In a hypothetical world where the object being swapped is nothing but an internal pointer, then yes a pointer swap like you wrote above might be the right solution.
You shouldn't get too familiar with the implementation though. You could shoot yourself in the foot if you assume something that is implementation specific so be careful.
When in doubt, read the standard and see what it guarantees.
My friend still uses C even though he has C++ available. I'm trying to get him to use C++ but he doesn't seem to like it. Gotta do something about it because what he uses right now is just awful. Also his code is full of compiler specific features and functions. Real mess nightmare.
zerkms, I guess you could wrap the whole block in an inline func if you didn't want the loose variable in scope, though that sounds like pedantic over-engineering.
You don't want to use Dev-C++, ever. I asked the teacher to install a more up to date IDE like Code::Blocks or something. "Okay" she said. "I'll check it out" she said.
"#include <stdio.h> is something you HAVE TO HAVE. If you program doesn't work it is usually because you forgot this line." moves on without actually explaining what this code does.
Do this day, I have no idea what "NO" means. It compiled and ran, and was miles ahead of anything the other students wrote. It was their first look at C++ and I had been writing it since Grade 10.
Basically just "ascii art" to print out a calendar that shows the current month.
If she wasn't happy with my paper, I'm sure she could have handled it better than putting a big slash through it and writing "NO" though. She didn't return to teach a second semester.
ntdll.dll!0000000076d5417d() Unknown kernel32.dll!00000000767a300a() Unknown > msvcr110d.dll!_free_base(void * pBlock) Line 50 C msvcr110d.dll!_free_dbg_nolock(void * pUserData, int nBlockUse) Line 1433 C++ msvcr110d.dll!_free_dbg(void * pUserData, int nBlockUse) Line 1265 C++ msvcr110d.dll!operator delete(void * pUserData) Line 54 C++
@melak47 I'm thinking about deleting the bottom-most vectors first, the ones with no children, then popping the stack and deleting the next ones. So they don't chain a zillion destructors.
Might deserve a full blown stack overflow question with the relevant objects explained so the experts can figure out something smarter than what I've got.
Last week I debugged some code that recursed once for every pixel in an image. Problem was, the author wrote it back in the 80s when the images were only 320x160. It didn't like me elevating the constants to 4000x2000.
if the heuristic is crap it might be doing a depth first search and drilling 10 million nodes deep, instead of having ~10 million nodes at a maximum depth of ~4-5