The Bourne Trilogy is a series of three novels by Robert Ludlum, which have been adapted to a series of three films starring Matt Damon. The series has since been further extended by Eric Van Lustbader after the death of Robert Ludlum.
Novels
The original three Jason Bourne novels are:
* The Bourne Identity (1980)
* The Bourne Supremacy (1986)
* The Bourne Ultimatum (1990)
The new Jason Bourne novels:
* The Bourne Legacy (2004)
* The Bourne Betrayal (2007)
* The Bourne Sanction (2008)
* The Bourne Deception (2009)
* The Bourne Objective (2010)
* The Bourne Dominion (2011)
* The Bourne Imp...
Lol... I was just going to post that link.... I remember now...
I was forgetting the first one... Identity
I have yet to see a scorpion, and I've been in the desert for nearly two years... well I suppose Las Vegas wouldn't have that many of them out in the open...
|genre=Action role-playing, open world
|modes=Single-player
|ratings=|PEGI=18+|OFLCZ=R18|USK=18}}
|platforms=Microsoft WindowsXbox 360
|media=Blu-ray DiscDVD
|requirements= See "Development and marketing"
}}
Fallout: New Vegas is an action role-playing open world video game developed by Obsidian Entertainment, and published by Bethesda Softworks. It was released for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in October 2010. The game is based in a post-apocalyptic environment in and around Las Vegas, Nevada.
Even though it directly succeeds it in order of Fallout game releases and also...
My documentation generator is already better than Doxygen, and all it does is printing a list of function declarations and their locations in the source code, and printing an index of the functions with hyperlinks to their documentations.
Mah documentation generator will automatically figure out possible exception types from function definitions, including std::bad_alloc, even when the function has no throw() specification. Can I safely ignore functions marked nothrow?
struct foo { virtual void f(); virtual ~foo(); };
void blah(foo& x) {
x.f();
}
// this function can take references to objects of types from code that was not written yet
In that case, list all the found exceptions and “anything thrown by my_param->foobar()”. xD probably with a note that the class has virtual functions or that a function definition could not be found (in the case of linkage with libraries).
@DeadMG my friend says "OK the behavior of my compiler is XYZ, so this if statement is all fine. aswell on all other compilers that show that behavior."
claiming that the behavior of his if statement is unspecifier behavior. but I want assurance!
@RadekSlupik it is behavior which the Standard leaves more than one possible behavior for an implementation to choose, but doesn't require documentation of the behavior
I'm usually not a big fan of too strict adherence to this kind of rules, but there are a few like SRP and DRY that I really really find hard to violate in an advantageous manner.
SRP and DRY are like "Don't ever use a Singleton"- technically, they might have an exception somewhere, but I've never seen any evidence for it's existence
@sehe How can credit you for the review in my blog post? "sehe" or your real name? (I generally prefer to use a real name, but I can understand a desire for anonymity)
@Ell Because encrypt("foobarfoo", "my key") would yield "xxxyyyxxx" for an hypothetical algorithm that encrypts three bytes at a time (most (all?) algorithms only encrypt in fixed-size blocks).
That allows an attacker to know that the three final bytes are the same as a the first three, even if they don't know which bytes they are.
@melak47 Maybe the concept can be applied to symmetric algorithms as well. But in asymmetric algorithms it's important because the attacker, having the public key, can generate ciphertexts. This would allow one to, in the insecure example I gave above, learn that "xxx" means "foo" (by encrypting "foo" himself).
@StackedCrooked sizeof is an operator, not a function. But yes (C99, §6.5.3.4/1): "The sizeof operator shall not be applied to an expression that has function type or an incomplete type, to the parenthesized name of such a type, or to an expression that designates a bit-field member." Violating that requires a diagnostic.
@RadekSlupik "For addition, either both operands shall have arithmetic type, or one operand shall be a pointer to an object type and the other shall have integer type.", "For subtraction, one of the following shall hold:"
— both operands have arithmetic type; — both operands are pointers to qualified or unqualified versions of compatible object types; or — the left operand is a pointer to an object type and the right operand has integer type.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well yes, but that's implied by q > p -- if they aren't in the same array, you can't compare them with > at all (but you can compare them with std::less or std::greater).