if you use one it crashes; if you use the other it puts out horrible console spam (fuck them writing to console without asking me) making the test output unreadable.
@JohanLarsson have you tried ditching the domain check for now and just writing ch - '0'? Just to see if it's actually the bottleneck, and what factors in?
I heard some comparisons between the SurfaceBook and MBP 15" speakers, the SurfaceBook has even worse speakers due to being crammed into the display for tablety functionality.
@JohanLarsson ...I'm not familiar with C# so I don't know if that's good or bad code for the language, but it sure seems verbose to my C++ sensibilities.
Not sure what I am going to do with the Surface Pro 3 now, not really needing it anymore. Maybe for drawing, but its tracking system is janky as shit on diagonal strokes or any precision strokes.
I'm supposed to be learning C# right now (and I am becoming acquainted with it in a noobish fashion) but I really, really wasn't looking forward to coding in it if it needed... that
@ElimGarak well. it's not needing that of course. But it's arguably "the sane way" to write it. Much less unclear or error prone than haggling with ch >= '0' && ch <= '9' and - given a good compiler, potentially easiest to optimize.
@jaggedSpire show me your alternative. I say it might be shorter but it suffers at least 2 new ailments. I don't think there's anything /definitely/ better. Just a matter of taste really
user1804599
My garbage collector has a bug but I can't find it.
I'd assume if(c < '0' || c > '9'){throw;} return c - '0'; would work fairly well, with only assuming that the characters 0-9 are a contiguous block of numbers with 0 at the lowest and 9 at the highest