@JohannesSchaublitb They have a pretty good conference each year in April. Their publications would very likely bore you. (They are good for Joe C++ Programmer, though.) Their website's book review section used to be superb. (I haven't checked in years.)
@FredOverflow This should be an FAQ. With rvalue references coming over us, such questions are going to flood us.
@JohannesSchaublitb It was founded in the UK, but it's open internationally. I once was a member. There used to be some German around whom you could pay your member fee by Überweisung, which was much easier than paying to some UK bank account.
@JohannesSchaublitb What for?
@JohannesSchaublitb Ah, I see.
@peoro The chat is serious, actually. It's us who are silly.
@FredNurk it will work in c++0x and most sane c++03 compilers
ah you already mentioned
BTW I find it funny how so many people seem to use T() as an example for "default initialization". Those are currently half-lucky with c++03 because it's somewhat similar to what it actually is. But they will be all-unlucky with c++0x, because default initialization basically means "no initialization" for non-class types in c++0x xD
@JohannesSchaublitb it was more idle curiosity anyway: we can't abandon current syntax (especially for those new to the language) and introducing an alternative syntax, even if we could acknowledge it as universally more easily understood, is likely to be overall worse
It's interesting that Visual C++ does not require disambiguation of &std::vector<int>::begin. I'm not quite sure what criteria it uses to select an overload.
Well, it does require disambiguation in some cases, e.g. auto fp = &std::vector<int>::begin.
@JohannesSchaublitb Wouldn't that be alias<int*>::type, assuming alias is a template? Or is alias a new language mechanism I'm not aware of yet?
@JohannesSchaublitb So does int() not mean 0 anymore? :(
@JamesMcNellis It is illegal to take the address of a member function of a standard container :) Let me back that up...
> Please note that it is technically forbidden to take the address of a Standard Library member function. (They can be overloaded, making &foo::bar ambiguous, and they can have additional default arguments, defeating attempts to disambiguate via static_cast.)
How would you invert a stack, without using extra data structures, like a second, or temporary, stack. Thus no stack1-stack2 or stack-queue-stack implementation in the answer. You just have access to push/pop feature of a standard stack.
I think there is way to do it by keeping a global counter...
I have created a template as follows
template<typename T>
void f(T const& t) { }
I wanted for this to be callable by containers but also by initializer lists. I thought it would be initializer_list<int>, when called as follows.
f({1, 2, 3});
But GCC behaves as if it's not St...
There is some unfortunate mechanism that merges tags initializer-list and initializer_list. In the new upcoming C++ Standard, these have quite different meanings and usage patterns, and are about different problem domains
class IntList {
public:
// This is a constructor that accepts an
// in...
@JohannesSchaublitb Well, Wordpress (blog) changes tag C++ to C# very consistently (actually it "generalizes" to pure C, and then renders that as the more specific C#), and IANA I think it was once had the SuperGreat idea of defining ISO-8859-1 as a superset of ISO 8859-1 (note: only difference is a hyphen). Such silliness makes life ... interesting.
Hm, I think I'm going to suggest new standard for traffic lights, only shades of green. Also, all text on the Internet should be red on blue and max 8 point. Plus, a few more gotchas in C++, of course. :-)
@sbi Possibly @Mahesh is talking about Structured Exception Handling, SEH, in Windows.
@Mahesh If you're talking about SEH, that mechanism transfers a 32-bit word of no particular type. Microsoft made that almost like HRESULT values in COM, and almost like code in the event log. Differences just to make life interesting (in apropos of @Johannes comment above).
There is some unfortunate mechanism that merges tags initializer-list and initializer_list. In the new upcoming C++ Standard, these have quite different meanings and usage patterns, and are about different problem domains
class IntList {
public:
// This is a constructor that accepts an
// in...
Hello all. I had a discussion with someone on IRC and this question turned up. We are allowed by the Standard to change an object of type int by a char lvalue.
int a;
char &b = a;
b = 0;
Would be be allowed to do this in the opposite direction, if we know that the alignment is fine?
The ...
I've given several answers today with only one or no up-vote at all, and then this idiot comes by and down-votes without leaving a comment why. I'm quite pissed about that.
@sbi @AlfPSteinbach So, standard C doesn't have exceptions. It is the windows guys implementing on their own. I was going through msdn on exception handling. So, thought C too has exceptions
@FredOverflow I didn't believe you (or him). Then I looked it up. Wow. ("Hence, taking the address of a [standard library class] member function has an unspecified type.")
I would not do this personally but just come up with unique names. But if you want to do it, one way is to use a combination of if and for:
#define FOR_BLOCK(DECL) if(bool _c_ = false) ; else for(DECL;!_c_;_c_=true)
You can use it like
FOR_BLOCK(GlTranslate t(1.0, 0.0, 0.0)) {
FOR_BLOCK(GlT...
@KonradRudolph What debugger do you have that won't show you the stack of each thread? Or do you have so many threads to make paging through them to painful?
@sbi Actually, gdb rocks. You can define your own macros and all that … you just need to know how to use it (and I don’t). And of course it handles templates extremely poorly
@peoro No, it's not bad, in general, although I'd have to be hard-pressed to remember a case where I actually needed that. It means you tightly couple two classes to each other, and tight coupling is always an inferior design to lose coupling.
@KonradRudolph Yes, VS has its quirks (VAX to the rescue!), but the debugger really rocks. I've done x-platform development for years, and the Mac guys would often ask if the Win guys could reproduce a problem, because debugging in VS was so much more better than XCode (which, AFAIK, uses gdb underneath). The same goes for the Unix guys.
@peoro Yea, I never knew whether that thread was spot-on or just wonky. I rarely use the debugger but when I do I wouldn’t want to miss it. Unit testing is fine but when the test crashes you still need to debug it (which is what I’m doing right now).
I have a class EventMgr which has a template function to register a listener. But, when I register a listener, linker gives me a "error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol".
Appetizer code:
class EventMgr {
template< class T, class EvenT>
void RegisterListener(T* listener, int EventType,...
@John I have to add that as an “end user” I don’t think I’d benefit very much from switching to clang. But its code base is much more comprehensible and its design philosophy is very, very much superior to GCC’s
The rationale is that this forces other people to open-source their code, e.g. Stallman has stated that this is the only reason why GCC has Objective-C support: Apple was forced to release their code under GPL since it modified the actual GCC, rather than be an external plug-in that could be released under a closed-source license
Ok, the following compiles for me with VC10 and with GCC 4.5.1 (on ideone.com). I think all this needs of C++1x is <tuple>, which should be available (as std::tr1::tuple) in older compilers as well.
#include <iostream>
#include <tuple>
typedef unsigned char uint8_t;
typedef ...
It requires only two trivial member functions per struct plus that buffer size constant.
If I were tackling this problem, I would start on the (assumed) presumption that since we're bringing the message in from a socket, we're getting effectively an array of char.
I'd write an STL-ish iterator for that raw array. Templatized on the type of field you'd like to extract. Say string or double.
I did this recently for a FIX/FAST decoder. The code is grungy and pretty heavy-duty, but it works beautifully and is super fast.
@peoro: Yes, that's a valid alternative. I think it would be much easier to write parsers for fields rather than mesasges though, since there will be only a handful of fields.
@peoro: ah, he wants to have his cake and eat it too. a super-magical system that does everything. thats going to be hard to build, and will be very prone to defects
@JohnDibling What would that bring? You don't have many objects of the same type in that array, but many of different objects types. You can't iterate over a heterogeneous container. What am I missing?
@peoro The tuple is so that you can let the compiler generate the boiler-plate parsing code. All you need to do manually is add those two similar member functions per message type and overloads for any data types you want to treat specially.
@sbi then wouldn't be enough to write something like stream >> msg.field1 >> msg.field2 /*etc etc*/ and specialize stream::operator>> for any native type he can find in any message (as I think @JohnDibling was proposing)?
@peoro For one, he needs it binary. But also, you cannot always simply stream all types. For example, for std::string you might need a reader that reads more than one word.
@peoro Then why would you come up with your own streams, with similar, but for some types slightly different semantics for reading from them, instead of just using a set of write() and read() functions?
@sbi you could do also with a write and a read function... I think overloading operator>> is cleaner, since here I was trying to define the semantics of a binary stream (thus overloading stream operators )
@sbi I think << and >> are a well known semantics for stream operators, since STL and boost (and Qt and many others) are using shifting operators like that
though << and >> are well known as stream operators, they are often considered by some to be an abuse of operator overloading, and I count myself among that group