@StackedCrooked Not always. I set aside 5 minutes each week during which I'm 100% serious. I assure that I'm not joking at the time by scheduling it while I'm asleep.
Think about it. They both hate OOP as it currently is. They both hate the web. They both consider dynamically typed language acceptable, they both talk of how the industry is terrible and everything is complicated.
Also, Qt is driving me crazy. void finished(int exitCode); // ### Qt 6: merge the two signals with a default value void finished(int exitCode, QProcess::ExitStatus exitStatus); Is there a way to get a function reference to the second function?
Aaaww. /home/nican/git/robot/main.cpp:235: error: invalid static_cast from type '<unresolved overloaded function type>' to type 'void (*)(int, QProcess::ExitStatus)' ^
In C++, an octal number is defined by preceeding it with a 0, example:
01 = 1
010 = 8
014 = 12
So I was experimenting how working with Base 8 in c++ works, and tried adding to it with a loop, like so:
int base8Number = 00;
for (int i = 01; i < 011; i+=01)
{
base8Number += i;
cout << b...
@VermillionAzure Irrelevant to compiler runtime. You don't have any infinite inputs to feed the compiler, and even if you did, the parser will have a finite parse stack, so an infinite input of a+a+a+a+... will all fit the grammar, but will still terminate fairly quickly.
@VermillionAzure A parser (typically) uses a stack. For recursive descent, that's the normal runtime stack. For others, it's (typically) separate, but still thoroughly finite. When you overflow the stack, the parser will (or certainly should, anyway) terminate.
@VermillionAzure I mean a well-written parser should check the stack, and terminate if it's about to overflow. Others that aren't so well written could just overflow and have UB. They'll probably terminate fairly soon after that, but with UB, it's hard to be sure.
@VermillionAzure Yes, generally. Write a little program that generates a program like: int a = 1; int b = a+a+a+a+a... for a hundred megabytes, then (try to) compile that and see what happens.
@VermillionAzure A quick check shows that VC++ and g++ both crash and burn on a mere 512 K of b = a+a+a+a+a...;. VC++ at least checks its stack, so it gives a meaningful error message: fatal error C1063: compiler limit : compiler stack overflow. g++, by contrast, pops up the standard dialog: cc1plus has stopped working.
Like, for example, I want to be able to handle UTF-8 encoding for a compiler or perhaps even translate the programming language syntax into a different language so that we can have a foreign analog to, say, C
@VermillionAzure Depends on how much you expect from it. To really work well, yes, it would need a fair amount of Unicode awareness. For example, to recognize equality of identifiers correctly, it'd probably want to do something like NFC on each identifier before doing much else with it.
@JerryCoffin It's just that I figure that given a character type and standard delimiters for tokens, it might be trivial to store the identifier names and still not have to change a lot of things
lol, so MSVC excepts the following, function prototype and then crashes: void interpolateSurface(std::vector<std::pair<std::pair<int, int>, ScopeLoc>>& dst, const const std::vector<ScopeLoc>& __restrict src)`