@Kelvin Get accustomed to hanging out here. That'll put an end to this nonsensical idea that anything about C++ could possibly be friendly. :-) Oh, and even though nobody's likely to say "yes, I'll be your C++ friend", they might start to write you love notes, so don't freak out if they do...
I'm working on a project where I have JavaScript code running on a VM written in c++ which communicates with a network device remotely and marshals the data to a C# program on another computer.
There are a few compiler apps for android, but many of them say that c++ is unpredictable and does not always work, but the apps say that they can compile c just fine. why is c++ so much harder to compile with android.
@Kelvin This library encapsulates a lot of common tasks in classes: launchpad.net/systoolkit, but good luck compiling on Windows! It may be possible with cygwin
@MarkGarcia I have to disagree. Sedgewick was good (possibly even great) at designing algorithms, but terrible at writing about them. Cormen, et al, isn't necessarily perfect, but its worst parts are still much better than the best parts of anything Sedgewick has written.
@Kelvin Might want to stay away from Corment for a while then -- although it's good, it's quite ...heavy. Heavy on formality. Heavy on mathematical notation. Heavy on hair-splitting technicalities at a time that you really need to learn general ideas.
@Kelvin I wish a had a lot better recommendation, but I honestly don't. The book I really like best is named Algorithms + Data Structures = Programs. Problem is that it's out of print, and uses Pascal for all the code. There is a later version freely available online, that uses Modula II instead, but it's still not much good when you're trying to learn C++.
@Kelvin I wouldn't bother. Lippman knows his stuff, but that book hasn't aged very well. Better to buy one or two really good books than half a dozen poor ones, at least in my opinion.
Seriously: I've made relatively serious use of: Fortran IV, Fortran 77, Pascal, C, C++, AWK, a number of assembly languages, lex/yacc/similar, SQL, and probably a half dozen more I can't remember any more.
@Kelvin That's a lot less good -- C and C++ are separate languages -- and despite the syntactic similarities, well written code is generally a lot different between the two.
I think it's starting to become my go-to examples of 'don't bother with template template parameters', which is handy since they tend to come up in the context of containers.
@Rapptz Do you mind trying to write the specialization for the arity trait?
Not run it through a compiler or anything. Pseudocode.
Well it's not an intractable problem. But I think it's a good example as to why the code is very much not very generic. (And practically speaking I'm fairly sure there are other container or container-like things in Boost which will break just as well as std::array even if you add a workaround for the latter.)
Okay. Try to do the job of the compiler and match e.g. an std::array<int, 5> specialization with that non-special case: which template parameter gets bound to what?