@RMartinhoFernandes Thanks for the answer in my topic. I have another questions "Why does it look like not a DHCP packet?" , I have built the struct from RFC, each size of field in byte was checked and also the values of these fields.
@sbi You're stricter than my debugger. Are you my debugger? ;-) I meant any template related questions -- the sort with which I've been torturing everyone here lately.
@Olumide It's on the good book list stackoverflow.com/questions/388242/…, but like Luc said, it's bound to get an update sometime in the foreseeable future.
@Olumide That book is definitely not an easy read, which I at least partially blame on it not being written to be very entertaining. But it's very hot stuff, that's for sure.
@Olumide I have that one. I like it, but I've seen some people here complaining about it being a bit hard to understand. I'm not sure if that's due to the way it's written, or to the complexity that is inherent to templates.
I've been reading if for about 6 months now and I'm still on page 137. Sometimes I get stuck on a page for weeks. The SFINAE paragraphs took almost 2 months to get past. BTW get past != completely understand.
On the other hand those books I read were indeed about 'old' best practices. Since I understood that from the start though I still learned the 'lessons' of whatever the at-the-time best practices solved.
guys, Hi! i am very new to this SO chat( but not in SO) so, not sure if I can get quick knowledge transfer here..especially i cant hold back myself from asking as I see sbi, DeadMG, Xeo, Martinho all are here :)
@LucDanton I know the latin alphabet, the entire greek alphabet (both transliteration and pronounciation), and a little of the Cyrillic alphabet. But I don't understand Greek nor any language that uses Cyrillic.
@LucDanton I remember the "-ИЙ" suffix as something common in Russian. (Take that with a grain of salt, though. It's a few decades ago that I had Russian lessons, I never liked them, I was in serious need of speaking Russian only once, and that's 15 years ago.) I think we mostly don't transcribe it.
I would like to perform the same operation on several arrays, something like:
#include<vector>
#include<algorithm>
int main(void){
std::vector<double> a, b;
for(auto& ab:{a,b}) std::sort(ab.begin(),ab.end()); // error
}
This code fails, since auto& is a const...
@Xeo Your explanation in the comment to that linked question is non-sensical as the range-expression in a range-for is never bound to the iteration variable. The elements are.
Oh yeah, I remembered another reason why I want range-based <algorithm>s, not iterator based ones - the range-bases ones work with tuples (assuming a fitting functor)
There could be two things that are being tried here: one is to sort the two vectors independently like in sort(a.begin(), a.end()); sort(b.begin(), b.end());, but there are more than two, so a loop with an initializer list would be sweet. Another is that the vectors are related and you want to keep the relative order of elements (i.e. structure of vectors instead of vector of structures).
@RMartinhoFernandes The OP is asking "This code fails, since auto& is a const-reference. Is there an elegant way around it?" and I wanted to express that his or her reasoning is incorrect, but that doesn't mean the code works.
Remark: operator() is described for exposition only. Implementations are not required to provide an
actual reference_wrapper::operator(). Implementations are permitted to support reference_-
wrapper function invocation through multiple overloaded operators or through other means.
This is a question about whether we can meaningfully divide Undefined Behaviour into useful categories. Please note this is not about what the standard specifies, but what must happen that it doesn't specify.
Exhibit A:
int x; // Step 1
x = x; // Step 2
Exhibit B:
void run (Foo * foo, int * ...
> @Spraff - The standard is all that we have to rely on when producing portable code. Just a little UB is more like being slightly pregnant. – Bo Persson 4 mins ago [emphasis mine]
@RMartinhoFernandes to be fair, a compiler could choose to provide extra guarantees not required by the standard - it'd just be another non-portable extension
I have a class that has some data members that I want to be hidden from the caller (because including the headers for their types significantly increases the compile time, and it would require every project using this class to add an additional path to their include paths).
This class uses QSha...
using boost::transform; using boost::stop_whining;
Are YOU looking for a way to further your power of expression? LOOK NO FURTHER!! Switch to Boost.Range and you may see a reduction in verbosity of up to 20% or more!
hello guys! the other day, i received valuable hints from you for using the struct `stat()`, however it seems to be that the way I'm using it to check whether a file exists or not, is not correct. Could you pls have a look at the following function? http://pastebin.com/tsy6rTcU More specifically, the problem is that even some files are physically stored, it doesn't find them (line # `35`)
> SFINAE drops you back in the thick of things fast. Taken as directed, SFINAE speeds relief to head and stomach. Remember: SFINAE is only seconds away. Avoid prolonged use.