Anyway, now you can just do T x {}; and not bother ({} is value-init, doesn't call an initializer-list ctor... unless there's no other option, of course).
@StackedCrooked I only plan on using {} for initializing vectors and lists and such, other than that, I think it just confuses constructors. (until such time as someone convinces me otherwise)
@rubenvb there was a question a few days ago who wanted to construct a vector with two ones in it, so he called std::vector<int> myvec{2, 1}; and said it was misleading to say that {} were the universal replacement for constructors.
I've been playing around with C++11 for the past few days, and I came up with something strange.
If I want to uniformly initialize an int:
int a{5};
But if I do the same thing to a std::vector:
std::vector<int> b{2};
Does not construct a two element array, but rather an array with on...
@rubenvb no, but until that question, I've never heard anyone mention that we might still use () once we had {}. Nobody mentions it, so it's easy to misunderstand, and think that it's a replacement but better.
Issue is related to what we discussed before. I SSHed into my server and i ran the application manually and it returns a segmentation fault. I'm not a C++ guy. Someone mind pointing me in the right direction?
I've done a simple test using the default hash implementation for int keys.
Here's my test code:
#include <hash_map>
#include <map>
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include <tr1/unordered_map>
using namespace std;
using namespace __gnu_cxx;
int main(int arg...
@RMartinhoFernandes I think IDL stands for Interface Definition Language. I just took it as an example. You declare something in some odd language and then generate the bindings to any language you want, including C++.
Now that I think about it, I have once initiated a tool, which was later extended a lot by my cow-workers, that can read and write half a dozen string resource formats across several platforms, including some proprietary ones. That does write headers files (which contain identifier definitions needed to access those string resources).
> @sehe What on earth are you talking about?! The registry and file system redirectors are fabulous. They make WOW64 viable. – David Heffernan 18 mins ago
> @DavidHeffernan Opinions vary, perhaps along with the definition of 'viable'. All this virtualization does violate the principle of least surprise and adds costs (allocation and runtime). Other operating systems manage to provide both better 32-on-64 support and better application virtualization with fewer snags/leaky abstractions (try running garbage collecting programs on Wow64, or try comparing md5 sums like the OP, and a few other niche cases). – sehe 18 secs ago
Mmm. for a half-troll I might be coming across a bit strong
one of those "I woke up at 1pm, I ate breakfast, and then it was 6pm and I ate again, and now it's 9pm, and where did all the rest of the day go?" days
bnf/ebnf cant be used to parse stuff with matching brackets can it? because they are for context free grammars. How does one concisely describe grammars that need matching brackets? :s