I was considering a premise that I could pass any lambda. Didn't realize that it could actually put a constraint on the signature of the callback function.
template<class F> void foo(F callback) { callback(42); } must take a function that has the signature T(U), where T can be void or any type complete type, and U can be int or any type implicitly convertible from int.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Yarr that's simple. I was living in a world where I was telling to myself that I can literally pass "any std::function-kind-of-thing" if you know what I mean :)
@RadekdaknokSlupik Srsly, i'd rather stab myself in an eye with a fork than to play that game. I also heard about Amnesia: something, not even touching that :)
@Xeo Sucks, doesn't it? I once just about quit SO entirely when that happened like twice in ten minutes or so. Not that big of a deal, but for some reason right then it just pissed me off...
It pisses me off when there's not even a comment. This time might've been a misclick, though, since it was removed later on and seemingly turned into an upvote
I have already a constructor of the form : template<class T1, class T2> MyClass(T1 x, T2 y) and I want a specific constructor for iterators. But I dont know the syntax for declaring a generic iterator... — Vincent2 mins ago
@sehe Yes, I'd love feedback :) All I had there before was simply a Markdown-ified version of the existing wiki page to test drive the publishing system, but now I just finished putting the first real post up (should be visible as soon as GitHub wakes up and realises the pages need rebuilding). As for the title... it was randomly suggested by GitHub as a repo name :S I thought it kinda works as a description of C++, so I left it.
Possible Duplicate:
Is it ever worthwhile using goto?
In a recent article, Andrew Koenig writes:
When asked why goto statements are harmful, most programmers will say something like "because they make programs hard to understand." Press harder, and you may well hear something like ...
@Fred: I agree (with what I telepathically think you mean), the alleged duplicate is about more "in general", while your question is about C++ in particular. That said, nearly all modern programming languages offer functional abstraction.
Everybody who is anti-goto cites, directly or indirectly, Edsger Dijkstra's GoTo Considered Harmful article to substantiate their position. Too bad Dijkstra's article has virtually nothing to do with the way goto statements are used these days and thus what the article says has little to no appl...
> It's not language features that make unreadable, unmaintainable code. It's not syntax that does it. It's bad programmers that cause this. And bad programmers, as you can see in that above item, can make any language feature unreadable and unusable.
It's a controversial answer, but this part I find beautiful.
Inheritance can make control flow way more complicated than gotos. Sometimes it gets so bad you have to consult a debugger to figure out what's going on.
Personally, I have never seen a complicated function riddled with gotos in the real world. I have heard many horror stories about such functions, but all I have actually seen so far are contrived examples.
> "But," they will chant, "you can make code very difficult to read with goto in C." Oh yeah? You can make code very difficult to read without goto as well
Personally, I cannot imagine an incomprehensible C++ function that was incomprehensible because of the way goto was used, and that wasn't a contrived example.
In BASIC, sure, you can jump from anywhere to anywhere, but it's just not possible in C++.
It actually is useful, knowing to analyze a given problem properly and try to reduce the number of necessary operations. Sure, you can have the same amount of fun by punching yourself in the face, but nonetheless - it can be useful and benificial.
I never thought the C++ hello world was a good start actually. I mean, if you think about it, you have namespaces, operator overloading and objects all in one example.
Buy the traveling salesman an Opel Ampera. No CO2 emissions if he can afford to stop every 60 km. If not, simply resort to the standard combustion engine (500 km range) which in turn drives the generator. Therefore, if emissions are related to distance traveled (say emission per 100 km), then for the first 60 km, you're traveling CO2 free and for the rest of it - reduced CO2 emissions due to the non-hybrid design.
And if can hold his breath for the travel time, even more win :Đ
Only downside is that the thing is quiet, can barely hear it. Someone not careful won't hear you and end up being a splat on the road. Or your windshield.
My point is, hello world would be easier if it used the standard C library. Just one function and its arguments. Much easier to explain without getting in to things like namespaces, objects, and operator overloading