@TonyTheLion At one time 1 MB was a lot of RAM to have in a PC. It was more than would ever be needed according to Bill Gates. And now the OS alone requires 1 GB RAM, it can't function with less, and applications are more memory-hungry than the OS.
@sbi I do find text interspersed with bold italics all over a bit harsh on the eyes. Personal opinion aside, I find it rude to go and edit someone's answer just for the purpose of changing that. Let me express myself with my style.
@Rabenholz personally, i think it's silly to waste time on adapting STL algorithms, when you can just write a for loop or something. The directly written code is easier to understand and faster to produce. Plus it's generally also more efficient.
@Maxpm 1) Books become out-of-date quickly? Consider a book on C++03. It took 8 years for it to become out of date. 2) Web-based resources also become out-of-date.
I poke over old unanswered questions from time or time and if anything's been sitting around and I feel like I might get some awareness out of it, I'll try and learn enough to answer it.
So I learned Lua and poked around with VLC playlist parsing to answer this:
This seems like it should be simple, but I'm coming up empty handed here. I'm trying to make a simple VLC script that checks if the "random" button is on, and if so when it jumps to a random file, instead of starting at time=0, it starts at a random time.
So far, it's looking to me like it shoul...
I don't know if I can point to a single thing as "the problem" but instead of making languages that are syntax-compatible subsets of one that already exists people just make up new nonsense
@HostileFork Look in the source for gcc and you'll find not only C, but K&R C. Or at least it was that way. It's enough to make you wonder, what language is this?
why this code gives me 1 rather than 0?? a || b should give me 1 and 1 && 0 is 0, right? I don't think logical operations evaluated from right to left.
int main()
{
printf("%d\n", 1 || 1 && 0);
return 0;
}
Got downvoted by someone who claims the operator precedence is important there. The operator isn't evaluated because of short-circuiting. Hopefully my last comment clarifies.
@LucDanton - Well, I'm a fan of (large parts of) the fringe Rebol project's design. It's written in C and its "kernel" is closed source. But an open source fork of it is being pursued by people with more ambitious goals to bootstrap it through a "system dialect" that's a subset of Rebol chosen for the domain.
@AlfPSteinbach correct, but () have precedence over the other operators. They answered that && has higher precedence than ||, which is a correct assertion, but it doesn't matter for that example where the short-circuit takes place.
I mean consider if || had higher or same precedence as &&. Then the evaluation would be (1 || 1) && 0. With result 0. Different. Because of different precedence.
@AlfPSteinbach think as each operand as a function (returning the same values). f1, f2 and f3. Suppose || has higher precedence, then f1() || f2() && f3() would still be 1. f2 and f3 wouldn't be called.
no you don't need to convince me, you need to find out what's making you not see that you're wrong. i don't know because i've already given you the facts. there's some blind spot thing here.
ok let's say that f1() returns 1, f2() returns 1, and f3() returns 0. as in the OP example
and we let || have highest precedence
then
f1() || f2() && f3() is by precedence equivalent to (f1() || f2()) && f3()
in the first sub-expression short-circuiting comes into play, so f2 is not called
the result of first sub-expression is 1
this left operand prevents short-circuiting of the &&
Ahh! I just caught the source of mystery OS-sounding jingle noise on my machine! It's a malfunctioning power management feature in a VM...and the reason I never see anything is that it only kicks in when I have the window minimized or in the background.
PS1 is the variable used as the prompt. You can set it to anything. It can even be dynamic. A lot of people set it so that it is the current directory. See here cyberciti.biz/tips/…
Or hostname is popular if you use ssh a lot onto other systems.
@RMartinhoFernandes Two ways of writing generic code. Either specify up-front the requirements on types and then use that, or write the code and then figure out the tightest requirements that can make the code valid. Top-down vs bottom-up. Obviously you're using the first and there's nothing wrong with that, I just want to know if that requirements can be tightened out of curiosity.
I considered and discarded a circular list idea because of the need for a sentinel. I didn't want to add a DefaultConstructible requirement. But maybe I oversaw things a bit.
Just had an idea — overload operator() instead of operator[], and throw all the arguments into a single composed hash function. Then as well as a cache, you have a memoization functor adapter.
I am writing some code for data analysis, and have to exclude samples base on some criteria. In practice i end up writing code such as:
bool Test(SampleType sample)
{
if( ! SubTest1(sample) )
return false;
if( ! SubTest2(sample) )
return false;
if( ! SubTest3(sample) )
return f...
I need intrusion for functional reasons too. I need to obtain a list node (or an iterator if I were using a std::list) from a map iterator in the touch function.
> 24.2.1/5: Results of most expressions are undefined for singular values; the only exceptions are destroying an iterator that holds a singular value, the assignment of a non-singular value to an iterator that holds a singular value, and, for iterators that satisfy the DefaultConstructible requirements, using a value-initialized iterator as the source of a copy or move operation.
Just scanning the text, there's a mention that some aren't
@RMartinhoFernandes definitely. But I also feel kind of bad about it, because from everything I know, they're working their asses off. But when they apparently have one compiler guy, and one STL guy, is it any wonder they're falling behind? The number of supported feature is ridiculous, but I'm not sure it's fair to blame the VC++ grunts
then again, they're the ones sticking their heads out and communicating with users. Kind of hard to see who else this feedback should go to
Em, this is something baffling... I have a function in the base class that does something..but when I call that function from a derived object..the data of the variable int Base::x contains garbage..shouldn't it have used the x of derived class
@LucDanton Right… a declaration such as int *iter; is default construction. Although copying default-constructed (uninitialized) pointers is OK, that paragraph is asking for int_ptr iter = int_ptr(); for an appropriate typedef.