@RMartinhoFernandes It's not terribly sexy imo (but I'm saying that because I'm eyeing Boost.Range). Still, an early proposal is the best way to get refinements.
@RMartinhoFernandes Haskell's id takes an x and gives you an x, whereas your id template takes a type and gives you a meta-function. Hence I think return makes more sense; it "wraps" the type in a meta-function returning that type.
@FredOverflow Yes, which means it's actually quite unlike std::make_tuple (assuming make_pair is a typo). std::tie, std::make_tuple and std::forward_as_tuple are the three tuple helpers with distinct and subtly different semantics.
I feel like I shouldn't have mentioned this treasure trove of proposals right before going to bed since it seems I will be missing interesting discussions. Oh well. Off I go.
> Today's state of the art in C++ generic and generative programming includes an increasing amount of introspection-driven code. C++11 acknowledges and encourages such powerful idioms; the header <traits> includes many introspection primitives new to C++11
lol, there is no such header, he probably meant <type_traits>.
(Note: tuple and tie can be taken from Boost or C++0x.)
When writing small structs with only two elements, I sometimes tend to choose a std::pair, as all important stuff is already done for that datatype, like operator< for strict-weak-ordering.
The downsides though are the pretty much useless...
JG Question 1. When should you use shared_ptr vs. unique_ptr? List as many considerations as you can. Guru Questions 2. Why should you always use make_shared to allocate objects whose lifetimes will be managed by shared_ptr? Explain. 3. What’s the deal with auto_ptr? Filed under: C++
I have seen tutorials that are using an array of characters in order to demonstrate something with a string object. For example thees tutorials:
http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/string/string/copy/
http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/clibrary/cstdlib/atoi/
I HAVE seen tutorials that are not u...
@RMartinhoFernandes If you want to, you should explain all the niceness of your id or equivalent alias template next time I have the time. You're so full of it ;)
but I'm outta here now
@Xeo that'd give MS a reason not to implement it...
Can an extern "C" function accept or return C++-specific data types, such as references, pointers-to-members, or non-POD classes (by value)? I cannot find anything in the C++ standard that forbids this. Logically, I would expect the standard to say something about it, as the C ABI is not necessar...
> In a 2008 chat, one employee noted that "we have a funny business... modern days [sic] pirates :)," to which the reply was, "we're not pirates, we're just providing shipping servies [sic] to pirates :)."
but there's no make_unique, is there? Pretty sure the official rationale for that was that it wasn't necessary, because it didn't give you anything you couldn't achieve otherwise just by writing sensible code
wjhereas make_shared actually allows you to avoid a relatively expensive operation
> (That C++11 doesn’t include make_unique is partly an oversight, and it will almost certainly be added in the future. In the meantime, use the one provided below.)