@Mysticial Pointers to char types are allowed to alias.
And in any case aliasing restrictions doesn't mean you can't cast at all. It means you can't access the same memory with two lvalues of unrelated types at the same site or something like that. (Paraphrasing very liberally here.)
@Pubby my structured arrays are getting destroyed after the a for loop. How can I save it so I can pass it to other functions. I have to create structures dynamically.
@Mysticial That might not be wrong. This is the limit of my knowledge regarding aliasing btw, some of the details still baffle me (Johannes once showed me code that I didn't expect to be valid). Be that as it may, treat aliasing as separate to alignment.
@LucDanton Ah ok. There's also another corner case with casting a pointer to a struct to a pointer to the first member of the struct. The question is, whether this is allowed if the struct is not polymorphic.
@Pubby their multithreaded C++ is 7.73 times faster than their singlethreaded. That sort of speedup either means (A) Their C++ isn't a fair comparison, or (B) Their test is contrived.
for instance: not taking advantage of the full functionality of Javascript
if float and int are same aligned and sized on a particular platform, you can say float a; int *p = (int*)&a; *p = 10; cout << *p; in the current spec and it will work without UB. But if you later access a, you do an aliasing violation
@MooingDuck Oh, and their code doesn't seem to have any sharing, so 7.7 is very possible. But yeah, their claim is likely bullshit or irrelevant in practice
Hmm, actually it seems that it's not JS that is as fast as C++, but low-level code FFI'd into JS that is as fast as C++
@MooingDuck It's doubly complicated in that the aliasing rules are specified regardless of what conversions are allowed. So sometimes the challenge is not finding a way to skirt around the aliasing rules, it's finding a way to obtain the pointer you want to skirt around the aliasing rules. Sheer madness.
You can pick random elements from std::set with std::next(s.begin(), r) where 0 <= r < s.size(). Not constant time obviously though.
Also a bad idea is that the repro time is on the order of 2 hours... attaching a debugger and getting useful data out of means turning off optimizations and disabling multi-threading
@StackedCrooked Yes, but they didn't catch it in this case. So I need to do the good old "guess where it is" thing. I'll be adding print statements in key parts of the program to see where it might overflow.
@Pubby One cannot "know" C++ without "knowing" pointers. It lets you appreciate things like iterators. That said, you shouldn't have to actually use them.
@Maxpm I'm all for using pointers, I think they're extremely important to learn early on, I just think it's idiotic for a teacher to say to use them in everything.
+---------+----------+---------+
| First | Second | Third |
+---------+----------+---------+
| First | Second | Third |
+---------+----------+---------+
| First | Second | Third |
+---------+----------+---------+
It's much more difficult for me to copy and paste a picture so I can do something useful with the numbers in the picture than copy and pasting and ascii table into excel for me to work with
@user1131997 because it means there's an easy and canonical way of having an aggregate of 3+ things, that doesn't require your api users to remember what you called it
(among other things)
@KerrekSB ta for pinning it, i assume that was you
I'm writing a little physics simulation in C++ that basically moves circles across the screen and when two circles collide, they should ricochet in the same manner as billiard balls would. When the circles do collide with each other, most of the time they will practically slow down infinitely/the...
@DeadMG Paracetamol saves me from going insane about once or twice a year.
@DeadMG Theres is harder stuff in case Paracetamol has no effect, but you usually have to take those on a full stomach, and it takes more time to kick in.
I'm trying.. But I just discover to use ALT+FN+ the FNnumpad (that should be on the other buttons, like jko..) but my keyboard doesn't has this buttons...
guess there's still market for those 2D strategy games after all.
> First, and foremost, Real Programmers are about the testosterone. If your average Cobol/Java drone thinks programming should be (needlessly) dull and boring, your average Real Programmer thinks programming should be (needlessly) difficult and dangerous. The purpose of programming, to the Real Programmer, is to prove how clever and/or manly they are.
I think C fan-boys are the only Real Programmers left. Or am I wrong?
There was a really old dude at my previous job who actually did that. He implemented OR gates from BJT transistors where the microcontroller should have been doing the job.
Although I haven't read the article yet... maybe they just blow stuff up.
Release of Ubuntu 12.04: April 26 Release of Ivy Bridge: April 29
It's pretty unlikely Ivy Bridge will run without problems on Ubuntu 12.04, right? Or is there not so much difference to Sandy Bridge? That had stability problems on Ubuntu for at least one major release I think.
You might write your own parser to just get the comments and doc markup, then cross-reference the positions of the comments to token positions of declarations in the AST.
libclang does syntax highlighting, so it does know about comments. I'm not sure if it's easy to combine that with things like classes and functions, though.
Well… it might have been even harder to get comments from some scattershot AST node than to get the file positions of nodes you care about, and sort them relative to comments you easily found yourself.
I might indeed be better of with finding the comments without clang, and than using clang find out the first declaration or definition that follows the comment. clang does preserve columns and rows.
I'm trying to build a switch and I get an "expression must have integral or enum type". I'm guessing the switch in winapi doesn't take variables with LPSTR type?
char testbuf[ 51 ]; // allocate space for 50 characters + termination
LPSTR test = testbuf;
scanf("%50s", test); // read at most 50 ch...