I got very disappointed with how my degree turned out to be. In half of the courses I learned very little. Another half was physics and economics and other stuff like that. There were very few courses I really liked.
@JohannesSchaublitb depends on what you mean by "constant", I guess. Normally, I'd say that it's not constant if it can be changed, whether or not you actually change it on any given object
but yeah, that's where the metaphor falls down. It might be better to compare it to objects vs values. An object contains a value, and can be updated to store a different value. But any given value is inherently constant
@hexa: It's type-safe without unified type hierarchies, which is by far and away the best option
C only has the PLEASE OVERFLOW MY BUFFERS AND UNDEFINE MY BEHAVIOUR printf and Java only has PLEASE OVER-USE INHERITANCE AND CALL FUNCTIONS I DIDN'T WANT's Object
@DeadMG I've seen it... in a C++ class where the teacher showed how convenient it is to overload operator+, and then promptly gave it the semantics of operator+=.
Of course, the types it operated on were polymorphic so it had to do a shaddy double dispatch and leak memory.
the c++ teacher in our UNI told us that "global" operator functions are "deprecated, only left for compatibility with prestandard C", and that one should prefer member function operators
For instance if the Standard uses a phrasing such as "the dereferenced pointer shall be initialized to a valid object, or the behaviour is undefined" then that makes it illegal.
@ÓlafurWaage Meh. I could informally say that 'legal' means allowed by the Standard, but that's not saying much. Still, the ISO document that gives guidelines for the usage of words like 'shall', 'must', 'must not' etc goes a long way already.
Can template<template<typename...> class Template, typename... T> struct base<Template<T...>>; match base<const std::tuple<>>? I'm testing it right now but just in case.