The very first anime I saw was Princess Mononoke. I don't remember exactly which ones I saw after that, but among them were Evangelion, Ah my goddess, and Crest of the Stars. This was around 2001 I think.
The first anime I saw was some weird half-hentai thing when I was 7 I believe. It was on some channel late at night. /shrug The first real anime I saw was pokemon. Fuck yeah, 6:30 am week day and watching pokemon before going to school.
@StackedCrooked It was. The kids today just don't know how bad they have it with Naruto and all that crap. Pokemon, Digimon and DBZ. Those are the ones they should be watchin. :)
I'm implementing a C++ program that can programmatically instantiate objects given an input file which provides the class names and arguments to pass to the constructors.
The classes are derived from a common base class but their constructor signature varies.
They are declared as follows:
clas...
well, I want to make a data structure which is a simple tree using inheritance
but it's annoying me because when you insert a unique_ptr<Derived> into, say, an unordered_map<string, unique_ptr<Base>> you only get back a unique_ptr<Base>&
so it's irritating to have to make intermediate variables or cast when I need neither o those things
@DeadMG you can assign or append a character to a string, but you can not construct a string from a character (except as a sequence of 1 character); i think that's silly'
I'm looking to implement a bubble sort. I have the following code that I wrote, which uses a for loop inside of a while loop. How can I make this into a bubble sort that uses two for loops?
Here's my code:
do {
switched = false;
for (int i = 1; i < size; i++) {
if (a[i] < ...
@Moshe you don't have a for loop inside a while loop, you have a for loop inside a do loop. try to train in general on translating a for loop to a while loop and vice versa. note that the for loop is formally defined in terms of an equivalent while loop, so translating in that direction should be easy!
Hey there. @thecosh I think I figured out your problem! I'm editing my answer, but you'll have to check it yourself. I don't have the hardware to test this.
@ManofOneWay Actually, I can have snow too. I'm going back to my parents' house Thursday, and they live close to the mountains and it usually snows there.
@RMartinhoFernandes Btw, next semester I will do a project for Oracle, the really cool thing is that they want me to do a JIT-compiler. The not so cool thing is that they want me to do it in Java. They want me to measure the performance. But I'll guess it will be fun anyway!
glVertexAttribPointer has two modes of operation. If there's no VBO bound, it takes a pointer to the data as the last argument. If there's a VBO bound the last argument is instead an integer offset into the buffer. In C, you have to cast this integer into a pointer anyway, but it is not treated a...
@thecoshman there, I changed my answer. The JOGL docs suck. That and the OpenGL API sucks too.
user406009
What happens when a goto or switch statement jumps past the construction of a class?
@EthanSteinberg Yes, it does. glVertexAttribPointer is not old API (I mean, it is old, but it's still core) And don't tell me that passing an integer cast into a void pointer does not suck.
Your code is fine. The variable lives wherever it would live had the goto not been there.
Note that there are situations where you can't jump over a declaration:
C++11 6.7 Declaration statement [stmt.dcl]
3 It is possible to transfer into a block, but not in a way that bypasses declarat...
When I'm reading the C++ standard, it seems that the following code is perfectly fine according to the standard.
int main() {
goto lol;
{
int x;
lol:
cout << x << endl;
}
}
// OK
[n3290: 6.7/3]: It is possible to transfer into a block, but not in a
way th...