I've been looking into some of the new features of C++0x and one I've noticed is the double ampersand in declaring variables, like T &&var.
For a start, what is this beast called? (I wish Google would allow us to search for punctuation like this.)
What exactly does it mean?
At first gl...
@sbi Riddle me this: a generic class with a perfect forwarding constructor; do I declare the copy/move constructor or let the compiler do the right thing? What happens when I call T(T())?
@FredOverflow typename std::remove_reference<T>::type, except for arrays where it's remove_extent, and for function references it turns then into pointers
@DeadMG There's no such thing as sibbling synonyms. No universal suffrage for tags. There's always only one tag beiong a synonym of another one. That will turn all occurances of that one tag into those of the other one.
Symmetry occurs not only in geometry, but also in other branches of mathematics. It is actually the same as invariance: the property that something does not change under a set of transformations.
Two objects are symmetric to each other with respect to the invariant transformations if one object is obtained from the other by one of the transformations. It is an equivalence relation.
In the case of symmetric functions, the value of the output is invariant under permutations of variables. These permutations form a group, the symmetric group. In the case of isometric transformations in Eucl...
@DeadMG If it's a warning, and it says "code isn't accessible" (not identifier), then that usually means execution can never reach that code. (Sorry for yelling. CAPSLOCK.)
@FredOverflow I plead guilty in that I always use an ordering so banal that I don't have to think too much about it (e.g. last time was a lexical ordering)
@thecoshman so will it be same i mean the code not accessible thingy in linux gcc/g++ too? what i really want to say is it compiles allright in win and nux but when i try it in win it simply refuses to match case some middle and end cases of that huge case
@echo9 Lemme tell you this: I have been programming C++ for almost 20 years, and I have seen bugs sneaking passed compilers, testers, and customers for a decade, which you'd think any newbie would smell without even looking at the coe in question, just by it being on the HD.
@echo9 probably better of with a proper SO question, unless it is really quick. Maybe just your switch statement, along with what you think it should be doing
The act of isolating the problem into a simple example that reproduces it tends to keep my question asking rate on SO very low. It's a great debugging technique.
@echo9 I certainly won't look at a switch statement with lines in the four digit number, not matter whether on pastebin or anyhwre else. Takes @Martinho's advice serious!
Well, since there is no agreed-upon definition of what OO really is, it's hard to say whether C++ is OO or not. I'm sure Smalltalkers would say that C++ lacks too many things to be considered OO.
@thecoshman yep! thats right.. so is it this thingy thats keeping my win based visual studio to just skip over.. or will it behave the same in nux too ? (sorry haven't tested it in nux yet :( )
@CatPlusPlus "Them" incenting time travel "by then" doesn't help me a bit. All that would allow is my descendants showing up now and exlaining to my why I fucked up big time in their past (which is my present). I really fail to see how this could be an advantage for me.
@echo9 Have you considered refactoring this in one or two functions that returns a container of strings (error messages?) that you append to m_statMsg?
@FredO: We or quite possibly just someone, my memory is a little vague, was discussing replacing switch/case with polymorphism because it doesn't use enough design patterns, or something
@all its just the part which will be taking care of any exceptions occurred during data transfer, socket, connection creation, address bind etc like stuff
@FredOverflow Five-index programming doesn't have the same ring to it; when you could have five-star programming just some decay (and a lot of gray area) away!
@Nils Are you watching it right now? Yeah, it's extremely interesting to see and hear the inventor of C++ talk about the development of the language. I have watched that video at least half a dozen times. (Sounds better than 6 times, doesn't it?)
@DeadMG it is for a terrain level of detail. the boolean values where for if a section of tile needs to merge level of detail down to a section next to it.
@DeadMG if the tile needs to lower the level of detail, then it will use a special linking index buffer, these link strips need to be different for each side, as they needs to use the right vertices for that side. If the section did not need to lower level of detail down to a section next to it, then it would use the normal LoD for that section of terrain
@DeadMG like I said, tech demo. So it was about showing how the LoD can change when you are zoomed right in and move further away and it reduces. It also was only updating the LoD on key press so that you could see how the LoD has been applied over the terrain
@DeadMG yes, but if you have a large map, you want to be able to see it rather detailed when you are close to it. But that level of detail dose not need to be applied to the entire map.
@DeadMG but if you are going to let the player zoom in, you want to let them see a decent looking bit of terrain. Besides, the technique could be applied to say an FPS game
@FredOverflow Sadly, I never got time to implement a really good function for applying the LoD, but in theory, if balanced right, you would not get a pop when the LoD increases, and there where about 6, so it would slowly get better as you come closer to a point on th emap
@DeadMG its more the other way around using tessellation shaders
with tessellation shaders, you would pass very big triangles to the graphics hardware to be rendered, and let the shader add in extra geomotry, usualy using a height map texture for something like terrain
I am fairly sure that a lot of the 'new' DX shaders are things that openGL has had for a while. MS just seem to have ranted about some new names for these things...