Remember that the comma is an operator. It evaluates each expression and returns the value of the right hand operand. Also, it associates from left to right. This means that
4, 1, 2, 3, 4 >> vX;
is equivalent to
((((4, 1), 2), 3), 4) >> vX;
but 4, 1 evaluates to 1, so the above evaluates to...
Analysis paralysis or paralysis of analysis is the state of over-analyzing (or over-thinking) a situation so that a decision or action is never taken, in effect paralyzing the outcome. A decision can be treated as over-complicated, with too many detailed options, so that a choice is never made, rather than try something and change if a major problem arises. A person might be seeking the optimal or "perfect" solution upfront, and fear making any decision which could lead to erroneous results, when on the way to a better solution.
The phrase describes a situation where the opportunity cost...
@Rapptz IMHO, not necessarily. You go by how the language permits or restricts you to do something. And we see that libraries in different languages often have different designs.
I don't think it is perfect. I just... well, I made terrible things in the past, you see, and vowed to never do it again. So I guess I get nothing done, because I am afraid it will suck.
@Pawnguy7 Just as the saying goes, learn as you go. Learn from your mistakes. More importantly, don't let mistakes bug you down. In fact, you should be happy to discover that you've made mistakes, which some people doesn't want to acknowledge.
Anyway, I guess, as with seemingly everything, it is a balance: Don't charge in, but don't think about it forever either. I just hope I follow through.
@MarkGarcia is it basically, "make stuff when you end up needing it?"
oh wait, is that the guy who tried to cook when Gale died?
ah.
no, not really
what I was thinking was that the whole Gale thing was really Gus's fault. If he had just kept his dealers in line, he would never have had a problem with Jesse, and the whole thing wouldn't have gotten off the ground.
and even after all of that, when he had Jesse to cook, threatening Walt's family was really over the top, IMO
hmm, I disagree.
he already knew that Jesse could be trouble after he killed Gale.
and there were the grand sum total of two cooks who could cook his blue meth.
it can't continue without the cooks.
yeah, but they can't get the return on investment he needs to fund that superlab
and he put a vast amount of money into it
true.
well, I think that he wouldn't have been dead if he hadn't threatened Walt's family on top
his special blue meth is worth too much of a premium on the regular meth
they didn't realize just how dangerous he could be
I'm allocating 10 GB of RAM for tons of objects that I will need. I want to be able to squeeze every last byte of RAM I can before hitting some problem like null pointer.
I know the allocator returns continuous memory, so if I have scattered memory from other programs, the max continuous size wi...
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In C++14, std::set<Key>::find is a template function if Compare::is_transparent exists. The type you pass in does not need to be Key, just equivalent under your comparator.
So write a comparator:
template<typename T>
struct pointer_comp {
typedef std::true_type is_transparent;
// helper do...
interesting /cc @DeadMG
user1804599
That would be most useful in my garbage collector.
@sehe There are a lot of things going on there. It pretty much traces through half the metaprogram. That little gem returns a reference to a subset of a functor-tuple, so elements in the tuple's type-list can initialize themselves from preceding elements in the same tuple, without being confused by finding themselves.
Hi, y'all. I have a C question, don't know if it applies to C++ as well... anyway, you can set the pack pragma around a struct, but what if I have a typedef struct?
@Markus A struct type exists even if you don't give it a name. A typedef is just an alias for another type. When you do typedef struct { int q; } mystruct;, you have an unnamed struct (which may have #pragma pack applied) and a named alias to it.
@Markus > Taking after C++11, C11 introduces facilities for probing and enforcing the memory alignment of variables and types. The _Alignas keyword specifies the requested alignment for a type or an object. The alignof operator reports the alignment of its operand.