Is this valid C (C99) code?
int f();
int g(int x)
{
if (x<0) return f(x);
else return f(x,x);
}
Obviously the program has undefined behavior if g is ever called with a negative argument and f is not a function that takes a single int argument, or if g is ever called with a non-negat...
As Andy E's head mentioned, I've started to create an IRC interface for the SO chat. The current state of the code is on Github: http://github.com/ghewgill/soirc
It's all ugly, nascent, fragile code right now but I expect that will improve in time.
@Tony He did a lot of janitorial work, and seemed to be online 24/7. Felt like fighting windmills. Kept pointing me at stupid users disregarding his advice, screaming abuse at him.
of course i don't understand why the committee didn't just define the syntax as template<typename T> typedef T alias;
beyond me. i seem to remember there was some weird technical reason. i have no clue anymore about the details. but it would seem so more familiar if they just use a typedef here :)
@FredOverflow yes your template works too also in c++03
one of the good things about alias<...> is that it is not a qualified names so you can do template<typename T, int I> void f(alias<T[I]> &v); for example and still have T and I be deduced
it was better before Political Correctness, when one could just say RTFM. surprisingly PC has not yet forced MIT to take down their RTFM site. But perhaps that'll happen...