but former and latter are in the same category as "thee" and "thy", they're quite worthless and it would be much easier just to say "first" and "second"
@Als That's not true. The devolved regions, and Ireland, do additionally speak other languages, but English is still the primary language of all of the British Isles
@RMartinhoFernandes An Expert™ on English from the current century, I never said I was an expert on historical English
yeah, I was just thinking do I mean Cyrillic or Celtic
well, I read what he said as implying that some British people do not speak English, as in, were never educated in the language and are incapable of speaking it, much like I can't speak Japanese
The Cyrillic script () or azbuka is an alphabetic writing system developed in the First Bulgarian Empire during the 10th century AD at the Preslav Literary School. It is the basis of alphabets used in various languages, past and present, of Eastern Europe and Asia, especially those of Slavic origin, and also non-Slavic languages influenced by Russian.
Cyrillic is derived from the Ancient Greek uncial script, augmented by ligatures and consonants from the older Glagolitic alphabet for sounds not found in Ancient Greek. It is named in honor of the two Byzantine Greek brothers, Saints Cyri...
@DeadMG Yes. Look at what I quoted. You replied to a specific chat message, with the precise words "that's not true". That is very specific, and what you said were wrong
@DeadMG you mean, in the time between reading Als' sentence and formulating your reply? That's some pretty speedy language evolution
and I guess it underlines my point that as I interpret your statement, any mistake made by any English language speaker is instantly and implicitly made officially correct english
@Als what? That according to @DeadMG, self-declared expert in English, anything said by an English speaker automatically becomes correct English? Yes, I said that was the only logical conclusion to his statement
I still think it's rather silly, but hey, I'm not the English speaker around here
oh, so what interfacing can you do then with B.P? I mean I read you write a class or library in C++ and call it from Python, but is that as far as it goes?
@TonyTheTiger I know a part of Boost that's NOT fun to experiment with... Boost.Graph. I'm sure there are some really good reasons why it's designed the way it is--people much savvier than I review this stuff. But I had a heck of a time figuring out how to use it and it's not used by a ton of people so just Googling around is not much help.
This is great. "Ok, I'll have to recompile my entire system. This will take like forever, so I'll just leave it running while I'm at work." I go to work, and I return home at the end of the day. The compilation had stopped about 10 minutes after it started.
But Meyers seems to be pretty insistent that a conforming new operator should always have an infinite loop calling the handler, until either the handler provides memory, or there's no more handler.
@KerrekSB Actually, I don't say anything about the implementation of the allocation/deallocation functions, I only speak about the syntax. And, within the operator overloading topic, I'd rather keep it so.
Well, I'll add a note at the top saying this explicitly. I'm willing to add links to good further material on the topic at the bottom, if someone provides them.
I see, that's OK, the FAQ article isn't a guide on how to write new operators, it just says what their signature would be if you wanted to write one. No problem.
@sbi I wish I had a digital version. I was looking for something yesterday to make my case in a debate against Tomalak concerning object lifetimes, but I couldn't find the passage by searching on paper :-(
@sbi How much is TCP relevant to the standard? Does one follow the other closely?
I'm pretty excited about EC++ 4th edition, with proper C++11 treatment. With all the cool new stuff, there's plenty of opportunity for entirely new chapters.
@sbi So the book is entirely standard compliant?
(Mmm, I don't think I have a digital copy of that one, either...)
@KerrekSB C++98, as I said. He didn't update it for C++03. I suppose, though, he'll release a new version for C++11.
@KerrekSB Ha, I haven't heard Scott talking about a c++11-compliant edition of EC++ at all, and knowing him I suspect he'll wait with writing a best-practices book until best practices have emerged. He's very thorough in researching all his topics.
@sbi I think someone mentioned in an interview (might have been Herb Sutter on a Channel9 Q&A on C++0x) that we should all wait for that :-) Maybe that was just optimism!
@KerrekSB Well, I agree to that: we shall have to wait for it. :)
Anyway, I couldn't find anything interesting regarding overloading new and delete in TCPL, 3rd, so I guess I must have read about it in earlier editions. (I'm pretty sure I remember Stroustrup having written about how to implement such beasts.)
I mean, clients could expect that if they have a magic new handler that makes more memory, then that should continue to work with replaced new operators, but apparently that's not mandated
@KerrekSB Based on the number of people who seem to ask questions without (apparently) having read a decent book on C++, I doubt it would make much difference.
@KerrekSB Only to the extent that it defines extern "C" and extern "C++", and leaves open the possibility that some other string in the quotes could be valid as well.
It does not, however, go into any detail about what either of those (or anything else in the quotes) really does.
I nominate "Erotic C++".
4
Anybody want to bet how long it'll take Tony to show up? :-)
I have a function taking a directory_entry, and I want to pass each entry in this for_each loop, through boost::bind, don't really know what variable to pass as the entry?
Please look at this code:
class A
{
int a;
};
Then add one more member to class A:
class A
{
int a;
int b;
};
In my huge solution when I add one more member to a class (like member b in class A) I get stack overflow error. I assume that this is somehow related to writing to not reserved dat...
@sbi: oh. it was just "Man of One Way" posting "kempe gött", which is sort of Swedish for "very good" about food. so i posted him a number of videos of people applying to be TV cooks, making chicken balls with spaghetti. it's also an example of extremely bad web design. all flash...
perhaps. i dunno about cpu usage. just that it's not linkable, and that it requires latest plugin, and that it's a malware vector, and that each such "page" has its own UI conventions
i think it would be nice if something like Mozilla XUL could be standardized
like a standard for Ajax apps where it's not part of standard that it must leak memory
@AlfPSteinbach Enough crappy pages don't use flash that it would be at least equally easy to blame HTML. Either can be used well or poorly -- the main problem is that most web designers are grossly incompetent at animation, movies, or viewers for either one.
@JerryCoffin Hm, I meant things like __cdecl and __fastcall. I was just thinking about signatures and function pointers, and the calling convention is part of that, but I couldn't see how that follows from the standard.
@AlfPSteinbach But extern "C" doesn't specify the calling convention, does it? Only the name mangling. You can still have __stdcall and __cdecl inside that.
@KerrekSB I think the standard is silent about what extern "X" really does, it only says that it allows to call functions declared as "X" from C++. It's possible to imagine a platform where extern "C" requires a different calling convention than C++ functions.