Hey guys, I have a question about thread-safety. I have a class that has a member function that edits a specific pointer content, where the pointer is an element of an array. I would like to only lock access to that element in the array, but allow access of other threads to all other elements. Is that possible?
@Borgleader Carefully ignores the minor detail that processors still do a lousy job of predicting many branches (but we don't know enough about this code to know whether it's true here or not).
Most definitely not the problem there /cc @Ven Even if many responders are bots (they aren't, but let's /assume/ nevertheless), they're responding to unequivocal fountains of bile, hate mongering blogs, ridiculous misrepresenters of truth etc.
@Borgleader I fully expect that to be a link to a spirit question
@nwp Unless you have a well-defined typical workload and profiler-driven optimization, it can't. The optimum instructions to use depend primarily on the input data (and secondarily on the target processor), not the operation to be accomplished.
> During the Vietnam War, American troops tried to find Viet Cong tunnels with witching rods. Researchers at defense contractor HRB Singer criticized skepticism of the age old practice as “somewhat academic” and said, given the importance of the mission, that “scientific rigor can be de-emphasized, if necessary.”
Pretty reassuring to think the US army leaders don't shy away from healthy doses of superstition and psychics src
I mean. Only one way to avoid pitch forks or civilian casualties etc.
> Worried about the Kremlin’s own paranormal efforts, the general was also a true believer. “I never liked to get into debates with skeptics, because if you didn’t believe that remote viewing was real, you hadn’t done your homework,” Thompson said, according to Schnabel’s book Remote Viewers: The Secret History of America’s Psychic Spies.
Hello guys, for a CPP beginner coming from Java background, do I need to start by reading a book about cpp , or I can use the cpp reference site and start write programs ??
@ZeRubeus Maybe look at this, but additionally never ever use new and you should be good. But a book wouldn't hurt if you want to learn things properly instead of stumbling around for a while.
also, it's for personal use in CS classes where we are given bog simple tasks by a semi-competent teacher and a rudimentary set of "functional" functions would speed up solving them giving me more time to fuck around on reddit
I'm making a map<string, string> radix tree style that then needs to be serialized and efficiently looked up from disk. Not sure how to de-duplicate the value though. And it probably has a proper name and implementation that I'm just not finding -.-
but because of the way it is overloaded (the overloads differ only by type signature of the supplied function) it's still impossible to be replaced by static_assert
for instance when the game tells you to go from A to B but it's incredibly unclear how the fuck you're supposed to get there and the map doesn't show even a single route so you spend the next hour looking for a vent only to loot the entire fucking area and then discover it was supposed to be an allegedly optional sidequest that opened the magic door for you
another thing that's annoying is how they keep trotting out the villains from the original Deus Ex, ensuring that you know in advance that your quest to murder them in a closet will have bugger all result
speaking of which, Jensen has an amazingly relaxed attitude about the whole thing
"Hey, these evil dudes trying to take over the world that were only stopped before by majorly fucking the world up? Well, I know who they are and where they live, but instead, I'm just gonna go arrest some small-time arms dealers."
just buy a rocket launcher, fly back to America, and blow them up dude.
he also makes about -1 use of all experience and information he gained from the first game
and they changed the voice actors for the recurring characters, so it's super distracting every time any of them is involved.
also, Jensen has a bunch of problems proving shit happened and gathering evidence, but he has fucking artificial eyes, just record and upload to a server, then show your boss.
also, Jensen could just fix a bunch of the world's problems by telling everybody what happened in the first game and why.
but decides that apparently this is much too simple of a solution
also I dislike Prague, it is not as good as Detroit from the previous game
it's a lot more open allegedly, but the problem is that the design doesn't lend itself to any actual quest or needed usage in the game, there's a bunch of paths that lead nowhere or look like they're clearly intended to help you with a given quest but then turn out to be just totally useless.
and they never actually tell you about any useful shops
I also had a few odd times like where a major NPC du jour got blown up but nobody decided this was important.
a few annoying buggy controls as well.. the game is nearly unplayable when you can't fucking reload and the ironsights were unusable
the hacking minigame is mostly much improved better but they decided that the smart thing was a fog of war sometimes, which just makes it impossible to play
also the game was only 14 hours long and at least 2 hours of that was running around trying to fucking find things
I just want to shamelessly self-promote my new hopefully-not-single-week-project: github.com/rubenvb/skui
I have just implemented a simple signal-slot mechanism and a "property" object that signals when it is changed. I'm mimicking Qt style with C++11(14?). Oh, and I have Travis CI building and testing it, yay!
unless you're going for some crazy optimizations no C compiler supports or you're working on a deeply embedded platform I don't think raw assembly has any use case left
Hi! I'm tempted to ask a question at the core of which lies just sheer curiosity and not some programming problem - I'd like to gather some info in one place (community wiki?) about the extents of c++ ecosphere, namely, a list of c++ language extensions: c++/cli, c++/cx and so on (I guess there are much more than that).. But I'm not sure if it belongs on stackoverflow or programmers, and will it be accepted as a legit question or discarded as <insert-reason-here>. What do you think?
Desire to know that is partly the reason I'd like to ask that question) c++/cli does not seem completely useless, for one. Is bridging managed and native code completely useless affair? I guess it depends.
They aren't well publicized and as much a mess as C++ is, the difficulty of finding good documentation on extensions seems to be prohibitive. It's like trying to track down all the upgrades/repairs made to a used car by the previous owners.
Somehow I'm fascinated with that mess)) But I understand those on the unfascinated side. It's like a discourse between those who are just at the beginning of a romantic relation and those who just want to get garbage taken out and dishes washed after 20+ years in marriage. Different attitudes and tasks)).. Ok, guys, I got the message, thanks.