speaking of std::function, today I had an episode with a buddy who couldn't handle that lambdas have no "touchable extremities", so I had to reinvent the wheel without std::function
@DeadMG He's one of those pricks who don't trust the standard library, so I'd had to convince him until I got tired and I told him to go and try fuck himself in the ass without it.
@DomagojPandža I'll never understand that mentality: "I don't like the standard library. It's <whatever FUD I like the most>. So I end up #1 writing all my own versions of it which end up with the same FUD because it needs the same FUD to actually work the same; or #2 not write my own versions of it and end up with crappy, buggy, and UBy code that has the same FUD because it needs the same FUD to actually work the same."
I don't think #1 happens a lot, because if you're smart enough to realize it's better to write those abstractions you're probably smart enough to realize you should use the standard library.
@DomagojPandža I think the newest versions default to LLVM.
@TonyTheLion Reminds me of a lady (?) I knew when I was in high school whose idea of great fun was to go to a restaurant and say (in a stage whisper) something like: "Oh my god, look at that man sitting in the corner masticating."
@Prætorian just because you're a high-rep user doesn't mean that you qualify as a moderator though, but heck.. why not (maybe you were referring to the "a million rep" thingie, that he is going to have soon - very very true)
or nhaa..
it will take him another 3 years probably, his rep record is kinda consitent
Thanks Seth. I use a newer compiler at home, and I had my code compiling on it, but when I try the version at my workplace it keeps breaking. The thing is, we release our products on RedHat Enterprise Linux 3 & 4 and this is the default compiler version on these ancient platforms. I tried you're code, but it's still breaking. Anyway, never mind. I think it has to do with a combination of the usage of the lexer, the sequencing operator and the use of semantic actions. I'll try tweaking the code until it compiles. — Haitham Gad18 mins ago
The way I see it you don't want SFINAE here. SFINAE is useful to pick between different templated overloads. Basically, you use it to help the compiler can't pick between template <typename Pointer> void f(Pointer); and template <typename NotPointer> void f(NotPointer);.
That's not ...
Dammit, I took the time to write this answer and it turned out to be a silly mistake, and a misrepresentative SSCCE. Oh, and I might be repwhoring it now.