that well.
This is something I've been eager to have for a long time, and I realize it's not a trivial request.
I propose adding a section to each Stack Exchange site for your own personal bookmarks. This would be useful for quick access to things like:
Links to specific answers, comments, or questions f...
I use them for these purposes:
Useful information - I might need it in the future
Rare/unique/fabulous code snippet - I might need it in the future (can you actually search among favs? I don't have too many at the mo, so I just scan)
to mark ambiguous questions that I may be interested in, so t...
@rubenvb it's anti-social, a wrong thing to do, since it reduces the information exhange. also, it's plain wrong that there is anything non-constructive about the question. even given the wooly nature of the term "non-constructive" which makes it fit almost anything and thus favorite of non-technical people. secondly, the cat has only stated that his interest is constrained to the present and future. that's not a point that i would try to associate myself with.
@rubenvb that is an unreasonable interpretation. if you had cared to make that comment, i am sure that people would have corrected you. in the same vein, "standard" is assumed, and "complete" is assumed, and "compiling and linking" is assumed, and a certain year, namely 2012, is assumed, and so on. without such assumptions any question admits a multitude of nonsense-pedantic answers.
On entering negative values in textbox i get an error saying **Overflow exception unhandled** .No is too smal or too large for UInt32"
Here is my code :
UInt32 n= Convert.ToUInt32(textBox2.Text);
if(n>0)
//code
else
//code
So I go this:
class A;
class B : public A;
class C : public B;
vector<A*> *vecA;
vector<C*> *vecC;
And I want to cast a vectC into a vecA.
vector<A*> *new = static_cast< vector<A*>* >(vecC); //gives an error
So I used void pointer as a buffer and the cast:
...
I declare some variables
int area_code;
int telephone_number;
when I get the input from user like
cout << "Enter the area code";
cin >> area_code;
cout << "Enter your local telephone number";
cin >> telephone_number;
now when I want to display them if their phone num...
@Cicada The original reason for the space before punctuation is that if you write italic and have a tall letter (such as “f”) then it gets in the way of the punctuation: fff!