Yes, no problem; you can do this with a template specialisation holding a static reference to the appropriate object.
template<typename T> struct select_cout;
template<> struct select_cout<char> { static std::ostream &cout; };
std::ostream &select_cout<char>::cou...
HMODULE is a handle to a loaded DLL or executable image (collectively known as modules). It must be closed by passing it to the CloseHandle function - bullshit
also modules are reference-counted, so you can copy objects with HMODULE if you'll increment reference counter by calling LoadLibrary. (however I've never seen in IRL)
@Abyx Yeah, I figured that, but that would require saving the name and make the example a bit bigger.
@Abyx I think I've fixed it. Thanks again. I was led to believe that CloseHandle could close any kind of kernel object. If I only had checked the docs I would have seen that was not true :S hides in shame
hm... I have a static library which is compiled with _MBCS, and an application which uses it, compiled with _UNICODE (MSVC2008). The library calls ::GetCommandLine(), and somehow it's GetCommandLineW which is being called. It's fucking strange... seems to be a LTCG magic
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hm, I'm not sure if I noticed the slowdown on gcc 4.5 or gcc 4.6. Anyway using 4.7 at home so I could test myself.
Suppose I have a big class hierachy without any virtual methods. If I were to make the root class destructor virtual, would that add vtable entries to all derived types as well?
The second equation looks like it should be = do { head <- getByteString 50; tail <- readNames (n - 1); return (head:tail) } (or something with a lifting function if you prefer).
@R.MartinhoFernandes On the whole, I thought it was a bit 'wordy' compared to other posts. I like your more terse style more, I think. This was the first post I ever had the TL;DR reflex with.
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you want I could propose some edits where I think 'verbiage' could be cut down while increasing clarity. (I do really love how you achieve the clarity, while still reaching the necessary details)
My ISP ran an offer (year-long free premium Spotify subscription). I dismissed it, because, well (a) I have my own music (b) I'm a HiFi addict (c) My experience with internet music sources is: it sucks for non-pop
How different Spotify is turning out. I can still detract a few points on the - suboptimal support for metadata on classical albums. But the availability of music is... astounding
Add to that my HTC phone, the Spotify APP and a Bluetooth A2DP audio receiver... it is really starting to capture me.
Updated, see below!
I have heard and read that C++0x allows an compiler to print "Hello" for the following snippet
#include <iostream>
int main() {
while(1)
;
std::cout << "Hello" << std::endl;
}
It apparently has something to do with threads and optimization capab...
If you want reliable, high quality answers quickly, use SO. If you want to gamble and maybe get a useful answer, maybe get a good answer, and maybe waste your time, feel free to ask questions here :)
IIRC static primitives are default (automagically) allocated, objects are not (depending on if they are a POD or not... which way around it is I forget)
@ecatmur most likely, they actually reside in a physical data segment in the binary image. This is also what makes (made?) some programs with large static data compile slowly on gcc
I would really appreciate if somebody could tell me why compilation of this program:
double data[123456789];
int main() {}
takes 10 times longer then compilation of this one:
int main() {
double* data=new double[123456789];
}
when both are compiled with:
$ g++ -O0
and the executabl...
which is a bit of a waste of space, but then it's a pretty stupid thing to have anyway.
I once had a colleague who went around writing things like static T zero_t = {0, 0, ...}; t = zero_t; in the belief that it would be "faster" than t = T().
Another newbie question: I implemented a template<class T> class ptr type. I know that such thing as template specialization exists in C++. How can I extend the class with more members if T = int? Do I have to copy the whole existing code?
Or can I just do stuff like template<class T = int> int ptr::incr() { ... }
@ShdNx If Button inherits from Widget then the order of constructors called is: Widget, Button. The order of destruction will be: Button, Widget. So all constructors are called. I don't know if that's what you meant with inherited?
Okay, I tried your idea with the base class thing, but I get the following compiler error: error C3855: 'ptr': template parameter 'T' is incompatible with the declaration
In a .NET site, what would you use to force a user to not be able to advance into the next screen given a certain condition even if they click the continue?