@JohnMerlino: depending on your implementation and forethought, you can inspect the backtrace programmatically in the method whenever it is called and log that somewhere
@TonyTheTiger: Hey regarding the thread monitoring, I think I need to discuss out the requirement in detail with the driver developer and the Architect. Specifically, need to know what scenarios are to be handled..How it can be known as to its a error situation & what is the action that should be taken...
I still havent had this requirement of monitoring thrown at me yet...but I see it coming sometime down the line....I think I will sit on the Q with your answer till I can get more updates and then probably take it on from there
@Als yes, well I didn't know you had control over the drivers. I think if that is the case, you might be able to get them to notify you if something goes wrong... not sure though, cause you're in user land and they are in kernel mode
@TonyTheTiger: The drivers are in-house development....though i really feel someone has messed up things down there....and now want to salvage the situation by pushing the handling to middleware rather than in driver
Yes that control flow of determining error conditions in driver needs to be clarified from driver developer and the architect
@TonyTheTiger: Very true...And if a driver has gone wrong i really doubt it can convey it back to user space...If it knew it is messing up it could handle it down there in kernel space itself
@TonyTheTiger: Cool and Yes something intersting, I need to start carving out a control path for playing just audio digital channels..currently we can only play audio-video channels only
@TonyTheTiger Morning? It's half past eleven here, and I got up at six thirty!
@TonyTheTiger @Chris Some of us might have a cat that walks across the keyboard once in a while (which is, I was assured, the only approved mode to write Perl), so it's not too far fetched to assume some of us might know a bit about writing Perl.
(And before you ask: I don't have a cat. I have kids instead. Those break the keyboard when walking across it. I know for sure, because they've tried and succeeded.)
@TonyTheTiger That's because you don't have kids. I had my alarm set to 6:45, but was awoken by a little girl sneaking into my bed at 6:20. By 6:30 she was done with cuddling and started kicking. I got the message and started to prepare breakfast.
@TonyTheTiger Actually, the kids are my job. This here I only do because I'm not used to be sitting around all by myself and would go nuts while they are in kindergarten/school. Well, that, and I do need a little money once in a while.
@sbi If sizeof is an operator, then I would say decltype is also an operator. The funny thing is that they operate on the type level rather than the value level.
That is, the expressions to which we apply them are never evaluated but rather "etypeuated", if you will.
In the C++ programming language, decltype is an operator for querying the type of an expression. It will be included in the upcoming version of the C++ Standard, often referred to as C++0x. Its primary intended use is in generic programming, where it is often difficult, or even impossible, to express types that depend on template parameters.
As generic programming techniques became increasingly popular throughout the 1990s, the need for a type-deduction mechanism was recognized. Many compiler vendors implemented their own versions of the operator, typically called typeof, and some portab...
@ChrisBecke Operators aren't function calls, but you can overload some operators by implementing a function with a special name, which will then be invoked if that specific overload of the operator is invoked. But there's always been operators in C++ which you cannot overload, like ., ::, sizeof, and ?:. (Read the FAQ entry on operator overloading.)
@FredOverflow Pretty much like sizeof, I guess. (In fact, sizeof would probably be implemented using decltype.)
@TonyTheTiger this is mostly to allow implementation leeway (some particular behavior can do exactly what you expect, important for some embedded systems) and remove some shackles on optimizers
@FredOverflow i was talking on the llvm-ML that sizeof(1/0) is well-defined some weeks ago. some troll attacked me saying i'm all-wrong and whatnot. then Vandevoorde chimed in and corrected him xD
Oh, someone must have referred to my operator overloading FAQ, I already got 65 rep from it today. Nice, so I don't have to answer any new questions to earn rep. :)
My rep/question ration isn't all that good among the C++ top-users, but I did answer a lot of question, and those tend to earn you interest after a while.
@FredOverflow I don't know whether UB can actually make you pregnant, but if it did, this would be conforming behavior according to the C++ standard. :)
but it allows you to for_each(numbers[0]+0, numbers[8]+16, ...), I think. If it always steps by incrementing by 1 (as it does when using op++), then I think it's well-defined.
@JohannesSchaublitb Well that's something that you might know that you don't know, then there are the things that you don't even know that you don't know.
@FredNurk yea, seems like he's in robot mode when he does that
are you scared to troll here, what you troll there @JohannesSchaublitb ?
@JohannesSchaublitb that explains all I think: " i started with c++ by 15y, and told my mom to ask me the quiz questions of the c++ books all time again. it was so nerdy xD"
Hi,
I'm learning Haskell at the moment, and have just written my first useful module - a parser fo INI files. I used Parsec. I'd like to know what can be improved here - or maybe I did some things completely wrong and there is a better way. Thanks.
module IniFile (iniFileToMap) where
import Te...
@FredNurk But it's not achieving the same effect as it would if calling base ctor was possible from within derived's ctor when using public inhertitance. Namely, if there were any public methods in Base, they'd become private in Derived
@RonaldLandheerCieslak I didn't add an op<< because it explicitly prints lines rather than a "single item", but if you want to add one, just add op<< in Backtrace; whether to use print() or op<< is stylistic, but I prefer the consistency of not using op<<
@GrigoryJavadyan what other differences do you see? (that would make it "not achieving the same effect")