@sehe I'm not saying he was wrong in not liking it, but I look at how C# evolves and I look at how C++ evolves. C# has constraints, async/await, yield, tasks, and who knows what else (I don't know C# much). It's useful. C++ wants to get everything perfect before anything becomes available, and the result is that useful stuff becomes available at such a slow rate
I'm wondering if it's really not possible to develop the language in a more agile way
C# and C++ are radically different languages. I mean, for starters C# doesn't have the huge baggage that C++ has with the need to support most of C99. C# generics and C++ templates aren't even the same.
Also, the way C# and C++ implement features are completely different
AFAIK C# doesn't have to go through a standard committee meeting that takes place maybe a maximum of 4 times a year and when they're all done with whatever they want, they don't have to wait 5-8 months so everyone can approve of the ISO standard.
@AndyProwl I don't doubt that these folks are really pushing that. In fact, that's the whole problem: some parties are pushing so loudly, I'm forever amazed that C++ hasn't become a total shipwreck by now
I'm trying to explain to a guy that I need a teardown function to demolish the testing database after each testing session. His answer? "Create database if it doesn't exist at start of app, don't ever destroy it."
@AndyProwl Hmm. I need to test a REST application. You know, PUT/DELETE/GET/POST requests and what the application response is, as a JSON object. There's no way on earth I can test it without a database.
@Jefffrey Why not? I'm not sure what the details are, but just create an abstract interface DatabaseGateway, have a mock/spy/stub implement it, and use dependency injection for connecting the stub to the logic you want to test. Then in production you use a difference implementation of that class that does the real communication with the database
@Rapptz I did. Lazy ranges and, in general, more composable algorithms
Guys do you know why I am missing important header files under VC/include? I have these: i.imgur.com/Q7dRf9f.png I installed vc++ 2010 express and full, I don't know what else I can do.
@AndyProwl That way I don't actually test the database interaction... which... is everything the REST application is. There's no logic: POST new user, GET new user, PUT (update) new user. GET token, DELETE token.
I might be remembering it wrong, I don't have the project in front of me, but it has iomanip? errors etc basically these include files report not being present at compile time. Some of it is old code.
@JoanVenge it's really simple, reinstall, fix your installation, whatever. If you require handholding, try Super User but I reckon they'll toss it out. I hope you can search for files on your own, so that's the end of it
@sehe Thanks. I've just about had enough today. 'Cos driving Anne's darts team around, I'm totally sober. If I was drunk, I would probably have held back a bit 'cos 'don't anger-post when pissed' :)
@sehe I don't know C, I've never used string.h, my SO education taught me "some-standard-header.h" means I suck and <some-standard-header> means I'm cool
That's true. But it's in no way equivalent to "That's not a thing"
@JoanVenge I'm not. I'm just cutting to the chase. You do realize that /you/ barge in here with a question, not even checking before you cross the road :)
@JoanVenge There's absolutely no irony in "We're not psychic". You're gonna have to solve this yourself. And if you need handholding finding out elementary computer usage stuff, you're in the wrong place.
@sehe Correct. The fact that it's not a thing is the part SO (nor myself) hadn't taught me (I remember several upvoted "there's no such a thing"). But I'm not trying to find excuses :) Hence TIL
@AndyProwl If the context is strictly C++, there is no such thing. It is then, maybe, <cstring>. But this context was a compiler installation. Where the compiler can do C and C++
there is not, /usefully/, such a thing in C++. Because it's, indeed, not useful to have standard library stuff polluting the global namespace
@Jefffrey I still remember when last year I was implementing Shared Signature and Shared Key authentication in C++. From the "documentation" on Azure/MSDN.
That was... phun
I think it took me several days, if not a week, to figure out the "right" - undocumented - mix of upper/lowercase hex digits in URI-encoding and the "right" (cough!) way to interpret the base64 representation of the 32 byte key
(the docs state something like, interpret the key as UTF8 bytes; in reality, the base64 thing is just used as the raw key. Good luck finding that out if the docs said something else)
I finally just reverse engineered from the .NET SDK for Azure. Decompiling stuff until I found that glorious mess-up.
Hahaha, I lol'd so hard. Seriously, learn to use GDB: Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0x00007ffff7837db0 in BN_num_bits () from /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libcrypto.so.1.0.0 ... #3 0x0000000000402627 in dosign (prikey1=0x605a00, pubkey1=0x6057a0, data12=0x608490 "-----BEGIN RSA PUBLIC ..."..., dataLen=427) at test.c:516 #4 0x0000000000401fc4 in main (argc=2, args=0x7fffffffe188) at test.c:346 You would have seen that you called dosign with a char* instead of RSA*. Also build with -Wall and get rid of the warnings before complaining. — Grapsus5 mins ago
@MartinJames Why is this question not downvoted more?
@sehe At least if memory serves, the <Cxxx> headers are allowed to add names to the global namespace as well. As such, your code needs to pretty much assume they do, regardless. The fact that they usually don't (or may not) doesn't really gain you much.
The minor good point is that the C standard is much stricter in this regard than the C+ standard--other than the reserved names (underscore followed by underscore or capital letter, etc.) they can't define any names other than what's specifically required by the header you included. Unlike C++ headers, one header can't include arbitrary other headers, and define all those names.
The classical mistake: creating a new stringstream every single time
template<typename T> // 1. Using stringstream
string StringFromIntegral_SS(T const &value) {
static stringstream ss;
ss.str("");
ss.clear();
ss << value;
return ss.str();
}
Update Boost Spirit Karma still ...
Good to see Spirit Karma still doing it's job well there.
Added another candidate implementation, that is faster still than the Karma version. It clcoks in at ~4x the lexical cast. [Silly Benchmark Disclaimer]. Of course, any real wins depend on the real usage patterns. — sehe41 secs ago
Now it's really time for bed.
@Rapptz PE will have to wait :(
user3010322
Hm.
user3010322
So, MSVC trips up on my bounds<std::size_t n> template.
user3010322
I apparently have too many instantiations of bounds<1>
user3010322
So it's Internal Compiler Erroring, and throwing my whole build out the window.
I fixed the problem with my release build of Unicode by not using buffer_view in it
user3010322
and creating a dumbed-down version of buffer_view to handle it data_block<T>
user3010322
But now the main engine isn't compiling.
user3010322
I, uh.
user3010322
I'm out of ideas. I can't really keep bending over for MSVC.
user3010322
I'm pretty sure it's time to switch to MinGW and QtCreator, but overhauling my builds and engine to work with QtCreator and MinGW is going to be.... a lot of work.
user3010322
2:16 AM
So I've effectively shelfed all my coding for months.
inline uint64_t solution(uint64_t n) noexcept {
uint64_t sum = 0;
for(uint64_t i = 1; i <= n; ++i) {
for(uint64_t j = 1; j <= n; ++j) {
// dumb brute force ._.
sum += sum_of_divisors(i * j);
}
}
return sum;
}
I was trying to do some math in my whiteboard to see if I could make it better but couldn't think of anything that wouldn't just end up in more computations
When a PE problem says "You are given that...", is this just to verify that your implementation is correct? Or is it intended to be used as part of the calculation?
Lots of people are talking about this, so time to throw my hat in the ring. Note that this is just my idea and hasn't really been vetted by other Stack Exchange employees (probably some of them will chime in here).
Background: of "rep whores" and "help vampires"
See this answer to "Why is Stack...
And it is great that sometimes I just go look at the source code of some libraries, and they are just converting to other types, and then converting back to return a value.
... so I'm not feeding SO's demise, and I strongly reject such a stupid arrogant and false accusation, which I return to you: I give you -1 for your comment, you are projecting yourself: you are feeding SO's demise with comments like yours, but thanks God there are people more civil and respectful here. I don't want to waste my time with flame wars, so I end this thing here. Consider reading this. — Mr.C646 hours ago