> A relaxed rule here is that standard-layout classes must have all non-static data members with the same access control. Previously these had to be all public, but now you can make them private or protected, as long as they are all private or all protected.
What changes for C++11?
Aggregates
The standard definition of an aggregate has changed slightly, but it's still pretty much the same:
An aggregate is an array or a class (Clause 9) with no user-provided constructors (12.1),
no brace-or-equal-initializers for non-static data members (9.2),...
> The member variable elems is shown for exposition only, to emphasize that array is a class aggregate. The name elems is not part of array’s interface.
> However, placement new is designed for internal buffers, which were themselves not allocated with new, which is why you shouldn't call delete on them.
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, something in that answer doesn't add up. Of course you should never call delete on something you constructed with placement new inside an existing buffer
I think I would move it into a separate namespace
namespace tricks {
using std::swap;
template <typename T, typename U>
void swap(T &t, U &u) noexcept(noexcept(swap(t, u)));
}
template <typename T>
void swap(my_template<T>& x, my_template<T>&...
In the example below, if we ignore the mutex for a second, copy elision may eliminate the two calls to the copy constructor.
user_type foo()
{
unique_lock lock( global_mutex );
return user_type(...);
}
user_type result = foo();
Now the rules for copy elision don't mention threading, but I...
I recently tried to explain to somebody how to become a C guru without being one myself. You know, the kind of guy which can respond to a simple answer like why a single loop so much slower than 2 loops by a wonderful response based on analysis.
In my opinion, this should be :
learn about alg...
It seems that C++ is undecidable because the implementation-defined template recursion limit has a loophole: operator-> drill-down is allowed to endlessly call different templates, but they aren't nested so the compiler isn't allowed to terminate.
Is this the only reason C++ grammar is undecidable?
It's possible there are other loopholes, such as recursion that occurs before or after instantiation. Are SFINAE conditions considered to be nested instantiations?
The return of operator->* represents a function in the process of being called, with the only missing parts being the parameters. Thus, you must return a functor that invokes the given function on the given object with the given parameters:
// PTMF = pointer to member function
template<cla...
buf is declared as static, meaning it retains it's value between calls to the function:
static matrix buf[max_matrix_temp];
i.e. it's not created on the stack as int i = 0; would be (a local variable), so returning a reference to it is perfectly safe.
This code is dangerous, because the memor...
I was perusing section 13.5 after refuting the notion that built-in operators do not participate in overload resolution, and noticed that there is no section on operator->*. It is just a generic binary operator.
Its brethren, operator->, operator*, and operator[], are all required to be no...
->
This is the only really tricky one. It must be a nonstatic member function, and it takes no arguments. The return value is used to perform the member lookup.
If the return value is another object of class type, not a pointer, then the subsequent member lookup is also handled by an operato...
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: No questions about asking questions. Violators will be shot. Survivors will be enlightened properly. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
my requirement is, when I input a number (say 01 - 100), I should be able to get the ASCII code value for that number.
Ex: 01 = A, 02 = B, 03 = C, so on...., 90 = Z, and if number is 91 = AA, 92 = AB, 93 = AC, etc...
All I could get from googling, etc...was to convert int to a char, get ASCII v...