@sbi I'm with you. Yesterday I left my gloves off (after fixing a broken chain on my bycicle arggg) and it was ok! I think it was about -7 then. Yesterday morning it was -14 :)
oh, it didn't actually break. It derailed and jammed. Hard.
One issue I can see is that your pair has a dependent name, so it's defintion should be:
typedef typename pair<const V,V> ePair;
I think you need to prefix your ePair with because it also has a dependent name in it:
G<class V, class E>::ePair<const V,v> e(a,b);
Sometimes I see code like
let (alt : recognizer -> recognizer -> recognizer) =
fun a b p -> union (a p) (b p)
Or like:
let hd = function
Cons(x,xf) -> x
| Nil -> raise Empty
What is the difference between fun and function?
> C++ uses pointers and have memory leaks , where java doesn't have pointers and there are no memory leaks (although there are logic memory leaks,I think) ..
Before my exam in the following week on advanced programming , I've tried to think of the main
differences between Java and C++ .
From my experience with both languages :
C++ uses pointers and have memory leaks , where java doesn't have pointers and there are no memory leaks (although there ...
@RMartinhoFernandes What's happened to your GPS module, robot?
Anyway, had a 1.5hr meeting. Now we go to have lunch and keep discussing the issues, then I'll have another meeting, probably longer than the first one. Then it will probably be beer'o'clock, and I won't have written even a single LoC yet. I hate those days.
I have been taking Advanced Placement Computer Science for this past year in high school. It seems as though we are taught simply to memorize code and functions and not how to be resourceful and efficient in using documentation and the like.
Practically, I imagine many (if not all) programming j...
Okay, I've got a Base class whose inherited attribute includes a variable called fontWidth. The font width determines the number of characters that can be printed per line. This is hardcoded information. The derived class has a method getMaxNumPrintableChars( _width ) ...
... I would like getMaxNumPrintableChars() to behave as follows. If no width argument is given the currentFont is used to look up the number of printable characters. Otherwise if font width is given it is used to perform the lookup ...
@FredOverflow the fontWidth variable is protected.
@Olumide excellent SO question material. It doesn't work here, since we'd have to be pulling information out bit by bit and it will be scattered across several pages of chat
Can the no-arg version (in the base class) call the arg version in the derived class? The arg version is specific to the derived class. Each derived class has its own arg version.
Thanks guys. I'll try it. By the way. `getMaxNumPrintableChars` is called by an instance of the derived class. (The constructor of Base class is protected.)
@FredOverflow Static assertions like that can go in the class body in C++11, I believe, so you can just static_assert(std::is_base_of<T, Base<T>>::value, "T must derive from Base<T>!");
@FredOverflow I'm working on a MWE. I've got to extract it from my code. (My employer is very emotional about having bits of our code apper online. He even freaked when my error message contained a path that identified the company by name.)
@DeadMG Oh, it doesn't seem to be an infinite loop, just a very long loop. It just told me that static_assert was a C++0x feature. Forgot to set it to C++0x :)
By the way, if you're only ever going to call Foo from the derived classes, then you don't need the virtual disptach, and the CRTP approach as described by @DeadMG is preferable.
@DeadMG One underscore followed by a lowercase letter is fine unless at namespace scope, right?
But I just don't see why you would want to start parameters names with an underscore.
@DeadMG I just realized that static_assert isn't really necessary, because the static_cast will fail cleanly when providing the Base template with nonsense :)
error: invalid static_cast from type 'Base<int>*' to type 'int*'
@Olumide Two consecutive underscores are always reserved, everywhere.
Welcome to undefined behavior land and enjoy your visit!
// make all classes protected to allow inheritance
// private should only be used if absolutly needed
Worst advice ever. The person who wrote this coding standard obviously has no idea about object oriented programming. Please tell him to read about the "fragile base class" problem.
If you don't want the using, simply change the name of the one-arg function to something else. You don't really gain anything by naming both Foo, do you?
In C++, will a member function of a base class be overridden by its derived class function of the same name, even if its prototype (parameters' count, type and constness) is different? I guess this a silly question, since many websites says that the function prototype should be the same for that...
> A member of a derived class will, by default, make any members of base classes with the same name inaccessible, whether or not they have the same signature.
@Olumide Because name mangling is only relevant on the linking level. It has absolutely nothing to do with name hiding.
So a member functionFoo can even hide a member variableFoo from the base class.
It's just how name resolution in nested scopes works.
Copy that ... "a member of a derived class will, by default, make any members of base classes with the same name inaccessible, whether or not they have the same signature."
@DeadMG >"private should only be used if absolutly needed" well i used to be of that opinion, because MS stuff generally lacked customization points so that e.g. you had to copy and modify the whole print dialog thing for MFC. I also advocated making functions virtual by default. Now I think that that is akin to socialist thinking, i.e. relieves symptoms momentary but exacerbates the root problem. Not that I'm much in for conservative either. :-)
@Olumide looking at the project layout, it seems to require having source files in the same general storage place as object code files and other transitory tool ejecta
@Xeo for best results do not rely on any particular tab size. default is 8 in nix and Windows console, and 4 in Windows source code. but don't rely on it. relying on a particular tab size is ungood for code that isn't completely system-specific. it will just jumble up the code for others.
e.g. the boost library sensibly requires tab-free code