You can use std::enable_if to make your own handy compile-time range testing class:
#include <iostream>
#include <type_traits>
using namespace std;
template<int Start, int End, int Val, class Enable = void>
struct crange { };
template<int Start, int End, int Val>
struc...
str==NULL tells you whether the pointer is NULL.
str[0]=='\0' tells you if the string is of zero-length.
In that code, the test:
if ((str == NULL) || (str[0] == '\0'))
is used to catch the case where it is either NULL or has zero-length.
Note that short-circuiting plays a key role here: T...
@EthanSteinberg Initially, I thought it was the functional part that killed me. But I'm fine with Mathematica - which is also a functional language... so...
In that case, if you include revisits, then mine really is: Mathematica -> TI-Basic -> Matlab -> C++ -> Java -> C -> x86 assembly -> C++ -> x64 assembly
x86 assembly is a little interesting. I only once coded a tiny windows notepad-clone in it using FASM, it was quite interesing. Loading all the *.DLLs manually, using their native methods etc.
@IntermediateHacker My progress: C++ -> PHP -> Java -> C#. Did some SPARC assembly and some Scheme. Currently trying to learn Python, but my laziness does not help.
I never got the point of being able to write entire programs in assembly. Only enough to read it fluently and write inline assembly with loops and such.
@EtiennedeMartel nice, you learned all the mainstream languages first. Python isn't that difficult, you'll need mostly a day or two to grasp its syntax.
@EtiennedeMartel just get an IDE like eclipse etc. Randomly standard library import modules and check them out using Code-Completion. That's what I did.
WCHAR * temp = L"HelloWorld"; LPWSTR xml = temp; std::wcout << *xml << std::endl; // It is just printing first character 'H'. Its understandable but how to print the entire sequence. Why is this behavior different from std::cout
That project has bloated itself to almost 400k lines now since I'm rewriting most of it. But it'll should shrink down to ~150k once it's done and I clear out all the old junk.
@cHao Yep, that's exactly what I did. I wrote a ton of little things that were self-contained and self-satisfying. Then I started putting them together to make a bigger project.
@SethCarnegie That was the same with me during the first 3 months. Then it started to get really old. Every one in a while, something exciting will happen (such as the x = x++ question). But it still got boring. And after I finally missed a repcap over Thankgiving, I started to pull back. By that time I had 2 Guru badges and so I started focusing my attention to looking for good questions that are capable of getting a lot attention.
Though I'm actually pretty surprised now. I've only seen 1 dumb question go 100+ since November. They were happening every other week back in October...
@SethCarnegie Now that my repwhoring days are over. I guess I can start spilling my secrets...
I use an autorefresher. Mods, if you see this (and there's 5 of you in the room right now), please don't ban me. Nearly all of my good answers are also because of this.
Auto-refresher set to a 5-second timer on a seperate monitor.
I bumped into this strange macro code in /usr/include/linux/kernel.h:
/* Force a compilation error if condition is true, but also produce a
result (of value 0 and type size_t), so the expression can be used
e.g. in a structure initializer (or where-ever else comma expressions
aren't per...
Would something like:
classname* p = new classname(parameter1, parameter2, ...);
create a pointer that points to an object initialized using a non-default constructor with signature: classname(parameter1, parameter2, ...)?
Thanks!
I saw a line of C that looked like this:
!ErrorHasOccured() ??!??! HandleError();
It compiled correctly and seems to run ok. It seems to like it's checking if an error has occurred, and if it has, it handles it, but I'm not really sure what it's actually doing or how it's doing it. It does loo...
Here is the perplexing code I found myself writing for this posting:
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
using namespace std;
cout << 45 +~ 3 + 1 << endl;
}
IT PRINTS 42!
But why?
And why did I include the "pc" tag for this question?
I was looking over some mock OCJP questions. I came across a really baffling syntax. Here it is.
class OddStuff {
public static void main(String[] args) {
boolean b = false;
System.out.println((b != b));// False
System.out.println((b =! b));// True
}
}
Why does ...
> Not SO proper. Go there for programming questions. For help with other issues, try dialling 911. This is not a helpdesk, and we offer no service guarantees.
Now I understand why the room-owners wrote that in the caption.