@Luc regarding last night's discussion, would the definition of "multibyte character" on §1.3.13 ("sequence of one or more bytes representing a member of the extended character set of either the source or the execution environment") answer this? chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/10?m=5919395#5919395
> If ps is a null pointer, each function uses its own internal mbstate_tobject instead, which is initialized at program startup to the initial conversion state; the functions are not required to avoid data races with other calls to the same function in this case.
Haha, no. Zero-init is = { 0 };. A stray mention of mbstate_t suggests that this is indeed appropriate, although I'll keep looking for the exact requirements/description of mbstate_t.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sadly, no. I don't have enough PHP, (praise be the Lord), to wind them up myself. I'll leave it to the experts. You have the idiom right, though:)
The functions c32rtomb and mbrtoc32 are described in the C Unicode TR (draft) as performing conversions between UTF-321 and "multibyte characters".
(...) If s is not a null
pointer, the c32rtomb function determines the number of bytes needed to represent
the multibyte character that cor...
Another way to formulate your question is "is it conforming that the result be encoded with UTF-8 even if this does not correspond to the current locale", I think.
> The final draft, N1570,[4] was published in April 2011. The new standard passed its final draft review on October 10, 2011 and was officially ratified by ISO and published as ISO/IEC 9899:2011 on December 8, 2011, with no comments requiring resolution from participating national bodies.
You know what's annoying? These things were described in a ISO TR in 2004, and eight years past, no compiler has them yet (ok, maybe libc++, I haven't tried).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well they have their uses. Example: My mum was never able to use a computer, she just got confused, now she has an iPad and it enabled her to surf the web and use email. Perfect and valid use of a tablet.
it's just a really low level concept somehow brought into higher level languages
user1182183
@Neil I always used goto to make many random values and make sure none is the same, however if only 2 values then if the second value is the same I always do -1 if value => 2 or else +1
@jalf oh I know you can do very powerful shit with it, but you still don't need to write an OOP to run a few backup commands... unless you have a seriously crazy back up system :P
@thecoshman My backup/restore system has classes for backup to different stream types, including backup/transfer to another, identical app on another, reachable, machine.
@rvalue In Portuguese we have this expression about "having one's feet firmly set on earth" meaning that one is grounded in reality. I was going to make a joke out of that. Is there something similar in English?
@ScottW My valuable data is actually flying to different parts of the universe on old fashioned vinyl phonographs.
This way, any extra-terrestrial intelligence will obviously notice the relevance and make sure (a) I get salvaged from the crumbling remains of the rock-that-once-was-Earth (b) I get my data back, in whatever usable media the other "species" is able to utilize.
@rvalue The user of other app has to accept the transfer - it is offered on a popup. It's useful to be able to clone a customer-in-trouble DB onto my box.
@thecoshman some people even call stack overflow a cloud app: hey, am I not the only one using SO as a backup server by storing 4K blocks of base64 encoded blobs inside post inside <!-- comments -->. Cloud storage FTW!
@rvalue The target app makes a backup of its own DB first. Mainly 'cos the transfer is not particualrly clever and is likely to majorly screw up if the connection to the source app is lost mid-way. This borks the target box 'cos it only has half a DB and won't start. Needs manual cleanup & local restore of the backed up files:(
@rvalue It's just not very clever at all, but it works, (mostly). The integrity of the database is maintained during the a transfer by documentation: 'UNPLUG THE CANBUS NETWORK AND DO NOT ENTER ANY DISPENSES WHILE THE TRANSFER IS IN PROGRESS' :)
@thecoshman Yeah, I feel your pain. We have a deeply recursive algorithm that chews tons of heap space in short-lifecycle objects that aren't used outside of the current iteration
what really baffles me, is how some of the code here is able to overflow the stack... Java hardly touches the stack, how can it overflow? The heap sure, it shits all over the heap, but the stack?
@thecoshman Backup is really simple for me, because I don't keep much digital baggage on my hard drives. No photographs, no important documents, no nothing. I have most things strewn all over the interwebs: code on GitHub/BitBucket/whatever, about 6 megs of text files and pictures on DropBox, save games on Steam. I think the only thing I backup to physical media are my SSH keys.
@rvalue Basically, they're two objects: the object itself, and a finalizer registration or something. And for obvious reasons one of them keeps a reference to the other.
@thecoshman When I really want to have an interesting discussion (which, believe it or not, happens sometimes here), I just drop the sarcasm talk because it's pointless