Oh. Yes, then, but the syntax of LC is sort of secondary to the semantics. Semantically, you can rename any variable to a unique ID, and shadowing doesn't change that.
Why do you think you need to implement a pure spinlock? Spinlocks have problems that must be solved using assembly. Some architectures provide assembly primitives which you must access that way.
@FredOverflow I was reading it and found that it uses the maths terribly :(, So I was gonna ask you some good discrete maths book to you since you're the professor :)
Synchronisation is requires for complex stuff that you cannot control at a finer-grained level. Atomics are preferable when you have concurrent access, but they are more expensive than non-atomics of course.
So you wouldn't just make everything atomic, because that'd be ridiculous.
However, any sort of mutex data structure will actually need to be implemented in terms of something atomic, if you think about it.
Not just if you think about it — if you look inside one. However, that's not a logical necessity, as it's possible to make a really bad mutex using just a spinlock and preemptive multithreading.
@KerrekSB & Potatoswatter: : ohhk.. thanks I got it. I completely misunderstood spinlock definition and got more confused when saw a assembly level implementation of the same which looked more or less like a lock free implementation..
@KerrekSB Also, someone who can walk into a place like SO and be so clueless about their environment… he's gonna have his hands full coping with a bunch of teenage nerds.
@Mihaela parr point to the first element of the array, and parr + 1 points to the next element by definition. There isn't any more explanation than this I'm afraid.
@Mihaela - it's actually good to ask anything you feel is "unexpected" in C++ - due to its multi-paradigm nature and its still-mutating specs over 30 years, it's better to find out for certain than to assume too much in C++ (safer to ask/investigate)
even books you read on C++ may be out-dated, the language has been around for so long
Umm.. I have A.D.D. but the second paragraph has the information
on why I'm endorsing an offline NAME change, instead of offline SKIN change.
Also paragraphs will have a number from 1 to 5 of relevance but...
probably will need to read it all, well here goes.
[3.76] BRAIN STORMING/STORYTELLING...
procedure testVoidPtr; var varr : Pointer; // void *varr Arr : array[0..2] of integer; //int arr[3] i : integer; begin for i := 0 to 2 do Arr[i] := i + 10; varr := @Arr[0]; for i := 0 to 2 do begin WriteLn(Format('%d = %d', [i, Integer(varr^)])); inc(Integer(varr), sizeof(Arr[0])); //cast varr as integer, not *int end; end;
in c++ the closer I came to this is :
void testVoidPtr() { int arr[3] = {10, 11, 12}; void *varr = &arr[0]; for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++) { cout << i << " = "<< *(int*)varr << endl; //typecasting
Sorry about the paste site. The point is to have a void pointer. Like in Pascal when I declare ptr: Pointer, it can be pointer to anything. That's what I want to know how to do in C++.
I've just started learning C++, and would like to know how to do things I do in Pascal, in C++. Sorry where is the paste site?
I know. I will probably never use it. I just want to know how to do it. So when I want to go to the next element of array (for example, if my ptr points to array) I would have to use + sizeof(whatever).
Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a good C++ book. It is way too big and complex for doing this. In fact, it is so big and complex, that there are many bad C++ boo...
@EtiennedeMartel Do you reckon we ought to make that a sticky? It comes up at least 3 times a day lately
it might even be able to preempt a lot of needless back-and-forth that culminates in the eternal question "Is there a recommended book for (starters|the curious|learning templates|c++11 features)"
Oh and that entire side of the book shelfs (floor to ceiling) is programming related (but as you can see it also stores my media and some spare cables). Granted that includes my 'Killer Borland C++ 4' and 'WIN32 API' bible, and 'Modula-2' , 'Prolog', and even (gasp) 'Van BASIC naar PASCAL' (guess what means).
Oh and by horrendous mistake "Exceptional C++" is in German translation :) LOL. It was ok after 30-50 pages. That should be apparent form the fact that the cover is oriented from bottom to top instead of the other books
ahh... ...Prolog - haven't heard mention of that language for decades
iirc - you put constraints on the system and then Prolog will find a solution? I remember writing simple constraints so the Prolog system can solve the problem by instructing a monkey to place various items on top of each other to reach a hanging banana, for example...
@sbi It is the children's version. I have two kids <6 yrs and cramped for shelf space (I have 2 movers boxes of them stuffed away because there isn't enough room left)
@LucDanton Make sense of the avatar? Well, Pratchett has Alzheimer, and cannot type anymore, and this Rob guy, from what I understood, is his secretary. This has been his avatar for a while, I think.
@TonyTheLion I'd be in favor of that. Better yet, link to the FAQ.
Mhmm. That said, don't we already do this?
No, indeed not. Would you add a section on that, @Tony?