I hesitate to ask this question, but I read a lot of the career advice from mathOverflow and math.stackexchange, and I couldn't find anything similar.
Four years after the PhD, I am pretty sure that I am going to leave academia soon. I do enjoy teaching and research, but the alpha-maleness, mas...
With "hooking" I mean the ability to non-intrusively override the behavior of a function. Some examples:
Print a log message before and/or after the function body.
Wrap the function body in a try catch body.
Measure duration of a function
etc...
I have seen different implementations in variou...
@StackedCrooked Wait, but you should. What I mean by static vs dynamic is a matter of the hooks being set in stone upon compilation, or being interchangeable at runtime.
@ManofOneWay You really should have references to const as parameters if they are input parameters that you don't intend to modify. Otherwise, clients won't be able to pass in rvalues.
What are the iterator invalidation rules for C++ containers?
Preferably in a summary list format.
(Note: This is meant to be an entry to Stack Overflow's C++ FAQ. If you want to critique the idea of providing an FAQ in this form, then the posting on meta that started all this would be the plac...
Common operators to overload
Most of the work in overloading operators is boiler-plate code. That is little wonder, since operators are merely syntactic sugar, their actual work could be done by (and often is forwarded to) plain functions. But it is important that you get this boiler-plate code ...
@RMartinhoFernandes @FredOverflow What do you guys think is better? Have operators defined the way @ManofOneWay does or have free standing specializations of std::plus, std::minus etc ...?
I read Scott Meyers article on the subject and quite confused about what he is talking about. I have 3 questions here.
Question 1
To explain in detail, assume I am writing a simple vector<T> class with methods like push_back, insert and operator []. If I follow mayers algorithm, I would ...
@Praetorian Obviously, implementing operator+ is preferred, because you get both. If you only specialize std::plus (is that allowed?) you don't get operator+.
@sbi: "That someone is already found.You were told to mail the team. If I was you, however, I'd wait for what Tim comes up with." I agree with you on waiting for what Tim comes up with.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes, but in case of swap I think all algortihms from the standard library call just swap(x,y), not std::swap(x,y), specifically to enable ADL
@sbi: Yes. I'll wait for Tim's reply. Just that the Wont guy pissed me with his antics of trying to wash off the whole thing, as A-Holes will be A-Holes forget policy.