I had to add a bool to the class and keep track of whether the task was done, then add a function to do it with exceptions to the class, or do it in the dtor and swallow them.
So if you wanted an exception from something going wrong, you'd have to go against RAII a bit, but it was there anyway.
I'm actually surprised I couldn't find a dupe of my question.
Most of them didn't care whether they could pass in a lambda, or they controlled the function taking a callback.
@chris There are cases RAII doesn't handle well. Obvious example: closing a file can fail (e.g., closing flushes buffers, which can fail if disk is full). If you're closing the file in a dtor, there's no real way to report that failure though.
@chris Sometimes (many times, really) it's not worth getting too wrapped around the axle. For quite a few failures, about all you can do is generate an appropriate error message before shutting down -- and if the display fails, your error message may not do much good anyway (i.e., you may not be able to display it).
@JerryCoffin Yeah, I can say I've sometimes looked back and wondered if I've gone overboard on exceptions. It sucks because they're low-level calls, and all of them return HRESULT, so checking for failure is pretty normal.
It's kind of nice to have an option of being notified of any problem at all when debugging, too, until you get an unlisted error code.
That was pretty annoying, actually. It only happened while resizing the window in multithreaded mode, and if ignored, had no noticeable effect. It was a pretty simple test as well.
Oh, and resizing in multithreaded mode would draw while doing so, where that wasn't really possible without another thread. Same for moving, but it never happened with that >.>
Pity, I finally ask a question that can appeal to a bit more than winapi freaks and still nothing :p
Honestly, there are few people on the site who can answer C++ winapi questions very well, let alone when you throw something specific like D3D into the mix.
Which basically says that it's pretty much impossible to do arbitrarily. I kind of expected something like that.
That feeling when you realize you missed a major part of the problem.
I thought it was only bad when two threads would call it at once, but it's actually bad if it's called before anything else is done using it at all (and for something like creating two windows, that's likely).
Sucks more than I thought, too. At least it wasn't that bad, looking back, until the comment exposed the real major flaw.
At least most things have a data parameter in one way or another. I've done this successfully with what inspired the question before (that's covered in quite a few tutorials etc), but that's not the point.
Hmm.. strange morning. I've been googling all the UK colleges and unis, but nobody seems to offer a 'Trolling 101' course, nver mind 'Advanced Trolling'. Maybe a net course offered by another country?
Hmm.. strange morning. I've been googling all the UK colleges and unis, but nobody seems to offer a 'Trolling 101' course, nver mind 'Advanced Trolling'. Maybe a net course offered by another country?
You know what the setback of using c++ to mean C++11 by default is? How is that spread to new and existing users? New people to C++ are going to use c++ because they're using C++, no matter what the version.
And then complain when valid C++ solutions are given.
Object-oriented programming (OOP) has become the preferrd programming approach by the software industries, as it offers a powerfull way to cope up with the cpmlexity of real world probleams. Among the OOP languages available today, c++ is far the most widely used language.
The languages should s...
Ever since I started being on it constantly, I'm always adding spurious apostrophes and using the wrong form of "there" and stuff until I see it and have to go back to type it properly.
I keep getting "invalid licence data, reinstall is required" on my main pc, so I have to resort using it on my laptop, which has no problems. And yes, I have re-installed. Multiple times.
You made a perfect coding style , this will help understanding and modifying the code so fast. but there's a point you didn't mention and its very important !
Comments:
Use comments in every single corner in the code , there's nothing like mother language to explain the code fastly , also to kee...
Can't the code be explained faster by reading it?
It should for the most part if things are named properly.
@Tuntuni And then, of course, there's the fact that it often makes sense to initialize it in the constructor and never set it again. Immutability for a start.
@chris Sure. I don't know how this question will be useful to anyone though, since it's all about preference. And also, I fucking hate both pascalCase and CamelCase. Not only do they look ugly to me but they also make me think the code is poor-quality (I have no idea why, that's just the way it is - maybe because it's used in Java so often lol).
I've kind of been on the brink of whether I like CamelCase or pascalCase better for free functions. I think I lean more toward camel when using the winapi and pascal when not.
> Get the children sent off to military school, then remove the doors of the room they're in before they leave. They just march around in a little military school uniform, crying and pissing on the floor.
I am the developer of some family tree software (written in C++ and Qt). I had no problems until one of my customers mailed me a bug report. The problem is that he has two children with his own daughter, and, as a result, he can't use my software because of errors.
Those errors are the result of...
I think it's queue where this is impossible, don't recall the other adaptors, but there's definitely at least one which doesn't correctly support move-only types.
Just closed the project. At one point, Compiler Invocation was working, but then I turned on the language options for C++ and it just stopped working. Again.