@Jefffrey If it helps, while &x above is a constant expression, reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(&x) is not, mostly because it would look through the abstraction that makes the "real" values of the addresses irrelevant.
> Systems can use either absolute or relative paths. A full path or absolute path is a path that points to the same location on one file system regardless of the working directory or combined paths. It is usually written in reference to a root directory.
@R.MartinhoFernandes then I guess that's my fallacy right there. I thought constexpr meant that the expression is always know at compile time and might be substituted with its value for optimization purposes.
@Pawnguy7 Well, it's basically just executing a part or all of your code with pre-defined inputs, and checking that the output matches the pre-defined intended valid output.
Anything can be computed at compile-time regardless of constexpr.
If you have int f(int x) { return x * 2; } int main() { return f(10); } the compiler can replace that with int main() { return 20; }, no constexpr needed.
It's really about being allowed in constant expressions.
gcc allows you to put constexpr on any function (I don't know why) but it doesn't mean you can use your 10 line constexpr function in a static_assert or array size.
Given int f(int x) { return x*2; } constexpr int g(int x) { return x*2; }, a declaration like int x[f(10)]; is not valid, but int x[g(10)]; is, even though both f(10) and g(10) can be computed at compile-time.
for Wide I simply wrote it so that if the test function returns "true", we assume that this is because everything was okey-dokey, as opposed to, say, because the code generator generated some hideous undefined behaviour which just happened to return true.
this assumption doesn't really sit right with me but you can't solve the Halting Problem so
I just made some research about those (quite) new features and I wonder why C++ Committee decided to introduce the same syntax for both of them? It seems that developers unnecessary have to waste some time to understand how it works, and one solution lets to think about further problems. In my ca...
constexpr doesn't guarantee that an expression can be evaluated at compile time. All it does is remove a barrier to use in a situation that requires compile-time evaluation. IOW, the fact that you (for example) assign some expression to a variable, then use the variable as a stand-in for that expression means it can no longer be used as a constant expression in C++98/03, but can be in C++11/14, if marked as constexpr.
@Pawnguy7 If you never use it where a constant expression is required, it may still be fine. If you use it where a constant expression is required, you'll get a diagnostic.
@ThePhD They realized it a long time ago. When compiler compilers were first invented in the '60s, quite a few people thought it was just around the corner. Then it came time to implement it--and the dream quickly turned into a nightmare. It's actually fairly easy to implement, as long as you hate your users. Making it decently usable is exceedingly difficult (at best) though.
@Jefffrey I'll give the idea some thought. Probably needs some polishing to be posted outside chat though.
user3010322
@JerryCoffin And thus, we ended up with pieces of it, scattered throughout languages, the most notable being preprocessor nonsense in C/C++/C# and templates in C++. <_>
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yup. That's somewhat interesting. I figured it's likely the group of "just C++", and "we" are in the "C++ + C#/otherstuff" cluster
Hmmm, the fact I can only squeal in excitement at the sight of a new post by this guy instead of being totally outraged as would be normal some months back means I completely gave up on the Asylum.
user3010322
We haven't taken some of our better quotes and put it up there in a while...
I'm a rep idiot - i tend to post too much in comments - wait for a complete answer before I post, check my code, and delete my answers that I don't think add to SO
It is extremely hard to find writers that understand things the way a programmer wants them to, or they can understand and then they can't write for non-programmers
Well, I will do what I always do .. Not make a fuss & only use the part I think is good. After all 20%-30% what he wrote would be better than what I could come with.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay, I think that's a nice arrondissement to live in. But make sure to see the city center, in christmas there's many beautiful decorations :)
@ThePhD No other suggestion? ;_;
user3010322
@user7236293 Well, I liked Rakkun, but I know you're not going to go back to that.
Paris is nice - I have only been there for a day. Nothing warms my heart more than seeing a long haired dog drugged across the polished floor in a mall like a mop.