@TonyTheTiger : I misread that to be " Scott Meyers on Movie Semantics, Rewind references and perfect forwarding." I guess too many movie references flying around.
@AProgrammer yes, in an article I'm reading it says "A common programming technique that uses placement new for this purpose is memory pools, sometimes also called "arenas""
small question, i got an integer i of value 8000; further i have a const char header[] = { 0x52, 0x49, 0x46 ... }; i need to add this 8000 to it, so i could write 0x1f 0x40, but i need it reversed, 0x41, 0x1F. now i wonder, how to do this. it was quite a basic thing and i can remember classes were we did that , but its long ago.. ;)
@dhanke You need to arithmetically add 8000 to the integer stored in your array? Or you want to append little endian (or whatever endian it is) representation of 8000 to the end of the array?
First, I'd like to say that I'm new to C / C++, I'm originally a PHP developer so I am bred to abuse variables any way I like 'em.
C is a strict country, compilers don't like me here very much, I am used to breaking the rules to get things done.
Anyway, this is my simple piece of code:
char IP...
It is not legal, since it is not possible to specialize template functions.
You could do something like this :
template< typename T >
struct foo
{
static int doSomething() {return 0;}
};
template< >
struct foo<int>
{
static int doSomething() {return 5;}
};
the ODR only applies to things multiply defined in the program in different translation units. there are separate paragraphs in clause 14 that apply to instantiated functions
in c++03, people argued that the order of initialization of instantiated definitions of non-local objects is undefined, because their definitions don't appear in a TU. since only the order of initialization for definitions of objects of a single TU is defined.
@TonyTheTiger: Thanks for your reply on my q on thread monitoring...I am still thinking about it....awaiting more suggestions...none seem to be coming up though
@CatPlusPlus That makes +4. I had minutes on SO where I made ten times that. :)
@TonyTheTiger I've seen Scott give (the first version of) this talk in Stuttgart. (Well, and I reviewed his slides before that, so I was somewhat prepared.) He's really great to have something explain to you. A natural explainer. And entertaining and funny. Makes you enjoy listening to someone all day long.
He also takes any question from the audience and tries to answer it. If he doesn't know it right away (and who would?), he researches during breaks, or in the evenings. I once got a question from him which he wrote on the plane while coming back. He had taking the email address of the guy who asked (and everybody else who was interested), and promised to answer the question.
Hey guys, I suggested C++ 0x as a devdays topic in meta, please upvote: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/88052/what-topics-would-you-like-to-learn-at-devdays-2011/89847#89847
@DougT Haha, and because of the popularity of this room, and the notoriety of its regulars, this will get upvoted enough for them to actually include some C++11 stuff. Only then nobody will show up, because this room's popularity (and the notoriety of its inhabitants) doesn't correlate at all to C++' popularity on SO.
@DougT But what if you had lost all but one finger... and the stupid government made you use the same finger to do all five fingerprints on their fingerprint file.
@StackedCrooked There's nothing we could do. You just didn't give us all the information. Although you didn't go around saying we weren't smart enough to figure it out.
@TonyTheTiger I don't know yet. They wanted me to take a C++ test. They said I should schedule 3-5hrs, but I took a 2hrs lunch break and answered it, and then added a discussion in a comment explaining what i think was wrong with the test. :)
@StephenCanon I'm not searching desperately. Actually, I wasn't searching at all. So I just thought it can't hurt to do that as an exercise.
Interview all day long with people asking me stupid questions, sure. Test, no. At least in an interview I can tell them why their questions are stupid to their face =)
@TonyTheTiger Really, you would. I needed to write a function that took a C string and counted the number occurrences of a certain substring. And one that replaced all occurrences with another string. No big deal. The only tricky thing about it is the memory handling for the string replacement.
@StephenCanon Yeah, really annoying. But they put those two functions into a class (MyClass), so that's probably their excuse for making it a C++ question.
I turned the thing on its feet and wrote a function templates that take any sequence, plus any other sequence, and count the occurrences using std::search(); and one taking three sequences, and replacing all occurrences of the second one in the first with the third, writing the result to an output iterator.
I also threw in a bit of C array size deduction using templates. :) I suppose there's a good chance they won't understand it and reject me for being overly clever. :)
@Xeo I've been working in this industry for almost 15 years, and in all that time I met less than a dozen developers whom I would trust to have a close look at this and understand what it's doing.
@TonyTheTiger Well, the only trick is that you mustn't replace in-place, because you don't know where those strings are, and whether you could write to them. Well, only in this case they were providing me with string literals, so I knew I'd invoke UB when I'd write to them. However, since on many platforms you might get away with it, they might not even know this. :( Another reason to reject my solution, then. :)
@Xeo When I kept nagging Scott to not to drop the TMP item in the 3rd edition of EC++, he forwarded me an email from another reviewer to shut me up. It said "What's a 'Singleton'?" I think he said this was one of the professional programmers AW selected (and paid) for reviewing his book.
Only he failed to shut me up with it. I kept nagging him, and I kept sending him examples to use to explain the matter. That turned into what's now Item 48 "Be aware of template metaprogramming". :)
Wow, 25 users logged in at GMT evening time in the middle of the week. That might not be a first, but I think it does stand out. If only you guys wouldn't confuse me with a solo entertainer! Hullo? Are you out there? Anybody listening?
@sbi Your statements seem ambiguous. Do you mean I'm confusing you for a sole entertainer, or that the sole entertainer I've provided is getting you confused?
@sbi : Don't worry. My code failed a code review one time when I was coding in COBOL, because the senior programmer couldn't understand my loops (which had their condition at the end). I tried to explain that the loop code would occur at least once (and most often ONLY once), but they made me move the condition to the beginning.
@sbi : At my company, we use COBOL as a front end, which compiles into C (using a custom compiler). This C code interfaces with an MFC C++ backend which generates the GUI from binary data (blob) built by a screen designer we wrote.