@classdaknok_t because it doesn't adapt to human predisposition any more than it adapts to screen width. Optimal pagewidth for reading has to do with eye movement. See Knuth
@JohannesSchaublitb really, sometimes they use pointers, sometimes references, sometimes they use a pointer argument and in the function body the first thing they do is assert the pointer != nullptr. WTF?!
@DeadMG Reading it. But you can compare it and branch on the result of the comparison. You can serialize it and send it to another server, which subsequently chokes and dies deserializing it. Etc. I think asserts can make life a lot easier.
Sure, blasting your leg away might give you some insight about what your leg's internals look like, but hell, there are more productive ways to spend your time.
@JohannesSchaublitb This is a really rotten argument for stupid errors like passing a nullptr where such is not accepted. You should get an assert, or get the documentation. Nothing more, nothing less.
You don't need to know anything about the underlying code, and understanding it, is never going to help you avoid passing nullptr to another function that doesn't accept it.
@JohannesSchaublitb Now there is a good point. Dangling pointers are equally bad
@JohannesSchaublitb Unless you're constructing all of them with respect to each other, you only need to memorize the relative order of a couple variables, which... you can just look at.
@sbi Keep steady! And, a hint of advice, group your edits into microcommits that are easy to review. You'll loose track if you postpone the diff review to the end (diff blindness or something like that happens, in my experience)
@sehe I can't do anything but commit this as one big blob. Remember, it's all one massive change, and it won't compile unless I change it all. I will, however, not commit all the other changes I have made. Those go into a separate checkin.
I've spent a few weeks programming in the most pure c++ i could possible achieve and now that i had to do something in C, i was like: How the firetruck could i have ever put up with this malloc and nonsense ...
@sehe As always, I have two checked out working copies of this project, prj_x, and prj_x_clean. I mainly work in prj_x, but if I happen to run into some other change I want to make first, I'll make that in prj_x_clean first and check it in from there. Then I update prj_x and merge the changes. It makes no sense to branch these off, because they are only a few hours' work.
@sbi I disagree. I'm not branching a branch, I'm on a 'pseudo' branch, simply because I don't need to push to a central repo immediately. Besides...
... the argument they are only a few hours' work defeats itself: the problem with large refactorings is that you need to be mindful in the review. In my experience, the sheer number of lines changed makes it 'large'. It is irrelevant whether the changes happened in an hour or a week.
@sbi: Simply put: I need to keep the work on a 'human' scale. I have learned that you don't always know when the next interruption hits. I have developed the habit of not reviewing and microcommitting midway, often, so the 'stack' of pending 'changes performed' never grows over my head (I can go home and continue tomorrow and don't risk forgetting stuff).
Well then, depends on what kind of a compiler. A Haskell compiler won't grok it. And it depends on the encoding you specify the compiler input in (e.g. gcc doesn't grok EBCDIC). But I'm digressing
Does anyone know if the HFONT you send to a window in the WM_SETFONT message needs to live as long as the window, or does the window get it's own version