I get we can't have int32 because we work in char lengths, but why not some other thing, like int1 = char, int2= short, int3 = int as we know it, int4 =64 bit one, (it's not number of chars, it's the power of 2 progression)
I'm a big fan of analogy and metaphor when explaining difficult concepts, so let me try my hand with a story.
Once upon a time:
There was a princess...
function princess() {
She lived in a wonderful world full of adventures. She met her Prince Charming, rode around her world on a unicorn, ba...
TIL Closures are confusing
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Think it would be interesting to have a bunch of pictures (say, that can easily be viewed side-by-side) of code? Like, I notice, there is a distinct visual to it, both in the syntax coloring, but also the style of the code itself. I like looking at such things, but I don't know if it is just me.
you don't want to get mixed-up requirements and write bad stuff because you don't know what you want, and then confuse that with writing bad code because you can't write good code.
Given Unaccepted Answer U, Accepted Answer A: U.Score > A.Score x 2, while A.Score > 10
Screw it. Just post the real code. People will have a better chance at understanding it than this convoluted English thing.
I was making a particle thing - ok, a manager - basically, particles would have an update() and draw() methods. It would call these, as well as add/remove particles (I was thinking, the update method can return a bool, true when it "died", for example). I am not sure how to add them properly, though, and deal with scoping. I considered making a copy of what is passed, but I don't know what type it would be. Any ideas? Passing an enum seems messy.
Umm, I just learned that everyone is now raging at Anita Sarkeesian because she took footage from Let's Play videos and didn't credit anyone for any of them.
This is suspicious ... thePhd was pretty much on 24/7 right before he went to the UK. Then he spent 2 nights with Tony, went back to the U.S. spent less and less time here, then deleted his account altogether.
could not but wonder what did @Tonythelion do to him that weekend ...
But if it is as popular as hell, then microsoft should be able to make money out of it. Microsoft decided to no longer support it, so it is probably still used in places but not all that popular.
@StackedCrooked sometimes I wonder whether the prince who kissed the sleeping beauty was a necrophilia
@Telkitty猫咪咪 I don't know (or really care) why Microsoft decided to drop XNA but you'd be fooling yourself if you didn't think it is popular within indie game developers.
Hmmm....was just fiddling with the "whatdoestheinternetthing" site linked in the starboard. The results seem somewhat...odd, to put it mildly. For example, geek vs. geeks.
um, cbf checking, I think I mentioned it as an example of the specialization you can do with generic programming, and which is not doable with generics. I didn't intend for that to be a rant (unless someone else edited it and fleshed it out into a proper rant? :P)
but like I said, I whipped it up in 5 minutes or so on my way to somewhere else. So it probably could use some a few edits ;)
main thing was that I wanted an example, to make sure the next person editing this wouldn't just go "these differences aren't important, generics is the same as generic programming, I'm gonna recreate the synonym mapping"
@Rapptz yeah, that's what I found out too. Then apparently someone read that later, and proposed the synonym
oh btw, it would be nice if some of the haskell people could look over it too, since I don't know enough about haskell type classes and their flavor of GP
@AlecTeal 20 minutes into the new day, and I'm already unloved. Ah, woe is me! If I weren't listening to Oh Darling, I'd feel depressed. But, who could feel depressed listening to Supertramp?
At one stage I was contented to be hated by everyone being the elitest troll on the internet ... at least they expressed hatre on daily level, so I assumed it was true hate
@ArneMertz I need to feel constant assurance that even matter caught in giant black holes from which nothing else can escape are still sending giant waves of love my way at all times.
Ah, but now the iPod has moved on to playing Fantasia Suite for Two Guitars. When I saw them live, it really did depress some of the audience -- at least one guy walked out seriously offering to give away his guitar because he was so inferior he was just giving up.
@AlecTeal If you're talking about Suptertramp, it hasn't been "hip" in at least three decades...
A solution based on Sylvain Defresne's response above is possible in C++11:
#include <boost/preprocessor/repetition/repeat.hpp>
#include <boost/preprocessor/punctuation/comma_if.hpp>
template <unsigned int N>
constexpr char get_ch (char const (&s) [N], unsigned int i)
{
return i >= N ? '\0'...
Just putting my dime in. I just performed a test. A sneeky one at that. I just let g++ create the assembly files of the same mini-program using pointers compared to using references.
When looking at the output they are exactly the same. Other than the symbolnaming. So looking at performance (in a...
@JerryCoffin I saw that, but I think that macro (in the answer) is simpler (as far as presentation, obviously it'll be a mess when you look at the actual Boost.PP macros).
@Rapptz Yeah -- thus the "arguably". I'd say the macro looks a bit neater, but is uglier internally. The boost::mpl version may not look quite as nice externally, but strikes me as less magical/more understandable.
@AlecTeal to be fair, she really should have stayed lying down. She could easily have broken her spine. She could have taken a rather minor 'just keep you still till it it healed a bit' and turned it into a 'yeah, you are paralised from the neck down and will no longer have any bladder control'