@ManofOneWay Breakfast, lunch, dinner, whatever. All I have left is a bunch of cookies. I am waiting for the local shops to open to go buy some emergency supplies before I go to work.
@StackedCrooked Maybe of "distant", but probably not so much of "big city" -- offhand I don't know their exact populations, but Brussels seems in the same general range of size as my nearest "big city" (Denver). (...and Paris is undoubtedly bigger -- not sure if you think of that as distant or not though).
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was thinking more of the metropolitan area -- I'm not sure of the exact political boundaries of Brussels, but what I think of as "Brussels" seems like it's probably a couple million people or so. (Edit: Google says 1.8 million).
In the following code, can the value of int be predicted ( how ? ), or it is just the garbage ?
union a
{
int i;
char ch[2];
};
a u;
u.ch[0] = 0;
u.ch[1] = 0;
cout<<u.i;
}
Frankly, I can't find any mention in the standard that doing this is undefined behaviour. The standard does define the notion of "active member" for unions, but it doesn't seem to use that idea for anything other than explaining how to change the active member (§9.5p4), and to define constant exp...
If you want reliable, high quality answers quickly, use SO. If you want to gamble and maybe get a useful answer, maybe get a good answer, and maybe waste your time, feel free to ask questions here :)
I was under the impression that accessing an union member that's not active is undefined behavior, but I can't seem to find a solid reference (other than answers claiming it's UB but without any support from the standard).
So, is it undefined behavior?
@Xeo Just like everyone else is focusing too much on the "active member" thingy.
The difference is that you can reason about the chars alias anything thingy, but you can't about the active member thingy because it's a concept the standard doesn't define properly.
The standard clearly defines what an active member is.
It's just that everyone assumes it must mean something else.
> In a union, at most one of the non-static data members can be active at any time, that is, the value of at most one of the non-static data members can be stored in a union at any time.
If I make a const union object (e.g in code below ), then no member assignment can be done in that. So is there any use of making a const union object, in any case ?
union un
{
int i;
float f;
char c;
};
const un a;
/// ! a.i = 10; error.
@Xeo Misunderstanding. I thought OP wanted to map the buffer to some potential stack-allocated small buffer within std::vector (I know no standard library implementation which does that, but some do for std::string)
I think it doesn't matter if it's necessary; If you allow the vector class to manipulate of his buffer, there's a possibility of it messing the C buffer. In a really bad way (like delete instead of free)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I guess so. If the OP needs iterator, he should just write an iterator. Do you think it's viable if I completely change my answer?
I'm reading this so I'm now looking at the implementation of std::forward and std::move:
// TEMPLATE FUNCTION forward
template<class _Ty> inline
_Ty&& forward(typename identity<_Ty>::type& _Arg)
{ // forward _Arg, given explicitly specified type parameter
...
btw @Bartek, I'd advise to just delete your one answer there, it doesn't add anything to the question really and the misunderstanding in the comments is also cleared up
I'm amazed BTW how you were able to hit 38k being my age, and in C++ not C#. And I consider myself pretty good compared to other students. Shall you need any coder in gamedev, lemme know ;p
@Xeo Still. Being average takes a LOT of time to get reputation. My first 100 taught me that. So it basically means you're good, even if you're stalking SO 24/7.
Controversial opinionated ones, or essay-style ones which aren't just about "explain this language feature", but stuff like "why are C++ compilers so slow"
@jalf I tend to defend my engineer status in my work against all these so-called "architects"; I guess I'd rather have to have all of my points earned for help and knowledge.
I had alot of trouble finding good c# methods for this type of date conversion, so I ended up writing the two methods below by myself. The date conversion though have been found somewhere on the net.
I hope someone will find these methods usefull.
// convert julian datestamp into .net datetime ...
Noda Time (noda-time.googlecode.com) would make this code redundant... Heck, if this is just meant to be "days since a Julian epoch" then DateTime.AddDays would do the trick... — Jon Skeet19 mins ago
And to make you edit one more time, you forgot to explicitly mention that T* is a valid random-access iterator, but doesn't provide iterator_category as a nested typedef (you got it right to test through iterator_traits)