> In this 5th part of the n-part series, STL digs into the Boost Library (boost.org). In his words, it's an open source, super quality, community-driven STL++. Stephan will walk you through a sample application from end to end, using boost.
Damnit, I've got stomachache :(
(That's got to be one of the funniest words with a not-so-funny meaning.)
Whether this leads to a memory leak, wipes your hard disk, gets you pregnant, makes nasty Nasal Demons chasing you around your apartment, or lets everything work fine with no apparent problems, is undefined. It might be this way with one compiler, and change with another, change with a new compil...
What if for some odd reason you replace so much implementation in your base class that you choose to rewrite it. Having the extra virtual keywords will clue you in.
Better case, for some reason you don't need the grandparent class anymore, whoops, just lost virtual table.
@FredNurk Understood, but there's no reason to introduce yet another issue, just because you forgot to explicitly declare virtual in your derived classes.
away from all the nitty gritty details of C++, even though I'm still doing C++ in my free time...
@sbi I've come to like C++ more then .NET, where it used to be the other way around, but I do like not having to worry too much about memory for a bit ...
Got a job offer last week. C++. I find myself thinking about it even though they haven't made a single substantial offer. Just speech bubbles. But C++ seems really appealing.
@TonyTheTiger Remember, I'm working on a document workflow system. Scanned pages of differing resolution, some of which are really big. If you have many of them on the same machine, the inner details of the GC suddenly start to become important. But twiddling them is much harder than deterministic C++ memory management. We keep adding Dispose() calls. Yeuchz.
@sbi well at least you have understanding of what you're doing, but the people I've known to call Dispose() were calling it for the wrong reasons... ugh
@Xaade One interesting thing I have seen that relies on functions in derived classes not being declared virtual was to employ CRTP to make those functions either virtual or not. But it was only interesting in an intellectual way, I've never come across some case where I thought it would be handy.
@sbi that is used in some safe-bool implementations, though I suppose it's not really the same
as I've only see that where you'd know when writing the base class list whether it would be virtual or not, rather than logic in the base class determining it
@TonyTheTiger No. And I guess I never will. I'm the guy who's having his dirty hands in the engine up to his elbows, not the one polishing the lacquer.
@Xaade heart surgeons and car mechanics are essentially the same, fixing intricate and delicate parts – but the heart surgeons have to do it while the car is running
@sbi struct A : safe_bool<> {... using a virtual method, struct A : safe_bool<A> {...calling a method on A directly (which isn't required to be virtual)
The curiously recurring template pattern (CRTP) is a C++ idiom in which a class X derives from a class template instantiation using X itself as template argument. The name of this idiom was coined by Jim Coplien, who had observed it in some of the earliest C++ template code.
General form
// The Curiously Recurring Template Pattern (CRTP)
template
struct base
{
// ...
};
struct derived : base
{
// ...
};
Some use cases for this pattern are static polymorphism, and other metaprogramming techniques such as those described by Andrei Alexandrescu in Modern C++ Design.
Static po...
@sbi yes, safe_bool<void> (the void is a template parameter default value) declares a method, we'll call it "boolean_test" as virtual, while safe_bool<T> casts as CRTP to call T::boolean_cast
So, when you make a template, you can have the template call any of the 'T'ype's methods, but the type you supply to the template must implement those methods.
Yes, but you're in a region, because what if you're IN the subway. You wouldn't be ON Europe anymore, you'd be underneath it. Therefore Europe is a region, not a physical object.
had to explain three times than, no, I don't want TV service, no, the TV is not broken and no, I won't change my mind, even if they do give me three months free TV
It used to be that you couldn't get Internet access without getting TV to boot where I live (which is of course tying and hence illegal). I think nowadays you can only get Internet access, but it costs just as much.