but that's probably because I hate my fellow man and haven't had the misfortune of meeting anyone, let alone also informing them that I am a programmer
@GManNickG Not really. For a start, I don't actually need that functionality. And secondly, it's bad to have a language feature, especially one that's so hard to read and easy to abuse like ?:, which can be trivially replaced by a user-defined function
@Collin The whole reason lambdas were introduced was because the user-defined libraries - that are massively non-trivial, like Boost.Lambda- failed to really address the problem
> Due to an unfortunate error in the language grammar, the implementation of ?: in PHP uses the incorrect associativity when compared to other languages
in my metaphorical quest from me to understand ALL THE THINGS, I shall turn over ALL THE ROCKS, and I shall endeavour to create what I can understand to be best; although it shall be but a beginning in the journey of forever; which leads to awesome software
Now that I think about it, syntax highlighting is a nontrivial thing for editors to implement. They can't always just read a file with a list of keywords and color them when they appear in source, unless the highlighting is really rudimentary.
> warning: after 3 levels of inlining (potentially across files with Link Time Optimization), some common subexpression elimination, after hoisting this thing out of a loop and proving that these 13 pointers don't alias, we found a case where you're doing something undefined. This could either be because there is a bug in your code, or because you have macros and inlining and the invalid code is dynamically unreachable but we can't prove that it is dead.
Anyway, concepts will hopefully solve those issues.
Boost.ConceptCheck helps but due it being a hack, you still have to look for the actual concept check failure message in between ******************* somewhere in the middle of all the crap the compiler spews.
@RMartinhoFernandes The first concept libraries I ever saw was in 2000. There's a reason these monsters never took off, and there's a reason the std committee agreed to introduce a language feature.
Really, I just looked it up. It was a template workshop as part of a conference in Erfurt in 2000. Czarnecki & Eisenecker introduced their amazing compile-time programming. Coplien talked about patterns (brand new topic back then). I had beers with Nicolai Josuttis, Dietmar Kühl, Erwin Unruh, and Todd Veldhuizen (I'm not sure he drank beer, though). I discussed with a guy who worked under Charles Simonyi.
And the latter plus some German introduced their concept libraries. Those turned absolutely horrible error messages into relatively horrible error messages.
But I was considering for a moment startling you by prompting you to go to bed about three hours ago, when I came here and found you. But then I decided I wanted to watch football (for you: soccer) instead.