I think I have one machine with a spellchecker set on British English and one with American English. On the one hand it confuses me, but on the other hand it gives me an excuse to spell words however I want.
> It is not, as I had intended it, the full word. This is because when I converted the text to speech, it was 2 hours 8 minutes even when I quadrupled the speed.
@RMartinhoFernandes well, it allows you to decide whether or not to take ownership, I guess. YOu have a reference to the shared pointer, so you can copy it if you decide to hang on to it
from what little I know about smart pointers, you use unique_ptr. if it is not working, make sure you are not just using it wrong. If it is still not working, then perhaps you did need shared_ptr
@Pubby like I said, that is just what I have gathered. It seems that for the most part, you want to only have one thing owning a pointer, or the data pointed at by the pointer, not sure what way it is meant to be thought about
@jalf wait... you mean my random musing are actually half sensible :O
@StackedCrooked strictly speaking though, that is not circular (see I know words). Would need a long chain of references before it took on a circular form
@Pubby well, it can’t strip public names since those are part of the API. It can’t strip even private names since they need to be accessible to the reflector. It does strip local names but those aren’t crucial anyway
I thought the problem of Infiniminer was, well, that it wasn't that good. All the hype I remember from it was the potential people saw for the game, not the game itself.
You write that the recursive function “should be less time-consuming as it doesn't create a new variable, and it does less operations”. The first assertion is pretty meaningless. Memory for local variables is typically allocated by a single subtraction operation, upon entering the fun...
^ I have a question about my (old) answer
Which current compilers optimize this:
double factorial( int n )
{
if( n < 2 ) { return 1; }
return n*factorial( n-1 );
}