In C++03, an expression is either an rvalue or an lvalue.
In C++0x, an expression can be an:
rvalue
lvalue
xvalue
glvalue
prvalue
Two categories have become five categories.
What are these new categories of expressions?
How do these new categories relate to the existing rvalue and lva...
@Xeo An xvalue is the call of a function that returns an rvalue-reference (or a cast to an rvalue-reference). The most prominent example of such a function is std::move.
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...
An rvalue reference behaves just like an lvalue reference except that it can bind to a temporary (an rvalue), whereas you can not bind a (non const) lvalue reference to an rvalue.
TRUE or not, because I understand this definition.
@Xaade rvalue is an abstraction that subsumes both prvalues (a new name for what was previously known as rvalues in C++03) and xvalues (a new concept in C++0x).
@Xaade But it isn't easier to read. Why would I separate the declaration from its first use? It makes me have to go up and down unnecessarily, which I find annoying.
In this answer, Ryan directly calls the virtual destructor. I've tested the code in VS2010, and it correctly calls all destructors (tested with logging statements). Is it actually valid to do so? What are the problems, flaws or even the good points of such an approach?
I can only think of it as ...
@FredOverflow For example, using notation ix to designate iterators if they are primitive (like ints used in a loop) so you don't accidentally put their values into an int that represents a coordinate.
Hey.... coming from people who print COBOL code on 89 sheets of paper, sit in a room at a round table, and complain about how my loop's condition is at the end of the loop code.... even though I argued that the loop occurs at least once.
Checks are performed by attaching check levels to variables with predefined values to check against, and given their own reference, so when you use the check reference, it checks against the appropriate variable automatically.
Tell your boss that he needs to read this book. Should he ask "Who the hell are Herb Sutter and Andrei Alexandrescu?", please quit your job immediately.
It means that the result of doing X is not formally specified. Compilers may implement it differently, or it may have unintended consequences, or it may not work at all.
Sounds fine except for the "Compilers may implement it differently" part, that sounds more like unspecified behavior or even implementation-defined behavior.