remember the C and C++ standards account for an extremely wide variety of platforms, even desktop systems with segmented architectures so you have near and far pointers
Did anyone else ever program in OpenGL and stumpled into the "float near = some_value; float far = some_value;" pit and got strange compiler errors? :-)
Can I check whether or not a given pointer points to an object within an array, specified by its bounds?
template <typename T>
bool points_within_array(T* p, T* begin, T* end)
{
return begin <= p && p < end;
}
Or do the pointer comparisons invoke undefined behavior if p...
implementing a collector to collect a language is one thing, but it becomes a lot more complex when you have to consider that GC references may exist inside native types
or, even if you ban it, the complex interaction rules that would result
it did, insofar as, it is now implementation defined whether or not dynamically unreachable objects are collected
but as a programmer, I have no options
the other trouble I came up against when considering garbage collection is code which is compiled to assume a GC would basically have to run against one to function properly- even if it was compiled into a program expecting non-GC
"PAE is provided by Intel Pentium Pro (and above) CPUs - including all later Pentium-series processors (except the 400 MHz bus versions of the Pentium M), as well as by other processors such as the AMD Athlon and later AMD processor models with similar or more advanced versions of the same architecture." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_Address_Extension
it's only needed when you have more than 4GB of ram, and that has previously been much less common than not
After reading "Hidden Features and Dark Corners of C++/STL" on comp.lang.c++.moderated, I was completely surprised that it compiled and worked in both Visual Studio 2008 and G++ 4.4. The code:
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int x = 10;
while( x --> 0 ) // x goes to 0
{
...
@FredOverflow Yes, it's the "goes to" operator, primarily used for unsigned loop variable in for loop. The example given is not a good one since it uses int. I first learned about "goes to" from a Usenet posting by Andrew Koenig; he has a thing for jokes based on novel interpretations of words and also C++ code...
@FredOverflow no, not AFAIK, but it's well known: Make Things Work the way you expect them. it's counter-intuitive that by adding a std::string member, say, you suddenly get different initialization semantics (as it was in c++98). that was the motivation.
@72con I wouldn't write code like that in the first place. How about this?
bool a = freakingLongMethodCall1();
bool b = freakingLongMethodCall1().getsFreakier();
bool c = freakingLongMethodCall1().getsFreakier().thisIsJustSick();
if (a || b || c)
@FredOverflow yes. different treatment of POD and non-POD aggregate. with POD a default-initialization like T() gave you zero-initialization, but with non-POD it gave you call of default constructor, by §8.5/5. In c++03 T() gives you value-initialization instead.
I know.. but sometimes you just do have multiline (say it gets as long as2 lines) conditions. How do you indent that w.r.t. he line with the if keyword?