@user635064 You could right-shift 8 bits, and then left-shift 8 bits. You'd normally prefer something like input & ~x0ff though. If you do the right-shift, you'll want (need) to cast to unsigned before the right shift.
@JerryCoffin One last question: I am looking at a programs memory, and I see the bits as: A2 42 D7 09 but when I %x this in C, I get: 0x9d742a2 , do you know why this happening?
@user635064 You're apparently using a little-endian processor (e.g., Intel), which means the first byte is treated as the least significant bits, the second byte as the next least significant, and so on. There are also big-endian processors (e.g., 68K, most RISCs) which would treat that sequence of bytes as 0xA242D709.
@JerryCoffin It's worth noting that the byte order actually is flipped in memory because of CPU enddianness. I like to remember little endian as an inverse mapping of the bye order between processor and memory.
@tanner Probably want to look at something like Qt or gtkmm. You can write code directly for X, but unless you're quite masochistic, you probably don't want to.
This is right; hap is a root that appears in many English words and its original meaning is indeed that of "good luck". It is traced back to Old Norse (the language spoken by the Viking invaders who entered the English scene during the 9th century.
In Old Norse, you would have these two words:
...
@RMartinhoFernandes he has now fixed it. and the subtle point of his fix-edit is that both parses generate a diagnostic, so both parses are valid in a way. but the other c++ parse is invalid because it won't generate a diagnostic
> Use tabs for indentation only. Don't align anything at all, even spaces are messed up for people using proportional fonts. [...] – ybungalobill10 mins ago
> Yes, of course the Generalizing Overloading for C++2000 that I wrote and published in the April 1998 issue of "Overload" is an April Fool's Joke. I hope you enjoyed it.
@RMartinhoFernandes He wrote the text, but he didn't type it into Acrobat. The version I had ten years ago, told who converted it to PDF in the PDF's meta data.
> When the 'Drink' button is pressed it makes an instant but highly detailed examination of the subject's taste buds, a spectroscopic analysis of the subject's metabolism, and then sends tiny experimental signals down the neural pathways to the taste centres of the subject's brain to see what is likely to be well received. However, no-one knows quite why it does this because it then invariably delivers a cupful of liquid that is almost, but not quite, entirely unlike tea.
@KianMayne Actually, there's a quite simple two-step explanation: 1) Tea doesn't taste well when processed by such a machine. 2) If you don't care, tea bags are simple enough.
I considered making one once, then decided against it because the solutions i came up with like getting sugar into the mixing section, were quite rube goldberg solutions
@DeadMG When I got my girlfriend to try tea for the first time, she said it tasted like broccoli water :L
Anyway, the sun is shining for a change. I need to buy some groceries, and then I'll spend the rest of the day outside, I guess. If the weather stays like this, I might even stay in the garden overnight. I guess using WWW-powered chat might not work over UMTS, so I'll probably be offline tonight.
Sometimes it's a bit disheartening - you can answer C++ questions all day long and get one upvote per post, but if you answer one silly JavaScript question you get tons of votes... Only to be outdone by the question about 0 being octal, I suppose...
I've never used Java, but I just don't like the idea of having to load a huge runtime every time I want to run a tiny bit of code for the sake of being able to use it anywhere
@KianMayne Apparently it's great for code generation tasks -- a friend of mine wrote a webserver in Lisp which is super fast, and it also supports lispy code generation in a highly intuitive and expressive fashion. I guess that's what you call "domain specific language", and Lisp excels at creating those...
@KianMayne I'll probably go for it, because it's otherwise a very fine opportunity, but I got a bit nervous about C#'s casual conflation of references and values, and how you can cause a dynamic allocation without even noticing...
@KianMayne Oh, I don't have .NET 4.0 on my Windows, but when I looked into installing VSE10 it required 1.8GB, in large parts due to its need to install .NET 4.0. At that point I gave up...
@jalf I've been puzzling ever since whether C++ and C# really have the same level of explicitness in their syntaxes... of course, in C++ you can have typedefs to references and converting constructors... but somehow I felt that in C# you can create references without "feeling" it in the syntax.
@RMartinhoFernandes But those are not just low-level worries. If I say y = x and then modify y, I want to know whether that affects x or not. I got a strange feeling that in C# you might fall into some traps there.
in the end, I don't really think one is worse than the other. But definitely different flavors, and it's kind of unfortunate that they look so similar on the surface
@RMartinhoFernandes In C++: int x; int & y = x; y = 5; That changes x.
@RMartinhoFernandes I wish I could use C++/CLI. I'm sort of curious about those managed gadgets, but I think C++/CLI is very neatly designed, so that everything would "feel" right.
Having a reference doesn't mean you can change the original object. All names in Python are references, for example, but with x = 42; y = x; y = 69 you don't change x, you rebind the name to another object.
I decided to do a test with computed gotos and local statics
void g() { std::cout << "init "; }
void f() {
int z = 0;
y: z++;
static int x =
(g(), z == 1 ? ({ goto *&&y; 0; }) : 0);
}
int main() { f(); std::cout << "!"; f(); }
I wanted to see whether the ou...
But with C++ I find it hard to get my head around all the calls to the windows things (well I did about a year ago, haven't really looked back recently)
and admittedly, this chunk of code is getting a bit bulky. A lambda to be called from a scope guard's destructor, which in turn calls 3 or 4 for_each instances each with its own lambda