even though I think that logically, it should be quite trivial for me to come up with structures that describe the semantics of my language, types & etc, it's actually just not happening for me
I was running my code under debug mode in VS2010 and it catched a nice error about invalid operator< which wasn't a strict weak ordering. Is there a way to catch these errors in libstdc++ on Linux or such conservative checks are only a feature of visual studio 2010?
I was running my code under debug mode in VS2010 and it catched a nice error about invalid operator< which wasn't a strict weak ordering. Is there a way to catch these errors in libstdc++ on Linux or such conservative checks are only a feature of visual studio 2010?
@Collecter nah, it's not my code I'm annoyed at. The moving company who have all my stuff in storage won't bring it out to my new apartment until monday
I've been thinking about how to manage objects that represent types
the problem is that a type can directly or indirectly use itself
so I can't just share the ownership by reference counting
but I also can't just store them, like, as a position in a namespace or something
I mean, what about anonymous types and stuff
especially since I'm allowing stateful compile-time functions, with objects and stuff, so there's no guarantee at all that any type T is the same just because I called the same function with the same arguments
unlike templates
maybe I should just write it in C#? :P
maybe I should make the users of the functions manage the memory
maybe I would just never de-allocate them during compiling, I mean, the compiling take several passes anyway and I could just ditch them at the end of the pass
maybe I could make them ordinary value types and managing the memory of types is the user's problem, like any other
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If you only know functions, classes, and namespaces, I'd say you're at beginner level. If you like learning I have good news: there's still have a lot for you to learn.
A simple (and perhaps overused) example of RAII is a File class. Without RAII, the code might look something like this:
File file("/path/to/file");
// Do stuff with file
file.close();
In other words, we must make sure that we close the file once we've finished with it. This has two drawbacks -...
RAII This is a strange name for a simple but awesome concept. Better is the name Scope Bound Resource Management (SBRM). The idea is that often you happen to allocate resources at the begin of a block, and need to release it at the exit of a block. Exiting the block can happen by normal flow con...
I've come across a slight problem for writing memory management with regard to the internal representation of types in a compiler for statically typed, complex languages. Consider a simple snippet in C++ which easily demonstrates a type that refers to itself.
class X {
void f(const X&) ...
I witnessed something like that last week. Someone asked about stack underflows in C++, and a guy decided that he was asking about stack overflows, and exemplified a stack overflow, with code that really didn't exemplify it. In Java.
Also, a memory leak implies losing the ability to release the memory, which is not the your case (hopefully). Having a large footprint may be a problem, but it's not a leak.
I'm used to memory management being done behind the scenes as extensions.... instead of built into the language... so it never occured to me that memory management would have to parse object.
anyway, I realized that this might present a massive problem for me, which is that I could no longer guarantee that, for example, std::vector<int> == std::vector<int>
but I figure that instead of polling each type individually, you'd just connect once, generate all the types at once, and then return a container of them
honestly? It really pisses me off, the ORM designer for LINQ, because you have to manually update it every time the DB changes