I'm not so self-assured that I am always right and am always happy to be corrected (and therefore educated); so a down-vote without explanation leaves me wondering what it was I missed.
std::deque seems to meet all of your requirements.
If performance is a real issue for you, you should read GMan's answer to Pre-allocate space for C++ STL queue .
Good questions and answers should always be above 8 IMHO. One just needs to read the little "tooltip" that pops up when hovering over the upvote button
People on SO mostly upvote because "this is what I needed!" or "hm, sounds interesting" or sometimes even "lulz, this is funny! +1"
Not for the reasons upvotes should really be given for
"appropriate" in the sense of "they answer whatever stupid thing the question asked for" or "they tell the OP the question is stupid but answer a little anyway"?
Taken from the C++0x FDIS (n3290):
If a lambda-expression does not include a lambda-declarator, it is as if the lambda-declarator were (). If a lambda-expression does not include a trailing-return-type, it is as if the trailing-return-type denotes the following type:
if the compound-s...
@Xeo I don't know what could be different, but the C# compiler will only fail to infer the return type of a lambda if it has various returns with inconsistent types.
Wait, there is one thing that is different. You cannot use implicitly typed variables with lambdas var x = () => 1;...
Because lambdas in C# can represent expression trees.
Good Evening,
I'm building a website which will will look something like this:
So probably a widget-centred web-framework would be best...
Which C++ web-framework supports cookies (for user-login [session] storage+config storage) and SQL (MySQL or SQLite)?
Thanks in advance for any suggestion...
Just one answer? Well
1.) No hardware implemented. They should be documented by the vendor, if not then microbenchmarking is an option.
2.) Hardware
3.) As pointed out above L1 cache has separate caches for data and instruction. There is also TLB for virtual memory.
4.) I attended a course l...
@Johannes: I found one of your mails way back from january 2009 and at the end you ask if the standard guarantees that everything is fine when passing in a 0 pointer to the constructor of ostream
@Johannes In case you didn't find out yet, take a look at this answer of mine, where I used your example class and then after that the research through the C++03 standard I made. :)
But it seems like I misunderstood it a little. ! is really magical as you suggested at first. It invokes the explicit conversion all by itself. The standard reads "Certain language constructs ...". I took this to mean if/while/for.
But the operators that work on bools (!, &&, ||, ?:, etc) also do this.
§5.14 and §5.15 mention the contextual conversion.
You may just replace cout by ostream(0) like
#ifdef NDEBUG
#define cout ostream(0).flush()
#endif
This way, it works with both std::cout and plain cout, and ostream is available when including <iostream>. Writing into a ostream(0) is a no-op. The flush function call is done so that you g...
That sentence explains that the effect is that of making the conversion, while the previous ones only explain whether the program is well-formed or not. I should have included it.
The rest of the paragraph I decided to exclude because I think it detracts from the point at hand.
In C++03, you need to use the safe bool idiom to avoid evil things:
int x = my_object; // this works
In C++11 you can use an explicit conversion:
explicit operator bool() const { return is_valid; }
This way you need to be explicit about the conversion to bool, so you can no longer do crazy ...
There are some interesting ambiguities here, though
like, int(f()) && noexcept(0); is ambiguous: it can mean: "declare f to be a function with ref-qualifier && and noexcept exception spec" and it can mean "logical-AND the result of the int(f()) cast with the noexcept operator"
This answer of @Martinho Fernandes shows, that the safe-bool idiom is apperently deprecated, as it can be replaced by a simple
explicit operator bool() const;
according to the standard quote in the answer 4 [conv] p3:
An expression e can be implicitly converted to a type T if and only if t...
> If, for example, you were writing an airline reservation system, make sure there are at least 25 places in the code that need to be modified if you were to add another airline. Never document where they are. People who come after you have no business modifying your code without thoroughly understanding every line of it.
anyone here ever use rackspace cloud? Trying to connect to mysql database and in an email I was sent this as the hostname: mysql50-33.wc2.dfw1.stabletransit.com, but it could not connect to that.
ok.....i have started studying C ,since last two months,&today at stackoverflow,i came to know that c++ is more preffered than C these days,would you help me to select an appropriate book for ir
This question has historical significance, but is not a good example of an appropriate question. Read and learn from this post, but please do not use it as evidence that you can ask similar questions.
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Provide QUALITY books and an approximate skill level. Add ...
if you want a series of (unique)integers to sum to a target, then even picking the smallest integers possible, there's going to be a point where you reach over the target
therefore, any series above that point mathematically can never sum to the target
I figure that this must impose a hard relation between the target T and the complexity resulting from the size of the input, N
That's pretty weird: it appears that in T t { expr0, ..., exprN }, the order of evaluation of the initializer expressions inside the braces is guaranteed. Even if T is a class and this results in a constructor call.
I checked on this while looking around for a way to (ab)use variadic template pack expansion.