So, the course have a few automated tests where the students are required to supply their implementations of various things (such as a std::vector clone, but not as advanced). The deadline for the "bonus" points (resulting in a higher grade) is in about 30 hours, and I now realized that the tests are a bit.. incomplete
it doesn't fail students who do stupid things such as having a single T& operator[](std::size_t) const, instead of one const, and one non-const
when updating the automatic tests, we can choose to either resubmit every previously accepted one, or just simply leave them as accepted.
The students really should know that two overloads of operator[] shall be present, but I'm not sure if we should just fail them this close to the deadline
instead I'm thinking that they, during the oral presentation of their code, will resubmit their implementation and if the automatic test fails then, they will have to explain why it complains, and why they shouldn't have implemented it as they had in the first place
On the level of ethics, anything goes, as long as the terms are fair and were clearly agreed upon by the students. (I'd say, once you hand them their grade you cannot change their test outcome)
@FilipRoséen-refp It might be nice to break up the assignment into different steps next time. I've seen test-driven online code challenge that work that way. They are awesome.
@sehe the grade is weeks away, but it's the bonus thing that worries me, it is basically; "if you have gotten an accepted test on the automatic-test-service, you are entitled to the bonus points"
or well; more specifically, "if you have a sane implementation, and it is accepted by the automatic-test-service"
@FilipRoséen-refp Yup. You already answered your question. That was the deal, then that's the deal. If you warned them that the tests are only conclusive from a certain date, then you might have some leeway
a lot of students are doing weird things, such as doing delete [] _data_ptr; _data_ptr = new T[_capacity] (); _size = 0; when implementing vec.clear ()
@sehe conclusive in what way, that we can automatically resubmit the approved tests?
(I personally feel that it's not fair to expect students to hand in their solution in 30 hours for bonus points, if the assistent is allowed to spend more than that amount of time tinkering with the tests, so that it might still not pass.)
@sehe because having a single operator[] instead of a const and non-const, as well as a single begin/end/etc in my book isn't sane, and doing the delete-reallocate dance in clear() isn't exactly sane.. either
@sehe was it a sane implementation, just because it passed the test? I mean, the test doesn't check if they just wrap std::vector, or use a linked-list internally; which would lead to -bonus on the oral presentation
@FilipRoséen-refp It adds a lot of value to have a more complete test, and it makes a lot of sense to provide them with the feedback. But you cannot deny them their cookie after they earned it, by your own logic:
@R.MartinhoFernandes it would save the assistants doing the oral presentations a lot of time if kattis (the automated test-thingie) would just spit out a "this is not sane"-message, instead of they having to manually read through the code
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have no experience of code reviews with such systems, we used to do that "manually". If you have I'd gladly hear how that performed. I suppose pretty well
@sehe they will however not get the cookie just because the test was previously accepted, unless they can explain why their implementation is not sane (on a good enough level that it's possible to "let it slip")
@FilipRoséen-refp Yup. You already answered your question. That was the deal, then that's the deal. If you warned them that the tests are only conclusive from a certain date, then you might have some leeway
^ again, it's about what you agreed when you gave the assignment. You can't change the rules during play. You'll just have to work with the bonus earned, and deduct more points for any inacceptible insanities
@sehe if they previously submitted an implementation that got accepted, but with the new test fails I expect the students to be able to show why they failed the test, and why such test was put in place.
@sehe it's one of the alternatives: 1) leave the test alone 2) update test, resubmit everything accepted 3) update test, leave accepted as accepted, and resubmit during oral presentation to see if there's anything worrying in their implementation
@sehe in my book those two go hand in hand, but yeah
@R.MartinhoFernandes of course such things cannot be caught, be we can catch other more obvious and "more trivial to catch" faults automatically
the test-thingie I pasted does some magic, and creates an interpreter that can read input files where we may specify in what order we run the different instructions and with what arguments etc etc
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, I thought it was (because such uses of casts are also enough to fail some of a students work, because they should know about the casts in c++); nevermind me then
@sehe we have a "if a student can reason about a problem, and come up with a solution, during the oral presentation, one may still pass"-policy
@AlexM. Doing things with well-defined test cases is actually easier, provided that you can debug your code when it fails (so none of that online judge shit nonsense)
@sehe I'm counting on you know; help me come to a conclusion! (in the end is not entirely up to me, the "real" course leader is the one who can make a definite decision)
@sehe oh snap, you are right; we even have a "if you have an accepted solution prior to the deadline, you are free to make more submissions afterwards, and use them during the oral presentation"-policy (we might still take a look at the previous implementation though)
I told people the tests done by QA were fine, then QA sent an email speaking about a bug that I already said it was unrelated to the things we were testing
quickly replied so people don't think I'm full of shit
@AlexM. Oh I love that. Like when QA insist to keep reopening the same bug, even though it's clearly another issue, just because "it's on the same screen"
Quality Assurance (QA) is a way of preventing mistakes or defects in manufactured products and avoiding problems when delivering solutions or services to customers. QA is applied to physical products in pre-production to verify what will be made meets specifications and requirements, and during manufacturing production runs by validating lot samples meet specified quality controls. QA is also applied to software to verify that features and functionality meet business objectives, and that code is relatively bug free prior to shipping or releasing new software products and versions.
Quality Assurance...
@Xeo yes but not in that way
I mean in the "yeah I know the bug is unrelated, I just sent the email FYI" way
It definitely improves your code. Your tentatively formulated claim, that it's obscure and that code would merit from a catch block is simply not true in C++ because RAII is an established idiom. Resource handling in C++ is done by resource acquisition and garbage collection is done by implicit d...
those two probably have nothing to do with each other.. but it was raining this morning, and I got big holes in my shoes; my feet been soaked ever since (and now they smell funny)
waiting for the "real" course leader to reply with his verdict regarding the test-updates, and since my charger got stolen when I forgot it in the room of fridays lectures; I can't work from home (all I have is a macbook, and a blackberry)
so now I'm stuck at campus, just.. waiting for a "push it to X|Y|Z"
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think scopeguard is bad a priori. In a sense it has benefits similar to those of lambdas when used with standard algorithms: sometimes it makes code simpler if you can inline occasional logic. Of course this doesn't mean that one should not refactor those things into a class with a good name once the same logic happens to be replicated, and probably I wouldn't argue scopeguard is a "major" use case for unwinding_exception, but as a tool it doesn't seem so bad to me
@AndyProwl While I don't like scope_guard much, it does have the advantage (in this case) of being roughly the minimum code that demonstrates the problem.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, but that's different from being a major motivating example (again, sic!). It's fine to present useless code for demoing, but it's not fine to do so for motivation.
This is not an answer, the code in your question had no such issue, and your types were all deduced by auto. The problem you asked about was your [Undefined Behaviour]() ("makes tmp to handle deleted data") which I explained in my answer. If you fix unrelated things after fixing that, well, that's unrelated. — sehe1 min ago
^ ffs - didn't even get an upvote. OP even downvoted another answer by the developer of Boost MultiIndex. Go figure.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think it was used a lot more early on, when people were trying to "graft" RAII onto existing code bases with lots of blocks something like: { do(x); process(); undo(x); }, and scope_guard was an easy way of making the undo part happen even if process threw.
*By life, I mean something more complex than microorganisms. Something closer to what we have on Earth.
similar to this question: Is it possible for life to evolve on planets without water?
Is it possible for an atmosphere to sustain life without oxygen? Could life evolve with other gases?
@rubenvb When the name was invented, "coffin" apparently just meant a box (or similar). It was centuries later before the word was used specifically for boxes for dead people. I'm not sure exactly why, but I find that mildly comforting anyway.
and, going down the Greek angle, I had a fairly illiterate Maths friend who could not get this concept through his head no matter how many times we told him that the singular is "matrix", not "matrice" (MAY-triss-ee).
Of course, if "matrices" hadn't been uttered for a few days, then "matrix" would come out and I figure he reckoned it was just an entirely different word
@LightnessRacesinOrbit you know, I don't think that "increase length, girth and/or weight" program works on your member quite like it worked on chickens. Also, it looks like it still takes ~½ century
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, you were barely short of being arrested for attempted regicide. OTOH, much of the best humor stems from taking silly statements literally.
As mentioned in the answer to What is the first asked question on stackoverflow?, the first (now deleted) question is "Where, oh where, did the Joel Data go?"
I'm sure that Joel refers to Joel Spolsky, but what was "the Joel Data"?
I'm surprised this question hasn't been asked before. The answ...
@JerryCoffin Well something like Reddit did in its early days. Put a lot of content that actually wasn't very genuine or were actual questions that someone wondered and instead were more placeholders and fillers so the site could look busy and incoming traffic would use the site.
@DemCodeLines I don't know of any that was explicitly done just to make the site look busy--at the same time, the definition of "topical" has been tightened (repeatedly) over the years, so a lot was allowed then that certainly wouldn't be now.
Well, it does remind me more of Java. And it's so macro-infested that you could argue about it. And the "native looking" is OK by my standards, but clearly not for the gritty UI zealot. (Gimme my terminal, thank you)
Is he saying that Qt is too shit to be deemed a library, or breaks C++ idioms too much to be deemed C++, or produces too ugly UI to be considered native-looking?
@Bilal Caption correct, but depiction nonsense. Here's how it was really done: pdp8.net/pdp8i/pics/small/pdp8i_frontpanel.jpg. The row of switches on the bottom were set to 1 or 0, then one toward the right was toggled to enter that word (one word) into memory. Repeat as needed.