I have the following code. In the dataReceived method, I am trying to access table, but I get an error. It works if I use self and do all of that, but I don't want to use self. Using self would not work for my purpose. How can I still gain access to table without using self?
Thanks!
class Socke...
Here is a simple class for iterating over a multidimensional numeric range:
#include <array>
template <int N>
class NumericRange
{
public:
// typedef std::vector<double>::const_iterator const_iterator;
NumericRange() {
_lower.fill(std::numeric_limits<double>::qu...
I know a random assortment of programming languages, and have a good (I think) understanding of the "usual" syntax of code. Because of circumstances I'm learning python over the summer in order to program the back end of a website. At the same time I want to continue my education in c++ (I've com...
I think your whole answer is a horribly slow substitute for new string(s1.Except(s2).ToArray()) (which is already quite inefficient). Look at string builder if you wanted something a bit more efficient — sehe12 secs ago
Don't fall asleep now that would be a waste of time
I used it. I also used those nifty wrappers like _bstr_t and _variant_t - they really helped keeping my sanity dealing with COM before the managed C++ extensions and COM Interop and all that
@DeadMG Mmm. More reading for me, I don't recognize a thing you mentioned there (apart from the name PPL)
Ha, that was fast: "Prevent Visual Studio 2012's ALL CAPS Menus: http://www.richard-banks.org/2012/06/how-to-prevent-visual-studio-2012-all.html #vs2012" — Richard Banks
I don't think so. I consider myself both "creative" and "different", but I don't really eat that much shit. Or maybe it's because I don't let it keep me down.
I think you have to create your own luck, ya know.
I’ve been beating the drum this year (see the last section of the talk) that the biggest problem facing C++ today is the lack of a large set of de jure and de facto standard libraries. My team at Microsoft just recently announced Casablanca, a cloud-oriented C++ library and that we intend to open source, [...]
Unfortunately the OP presented code that didn't compile.
Here's the original code corrected in the most natural way so that it compiles:
class Type1Str : public string
{
public:
Type1Str() {}
Type1Str(const string & str) : string(str) {}
};
class Type2Str : public string
{
public:
...
@RMartinhoFernandes "the second one fails, because std::unique_ptr<T> doesn’t have a specialization of std::iterator_traits". That wording seems backwards; I'd say that std::iterator_traits doesn't have a specialization forstd::unique_ptr<T>.
I fear that daklang will be worse than Java and PHP… combined.
> So in Visual Basic, the decision to include in the syntax and semantics the ability to assign numbers directly to strings and vice versa was a result of the designers' desire to attract a broad base of developers who would probably not understand the notions of strongly typed variables.
I think your whole answer is a horribly slow substitute for new string(s1.Except(s2).ToArray()) (which is already quite inefficient). Look at string builder if you wanted something a bit more efficient — sehe9 hours ago
@RadekdaknokSlupik Is it. I always thought typography is the art of typesetting (so, something would be wrong with capitalization, kerning, font consistency etc.) Another thing learned/to learn :)