Is there any risk in overloading (unexpected casting)..? I remember reading that it's better not to overload pointers and integers. Perhaps this advice somehow also applies to overloading enums?
I'm using different names. I guess practice will show if that's a good idea, or not. Name is overridable, anyway, with X ## ToString and StringTo ## X as defaults.
Something like: for (RGB::iterator it = RGB::begin(); it !=RGB::end(); ++it) { RGB & rgb = *it; std::cout << rgb::name() << std::endl; // I liked the syntax in @JohannesSchaublitb samples }
@PiotrLegnica yeah, this is what I ended up with after toying with Johannes' code that used namespace containing integers instead of a real enum. It probably won't work in your code.
@JohannesSchaublitb Heh, I've been meaning to try that experiment. I don't really give the strategy a high chance of success. However, that code doesn't work because &Name in sizeof(f(&Name)) does not resolve the function overload. The first declaration does not depend on a prior declaration; the second declaration finds just one overload; the third finds two overloads and requires a typecast per §13.4.
However, the cast cannot be constructed without knowing the value of the counter. So you need to put the SFINAE into a recursive template. However, the template must be called with an initial value of zero, as (again) you don't know the value of the counter. This will probably break with memoization, and is likely ill-formed, as you are redefining names which the template depends on between implicit instantiations.
but people said me that uninstalled the window.. i was discussing with them for any other way.. but i guess they do't want to discuss.. so they said me to figure out myself
but finally, i solved myself.. thats a good news from my side..:)
@potatoswatter: i am pretty sure that people will now discuss me here..
i mean regarding my problem... anyways ... they will tell you better than me ..
you can read Mr.sbi message that he suggest me...
i am glad that i did this myself..
but even then i say thanks to people here on lounge<C++>
You can't stop a malicious user from wreaking havoc, and your energies would be better spent documenting and educating users of the Graph class on how it should be used.
Raw pointers are used in many different ways, so not using a raw pointer would help self-document the expected lifetime. A re...
@cpx it appears the busy/noisy feeds were removed from the channel (and that's good, they really were annoying)
There's a difference. Feeds can be set up (by room owners) to either be posted at that top pane or from the feed guy. We used to have a feed here posting C++ questions in that top pane. And we have two feeds (answers/comments to that FAQ question on meta and new additions to the FAQ tag) setup to be posted by that @Feed guy. That general C++ question feed was set up way back by Roger Pate to one of his interesting question collections on the SE site that found C++ questions all across SE. A while ago one of the room owners deleted that feed (probably because he was annoyed by it) and - lik…
I would like to use C++0x new initializer list feature to initialize a std::vector with a compile time defined number of items for a new API I'm currently working on. Something like this:
template<int n>
std::initializer_list<std::string> duplicate(std::string s) {
// return s dupl...
@ThomasEdleson I'm using the Boost preprocessor library.
@ThomasEdleson There seems to be no way to get the number of varargs at compile time. I eventually found a method, but turned out not to work on Visual Studio.
@JohannesSchaublitb Well, this got disputed, and since @Xeo meant to show up for the meetup, I promised to check. But then SHe failed to show up, and since then we're entertaining the thought that she wanted to hide her true sex and is a beautiful 19yo female C++ programmer. :)
Anyway, it's not as warm as it was in my vacation week, but it's 15°C here, and a sunny day with a blue sky, so I'd better leave the house and get something done in my garden. See you guys later.
@Potatoswatter a function parameter can resolve the overload too
@Potatoswatter when the overload set is given to a template function parameter that needs deduction, the spec says that trail argument deduction is done for each of the members of the set, and if only one trail argument deduction succeeds, then that member is used for the argument deduction.
Thus, you make argument deduction with a single member, and have the parameter then have a single unique type (for the N<M> with M being the highest number), and the the call resolves the overload set to that void(N<M>) member
but all compilers I tried did moan for a different thing :(
that's why I have that strange SFINAE in there at all :)
Quick question, when creating a enum to string mapping, how do you handle the error if the string is not valid? For example: MyEnum FromString(const std::string & value);
My options are throwing or returning some a special null-enum-value. Which would you prefer?
I have a class that stores some metadata about enum values: template<typename Enum, Enum value> struct MetaData { };
I can instantiate like this: MetaData<Weekay, Monday> { };
Is it also possible to instantiate with only the enumerator and let the compiler deduce the enum type?
@ThomasEdleson I think it would be great if the preprocessor was more powerful.
I recently wondered if Bjarne Stroustrup hates the CPP simply because it is something that he cannot control from within the C++ language.
He spends years working on a super nifty feature and in the end the developer ends up writing a macro because it's quicker and gets the job done. It's only natural he hates CPP then :)
@PiotrLegnica My implementation of the enum generator turned out to be quite different than yours. It doesn't provide the options of custom strings or numberic values. On the other hand it provides various utilities through template specializations of metadata classes.
the page you linked has several things misleading or just plain wrong about it
the gist of the truth is there, but it's only going to be apparent if you already understand
which is true of a lot of teaching materials -- teaching is hard
for example: "You might wonder why the Java creators designed things this way - why use a two stage approach instead of just compiling or just interpreting the code like most other languages do? Well, the advantage is that once a Java file has been compiled, any computer with a Java VM can interpret and run that file. So the code is a lot more portable."
this completely misleads you about portable C (e.g. C89, though related effort started much earlier)
or even sh, which is much older, can be written portably (e.g. POSIX), and doesn't require externally-visible separate compilation and interpretation phases
exactly: blurry and arbitrary, just like "scripting language" vs "programming language"
also wrong: "Because the interpreter must be loaded into memory, there is less space available during execution; a compiler is only loaded into memory during compilation stage, and so only the machine code is resident in memory during run-time;"
I've heard anecdotes where, on much older hardware, a higher-level interpreter can fit both code and data into cache and thus run faster than a traditionally compiled equivalent
remember that a higher-level language (or bytecode) can represent much more in a smaller space. the interpreter for that bytecode can be relatively small if it can take common parts (e.g. function call overhead, though that's a poorer example) and only have them once, instead of duplicated throughout machine code
I'm getting error messages that say the server closed the connection. Sometimes BAD_GATEWAY. I think it's google.
Again: svn: Server sent unexpected return value (502 Bad Gateway) in response to MKCOL request for '/svn/!svn/wrk/684af865-85d4-4e8c-a718-7015720973c5/trunk/Main/3rdParty/Boost_1_46_1/boost/mpl/aux_/preprocessed/bcc551'
Hmm... if only there was some solution to this version control problem where you could make your commits locally and then upload all your changes in a single efficient compressed upload...
@CharlesBailey Subversion is certainly using some form of compression though.
Ok, this time it's already started transmitting data. Promising.. (after 7th try)..
@Als btw the image I just posted describes superbly how bad people are at using google.
This time I only uploaded the headers, not yet the libs. Perhaps that was the magic trick.
I've been thinking of uploading the code first to a SliceHost and from there upload it to google. It's already in the cloud then, so perhaps it'll go faster.
@StackedCrooked Nanoha has three seasons, and the first one starts a bit slow. That's why I'd recommend the movie remake of the 1st season that came out last year. It's just mind-blowing and waaay cooler than the real 1st season. :) The best season is still the second though. it's plain epic imho. And yes, I'm a fanboy. :(
A friend of mine was really against watching nanoha, after he tried watching the first season. he stopped at ep ~5 or so. later, he watched the movie and then all 3 seasons and came to like it pretty much :)
@StackedCrooked Yep. I got a poll at the beginning of every month, lasting one week, featuring 5 anime names. Whichever gets voted the highest I watch and review until the next month
@StackedCrooked Don't know, never watched it, but one person in the IRC channel really liked it and watched it all the way till the end
I've also started watching Detective Conan, which is really old. I feel way to old for this. But the review on the THEM-anime-reviews-website is so motivated that I don't have the heart to give up on it. It also gets better I heard...
@StackedCrooked GitHub gives you 300mb by default, if your stuff is open source, send them a mail if you need more than that (although GIT has way better compression than SVN)
What's the best way to handle a failed allocation when it's "internal" e.g. I've got an array list implementation and the resize fails, what to do? abort()? (It's C)
I remember a chapter in Effecitve C++ that mentioned you need to set the set-new-handler. So that you can cleanly report and exit in case of memory shortage.