Disclaimer: I definitely don't think this is a good solution. The good solutions are to either rethink the design (maybe OO polymorphism is not warranted here given that there is a bounded number of possibilities?), or to use a second function to pass along said polymorphic object by reference.
...
i have a question, if you cannot use to regex to parse html -- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1732348/regex-match-open-tags-except-xhtml-self-contained-tags
then how do html parsing libraries work (implemented)?
They're likely to use regexes for tokenization and then just use a regular parsing algorithm, and a bunch of nasties to handle all of the idiosyncrasies of bad HTML.
The Unix Programming Environment, first published in 1984 by Prentice Hall, is a book written by Brian W. Kernighan and Rob Pike, both of Bell Labs and considered an important and early document of the Unix operating system.
The book starts off with an introduction to Unix for beginners. Next, it goes into the basics of the file system and shell. The reader is led through topics ranging from the use of filters, to how to use C for programming robust Unix applications, and the basics of grep, sed, make, and awk. The book closes with a tutorial on making a programming language parser w...
Suppose Ploni eats some meat. He then gets in a spaceship and accelerates to some significant percentage of the speed of light for a short trip into outer space, and then returns home. At the time when he returns home, exactly six hours have passed from the Earth's reference frame; however, becau...
> Spaceman Ploni, who decided to eat meat immediately prior to takeoff (a revolting thought), can still taste it when he returns to earth, despite the fact that his more sensible brother, who ate meat with him but who didn't board the space-ship, is now enjoying a milkshake.
In Windows 7 you can't turn off sounds in general, because every time you change the desktop theme it enables sounds again, and the speaker icon is often missing (due to a timing error), and so on
working on IOCCC code. What do people think? int main(int c){c++;printf((c==((~c+1)&c))?"%d\n":"",c);(&main+((void*)&exit-(void*)&main)*(c/(1<<12)))(c+1);}
When I am trying to compare 2 same float values it doesn't print "equal values" in the following code :
void main()
{
float a = 0.7;
clrscr();
if (a < 0.7)
printf("value : %f",a);
else if (a == 0.7)
printf("equal values");
else
printf("hello");
...
I know in some area(game industry, for example), STL is not recommended.
So my question is: is it really a good practice of not using STL in some cases? If so, what's the biggest reasons of not using the modern C++'s STL?
@FredOverflow Unanswered questions that are closed as a dupe get redirected to the dupe. So if you close two unanswered questions as dupes of each other... hmm...
I understand why the keys of a map have to be const to the outside world, but I don't like how they're completely const, so you can't even move them. :(
std::for_each(someMap.begin(), someMap.end(), std::back_inserter(keyStrings) ); This obviously does not work since it will try to insert a pair<key,value> what I want is to just insert the key.
Ah, wait, they specifically only allowed cv- and ref-qualifiers to appears as part of a function type, not that a function type like R() && will match a T&& partial spec :(
Windows 8 introduces WinRT, which is like .NET but unmanaged.
Why is it unmanaged? Is it a performance issue? Does it mean garbage collection is not suitable for lower level APIs?
Not sure how it goes e.g. if T is not a function type actually. I think I left a lot of the primary templates undefined as opposed to making them empty. (I.e. this might be a precondition of FromFunctionQualifiers.)
@Xeo An alias for from_function_qualifiers, duh. More seriously though, FromFunctionQualifiers<void() const&, double> is double const&. By default the second parameter is int.
The name of the module is function_traits and that's really the shining jewel of functionality it provides (every thing is lower level and are components of the 'default' behaviour). The name reflects that and nothing more -- it's a utility to manipulate function qualifiers 'as-if' you were manipulating a type.
To clarify, the goal of the module is to allow to reuse type-manipulating metafunctions to make them operate on function types.
So Functionqualifiers is a higher-level metafunction that applies a type-manipulating metafuction on a function type (yielding a function type). No idea what to name it.
Does anyone here know the advantages of using late binding in iPhone development? I don't like late binding, but I'm trying to find out why Apple is using Obj-C and especially the late binding features.