@TonyTheTiger That particular video took ages to load, really. I let it buffer while I did something else. Afterwards I saw the download option right below the tags.
@TonyTheTiger I dunno. Never saw it. And except for one person, I believe nobody else saw it either. It was just the first weird language I could think of. (That says something about the guy. I mean, we were just discussing Brainfuck.)
The thing is that T is a template parameter. When the template is first parsed (when the compiler encounters it first, no parameters given yet), the compiler knows nothing about T, so result_type is a "dependent type". It might be the name of a member function or a static member. That's why you need to slap a typename in front of that type: to tell the compiler to expect a type there, so it can parse negate() and check whether the code makes any sense.
@JohannesSchaublitb Uh oh. The syntax errors where the compiler is confused by not seeing a semicolon are the worst you can run into with C++. My students were always totally baffled when I explained to them why the compiler will complain about a missing semicolon by spitting out a very nasty and totally unrelated error message in a totally different header than the one where they forgot the ; at the end of a class definitions.
Those error messages are so unpredictable, so arbitrary, I was always looking forward to be the shiny knight saving them from a seemingly hopeless situation. :)
@TonyTheTiger You need to play with VC, which doesn't properly implement two-phase lookup, and gets this wrong, and accepts the most hilarious "code" in a template, only too make it explode right into the faces of the users of your oh-so-clever template library, sending you back to the drawing board, because you missed that illegal dependency, to appreciate the value typename.
@TonyTheTiger You forget the semicolon at the end of a class definition in one header. The compiler, expecting an identifier for an object of the just-defined class, will happily keep parsing to the in the next header (the end of a class definition is often the last thing in a header), where it encounters int f(), and wonders what the f is supposed to mean. So it tells you it encountered an f, where it expected a ; or a , (or some other clever message), not mentioning the class at all.
The first times this happened to me, it stole me incredibly amounts of time. I remember spending whole workdays trying to figure that out.
@Tony - I like the imagery. Especially after discovering that you can't access the filesystem on an iPad without jailbreaking it.
Okay, so I primarily came into development through web UI and JavaScript. Is it weird that I find Java overly rigid compared to C++? My coworker thinks I'm nuts. Granted I know less about C++ than Java which I'm clearly going to have subvert from it's typical paradigm somehow if I'm ever going to write an Android app.
What are the C++98/C++03 standard's and the C++0x future standard's exact rules for dominance in virtual inheritance?
I'm not asking for just the specific paragraphs, although I'm asking also for that (somewhere in section 10, I'd guess).
I'm asking also for the consequences of the standardeese...
@sbi It is a Quality of Implementation issue though. There's nothing preventing the compiler from inserting a do-nothing token at the end of every header. It could easily detect a missing semicolon, but e.g. Visual C++ does not.
@ErikReppen I agree, Java is a very rigid and inflexible language compared to C++. Of course, some people would say that Java has other advantages to make up for that (I don't think it does), but it's hard hard to dispute that C++ gives you more, and more varied, tools to solve problems
where java usually just tells you to define a deeper class hierarchy and write another 200 lines of boilerplate code
What's really frustrating is seeing all these Apple fans act like its a feature Apple is working hard to add any day now. More frustrating than that is trying out Honeycomb on a Samsung Tab and liking everything except for the embarrassingly clumsy swipe-action (minor detail). Thus I'm thinking C++. And robots. With whiskey. And hookers.
@jalf it means that a member name of a derived class that has a virtual base class hides a virtual base class member name, even if the virtual base class member name was also found directly by walking along an alternative path in the base classes tree
@JohannesSchaublitb probably just a generic programming thing. You can write code where, depending on template types, your cast may end up looking like that, so it'd better compile, even if it isn't useful in itself
What's happened to your typing, @Alf? I liked you much more when your typing didn't seem to imply you are a 17 year old script kiddie in desperate need of a new keyboard.
BTW, I cam across it (again) via this speech. which I thought would be a stark contrast to Steve's. It turned out it is, but not in the bad and silly way I thought it would.
@TonyTheTiger You laugh, but I gonna suffer for it badly, in a few hours when those pesky kids are tugging at my sheets.