> Furthermore, only one copy of the hostent structure is allocated per thread, and an application should therefore copy any information that it needs before issuing any other Windows Sockets API calls.
There are a lot of posts complaining about operator overloading.
I felt I had to clarify the "operator overloading" concepts, offering an alternative viewpoint on this concept.
Code obfuscating?
This argument is a fallacy.
Obfuscating is possible in all languages...
It is as easy to obfuscat...
@LewsTherin No. That part meant that if you called other functions the structure would be reused and you would not be guaranteed to point to the same data.
@FredOverflow Nah, C++ operator overloading is too weak to be used for obfuscation. Haskell's much better for that.
> Gosling: I left out operator overloading as a fairly personal choice because I had seen too many people abuse it in C++.
> Stroustrup: Many C++ design decisions have their roots in my dislike for forcing people to do things in some particular way [...] Often, I was tempted to outlaw a feature I personally disliked, I refrained from doing so because I did not think I had the right to force my views on others.
Let's get pedantic, because there are differences that can actually affect your code's behavior. Much of the following is taken from comments made to an "Old New Thing" article.
Sometimes the memory returned by the new operator will be initialized, and sometimes it won't depending on whether the...
struct Foo {};
struct Bar : Foo {};
Foo &foo = Bar; // without ()
I wonder, Is it a legal notation? And if it is legal, could you give some details? Something like, Why it's legal? Or, What is the origin of such a notation?
EDIT: I cannot compile this code. But I met a code like that and...
Because I haven't got anything to plug into the copier thingy until I finish another part of the project
Well I basically got a mini protocol
and there is times when a file will be sent over a connection
But most of the time it will just be text
And it won't be any where near the 1600 word mark so it will be under 65535 mark
and other codes on the protocol are just 1 or 2 bytes
and the only time it will be what I reckon will be a noticable time suck will be when it's files that are more than 65kB and that will probably end up implementing ftp and won't be part of the protocol
So I've realised that I don't even need to check and it won't take too long to copy things
Accessing data on a CPU register is equivalent to getting that information from your mind; data on cache is like information on your desk (L1), in your room (L2), or in your house (L3); data on RAM is like something on your city; data on disk is like something on Pluto (or Jupiter, if it's an SSD). Network speeds vary a lot, but you're still an astronaut.
@FredOverflow But, but, the government, they, they, they have these things, they can get the magnetic something, and residual stuff, and then they can see your porn!
I was just reading about it and yeah just one zero pass will render that hdd well and truly erased with the chances of getting any actual functional data practically nil
The odds of recovering the hard drive and being struck by lightning would be 0.000000000000000125%, which leaves your warning without much credibility.