@FredOverflow Indeed, license agreements are so much cheaper to come up with that formally testing your code, so they have taken the place of formal reasoning.
There are even people that say "OMG your function has two return statements, you need to introduce another variable". "But won't that make my program longer and harder to read?". "Yeah, but then you only have one return statement!". "So?"
@FredOverflow That Single Entry, Single Exit is a leftover from the times people used assembler. You had so much freedom then, you needed to restrict yourself. Those restrictions, however, do not necessarily overlap with the restrictions that are useful today, when we use more structured languages.
@DeadMG ?: is a perfectly fine language feature. It just looks ugly to the uninitiated. In Scala, ?: is called if then else. It does the same thing. Is that badness, too?
@LewsTherin - you can have different addressing modes on some hardware. Some of the relative ones have maximum distances from what they're relative to)
> A NULL-terminated list of addresses for the host. Addresses are returned in network byte order. The macro h_addr is defined to be h_addr_list[0] for compatibility with older software.
And I was "Okay so arrays are pointers, but apparently not always, but that's what the books say, but there are exceptions, wait I don't get that at all..."
The thing that confused me the most was that * meant two different things. It marks pointers in declarations, and it dereferences in expressions. Of course all the books I had available sucked at explaining that.
If you look at everything a human being can accomplish (like walking, speaking, writing, basic math...), then learning pointers is almost trivial in comparison.
I am working on implementing UpNP on C++, and I need to get the local internal IP address assigned by the router to make the sockets works. The address I need is the one that appears on routers where it shows the computers connected to the router and the local IP assigned to each computer. I am u...