@Xeo Maybe that's a bit high for a junior. I really don't know. I haven't been in this situation for more than a decade. And I always considered myself a very good C++ programmer, worth being paid enough.
Anyone know if there exists a #define I could check to determine whether my code is being compiled using glibc (vs another implementation of the standard library)?
@Xeo Do not take me too serious. As I said, I only had a single experience with applying as a junior programmer, this was in the 90ies, someplace else, a very small company,... I'd trust your lecturer over my assumption any day.
> "Learning Haskell is a great way of training yourself to think functionally so you are ready to take full advantage of C# 3.0 when it comes out" (blog Apr 2007)
For a few days I've tried to wrap my head around the functional programming paradigm in Haskell. I've done this by reading tutorials and watching screencasts, but nothing really seems to stick.
Now, in learning various imperative/OO languages (like C, Java, PHP), excercises have been a good way f...
@Als Here's what I did: 1) read the shallow description of the features on Wikipedia; 2) read Bjarne's intro; 3) play around with it; 4) Look up the standard library things in the standard.
I guess not only me but lot of C++ programmers veterans or not so veterans are wondering this moment about how to actually get yourself to learn and get up to speed on C++11
@FredOverflow No, we don't, but I'd like to see that. Something we can point all those to who ask extremely silly questions because they believe they can pick up C++ on their way to programming a game in it without reading a book.
Opinions wanted: if you were going to include a strlcat() or strlcpy() in your code for use on a Linux system (as glibc does not include these functions), would you rather rip the BSD implementation, or imitate using something like this?
Oh.....so a c++ reference doesn't copy the value of the argument being passed in, but its address..that actually makes sense.. I thought it copied the value
@LucDanton you guys disagree on some of the similarities of the language. For example if I told a Java programmer pointers instead of references, I would be in hot water...
@LucDanton Yeah, the worst example of that is lvalues and rvalues, because they aren't values, and the characters 'l' and 'r' are completely meaningless.
@FredOverflow If only we had some kind of device or machine that could understand human readable text and translate it to a form more adapted to computers.
Hey guys I have a question I hope you can understand my point. Lets say I have a richTextbox and I have an image object inside, is there a way I can mask this object to be in the structure but not on the screen so that when I move the cursor to its place its not actually there and it passes it ?
@StackedCrooked the concept is that the reference is not really a pointer or an object of memory location, but an alias to another variable. How it is implemented is another thing..but it uses a pointer
@LewsTherin From the C++ FAQ: "Even though a reference is often implemented using an address in the underlying assembly language, please do not think of a reference as a funny looking pointer to an object. A reference is the object. It is not a pointer to the object, nor a copy of the object. It is the object."
Substitution failure is not an error (SFINAE) refers to a situation in C++ where an invalid substitution of template parameters is not in itself an error. David Vandevoorde first introduced the acronym SFINAE to describe related programming techniques.
Specifically, when creating a candidate set for overload resolution, some (or all) candidates of that set may be the result of substituting deduced template arguments for the template parameters. If an error occurs during substitution, the compiler removes the potential overload from the candidate set instead of stopping with a compilation ...
@LewsTherin If you declare a reference, for example: const std::string & name = person.getName(); then you don't know if it will be allocated as a variable on the stack. That's implementation dependent. (Correct me if I'm wrong.)