@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, but then they won't catch MyOutOfBoundsException exception, that derives from std::out_of_bounds and MyException, because the latter derives from std::exception, too.
Everybody knows you're not supposed to compare floats using a tolerance, but rather in a way that makes sense for what you want. — R. Martinho Fernandes15 secs ago
@StackedCrooked The other way out is being overly clever. As I said, I had, at one point, exception class templates, which you would instantiate to define exception interface classes in a header, and those from which to instantiate derived concrete exception classes to implement the interfaces. That, plus a pair of macros you could use instead of { and } wherever you felt like it, to add tracing to exceptions coming by. Quite elaborated, but it worked.
@sbi But that doesn't really solve the original problem does it? It's just a fancier way of limiting yourself inheriting only std::exception. Or do I misunderstand?
@StackedCrooked The trace macros would catch any std::exception-derived thingy and throw a wrapping MyException-derived thingy instead, so you never needed to catch std::exception. Nowadays I would probably use TMP to find out whether any of the base interface classes already inherited from std::exception and derive from that, if none did.
> declined - I looked over this for a while, the answer comes off as little more than a rant, and then a link. If there was something constructive along with the link, even if it's wrong/right, I'd undelete it.
Bitch!
:)
BTW, you all need to upvote the robot's answer, because it needs to rise higher to be noticed.
@sbi I thought so too. We had an "advanced" C++ course at work and the lecturer used non-const ref. When I asked him whether const-ref was preferred he didn't know the answer.
@StackedCrooked With const, it's always the same answer: If I don't need to modify this, there's a chance modifying it is an error, so I help the compiler catching it just in case.
@Xeo One of the basic ideas of being on salary is that it blurs the division between your time and their time. In the US, a lot of it often hinges on whose equipment you use -- if you wrote it outside business hours, but on a laptop owned by the employer, they can probably claim it. If you write it on your own machine, there's a much better chance of it being considered yours. Some also depends on whether it falls within your job description.
if I called your function with the string "4.5", wouldn't it be reasonable to expect it to return 4 or 5 (depending on whether it rounds up or down)? I certainly wouldn't expect 45.
@JerryCoffin I know. I had a symbian phone until a few months ago. And they illustrate my point very well: they were technically smartphones. It had a web browser, it had an app store, it had a pdf viewer, it had most of the basic functionality you expect from a modern smartphone. But it all sucked. It was all so painful to use that no one used it as a smartphone. You used it as a phone.
And perhaps, if you were reeeeally reaaaaaaally desperate, you might try to use the browser to google something quick. I think I did that once, in the 3-4 years I had the phone. It was doable, but painful. The iphone was more than an incremental improvement over that
@jalf I never owned one, so I can't say anything from personal experience, but I've known a few people who thought they were great. I did have a Palm phone for a little while. I wouldn't say the browser was terrible, but the networks at the time were so slow they were unusable, regardless of the browser.
@jalf I had a Nokia dumb phone with a very small screen and a phone keyboard, and for a while I used that for twitter and reading news sites during commuting. It was painful, though, and I only put up with it for a few weeks while I decided which smart phone to buy.
For my programming languages class one hw problem asks:
Are local variables in FORTRAN static or stack dynamic? Are local variables that are INITIALIZED to a default value static or stack dynamic? Show me some code with an explanation to back up your answer. Hint: The easiest way to check th...
specifically, I'm working with code that uses almost no local variables, only globals, and I'm wondering if it was simply a port of older Fortran code.
I think our company used FORTRAN before. I know in 1995 there was a total rewrite to C++, but I'm not sure if it was FORTRAN before that or C or something. But I know somewhere way back in our history is FORTRAN.
@JerryCoffin I thought that, grammatically, it was illegal to do ~int() literally, though, that you could only do such a thing through a typedef or template parameter that happened to be int.
@Papergay people were wondering if ptr_to_int->~int() compiles. The answer is yes, yes it does. int is not a class, but it does have a "pseudo-destructor".
huh. I display the address of a local variable, call a function through a function pointer (takes no params, returns a short), and the function displays the address of it's first local variable. 483 bytes difference.
@sehe You don't need an aggregator -- you might want it if (for example) you wanted just a list of total sales for each month, but if you just want the sales grouped by months, you don't need to use an aggregate (though it is undoubtedly more common).
@JerryCoffin I'm going to call that... craziness :) Let the compiler do the optimizations. It will work nicely, unless your profiler tells you it doesn't
@JerryCoffin Totals? What sales would you expect to be printed now? Average? Min? First? Sum?
@Papergay The errors are only because they don't have the right assembler (the only have gas and nasm, but this is written for masm (and would probably work with tasm, but not much else).
I guess I simply don't actually understand what a group is. If I don't group anything, is a table with 100 rows also a table of 100 groups (each 1 row), or a table of 1 group (with 100 rows), or is it neither?
@sehe Wow. I guess nobody's sarcasm detector is working very well today. He'd replied that the previous code I posted was 10 ms slower than something else -- so being an ass, I decided to write one that should be pretty fast.
@sbi i already read that long ago but since this was not mentioned there i assumed that this was some kind of automated soft-replying (at least they seem to use the same highlighting)
@FredOverflow The columns not participating in a group will have to be 'aggregated' ( either FIRST(value), LAST(value), AVERAGE(value), SUM(value), MAX(value) etc.)
@FredOverflow Normally (and hopefully my brain is actually working this time) you'd do something like select month sum(sales) from wherever, group by month. Then, instead of just giving you one overall sum for an entire column, it would give you one sum for each month.
@sehe Yeah, probably had the comma in the wrong place, you're right. Not so sure about the all-caps though. Is there some SQL engine that requires that,?
@sehe Yes, but caps in macros were originally done for a reason -- originally as a warning against anything that might have side effects, because it might be evaluated more than once.
The convention is very much to make tables and columns uppercase. Also, the convention is even to make password case insensitive in some RDBMS-es. Go figure
@sehe Sounds to me like users who just weren't quite willing to let go of COBOL. I haven't been around enough other people who write SQL regularly to be sure of conventions, but if the convention is all upper case, then I guess I'll just stick by being unconventional.
@FredOverflow Oh great. I'm sure it is configurable. But I somehow blocked that knowledge. So, that makes the convention more useful in a way :) No need to ask yourself what the proper casing was... (I bet some would argue the opposite. But: portable DB schemes. And: meh)
@Collin what else. As it is, it looks like you are somehow trigger-happy. This kind of 'quick! closevotes!' doesn't really invite serious/critical thinking from the lounge.
I'm trying to use an if statement to control what's being produced. I have a condition that asks to enter a number 1-5. Well if you enter a 6 it should state that's not an option. At this point not getting that.
@Prætorian He misunderstood what was going on in the question he's complaining about. He thought someone was overrunning a buffer, then reallocing it to fit. His answer tried to rewrite it all strangely and confused people
You know, you see pictures like below and sort of chuckle until you actually have to deal with it.
I just inheritted something that looks like the picture below. The culture of the orgization does not tollerate down time very well, yet I have tasked to 'clean it up'. The network functions as i...