In my view, programmer errors are passing invalid arguments for example, glBegin(); glMatrixMode(...);. Things that happen by not reading the documentation.
The Native API (with capitalized N) is the mostly undocumented application programming interface used internally by the Windows NT family of operating systems produced by Microsoft. It is predominately used during system boot, when other components of Windows are unavailable. The Program Entry point is called DriverEntry(), the same as for a Windows Device Driver. However, the application runs in Ring 3 the same as a regular Windows Application. Most of the Native API calls are implemented in ntoskrnl.exe and are exposed to user mode by ntdll.dll. Some Native API calls are implemented in us...
In computer science, hierarchical protection domains, often called protection rings, are mechanisms to protect data and functionality from faults (fault tolerance) and malicious behaviour (computer security). This approach is diametrically opposite to that of capability-based security.
Computer operating systems provide different levels of access to resources. A protection ring is one of two or more hierarchical levels or layers of privilege within the architecture of a computer system. This is generally hardware-enforced by some CPU architectures that provide different CPU modes at t...
> However, most general-purpose systems use only two rings, even if the hardware they run on provides more CPU modes than that. For example, Windows XP and below only uses two rings, with ring 0 corresponding to kernel mode and ring 3 to user mode.[3]
ring 0 for kernel code and device drivers, ring 2 for privileged code (user programs with I/O access permissions), and ring 3 for unprivileged code (nearly all user programs). Under DOS, the kernel, drivers and applications typically run on ring 3, whereas 386 memory managers such as EMM386 run at ring 0. In addition to this, DR-DOS' EMM386 3.xx can optionally run some modules (such as DPMS) on ring 1 instead.
Microsoft Windows CE (now officially known as Windows Embedded Compact and previously also known as Windows Embedded CE , and sometimes abbreviated WinCE) is an operating system developed by Microsoft for embedded systems. Windows CE is a distinct operating system and kernel, rather than a trimmed-down version of desktop Windows. It is not to be confused with Windows Embedded Standard which is an NT-based componentized version of desktop Microsoft Windows.
Microsoft licenses Windows CE to OEMs and device makers. The OEMs and device makers can modify and create their own user interfaces a...
> The current version of Windows Embedded Compact supports Intel x86 and compatibles, MIPS, and ARM processors.
This guy flies low. And I mean, really low. Less than a meter above the ground, they say. I currently cannot find it, but I have seen the same thing from the cockpit's POV somewhere, and you can see how his comrades fling themselves to the ground, in order to not to get hit.
> If control flow reaches the point of the __builtin_unreachable, the program is undefined. It is useful in situations where the compiler cannot deduce the unreachability of the code.
@LewsTherin Expression templates I learned from Todd's original article from the 90s. Josuttis/Vandervorde's template book has a pretty good description of them, though.
@LewsTherin I dunno what .NET considers expression trees, but the general term, I thought, refers to expressions being stored in trees. Expression templates do just that — but at compile time. It's one of the two roots of template meta programming.
It's either <typename, magic_enabler_type> or nothing. The typename = one generates <typename, typename> for both overloads, and that's why I need the dummy.
Ah, I see now. Blame my hazy brain after a few too many hours of being awake. But I still don't see why a substitution failure even creates a <class, class> sig
I have journeyed thus and bruised into the lands of the error page on Stack Overflow. There, upon the sight on the hill I see a vision as such:
For those reading with images off:
# define v putchar
# define print(x)
main(){v(4+v(v(52)-4));return 0;}/*
#>+++++++4+[>++++++<-]>
+++...
Here's my shot at a 404. It's not a polyglot, but it's more visually interesting:
#define _ f++>o--*ur-- || o--*h++ || f++*o--*ur;
int f = 0, o = 0, ur = 0, h = 0;
main(){f++;o--*ur;o--*h;f*our();printf("%d\n", (f-o-ur));}/*oh, f*/our(){
_-_ _-_ _-_ _-_ _-_
_-_ _-_ -...
@unNaturhal putchar is usable without it. And it's C.
@LewsTherin: I know that my code should be always readable. But I think that writing unreadable cose could be consider as a skill, and it's funny to suggest to you friend as joke :P