Fuck, I just realized that if I refactor all my code to use the "all lowercase" notation, I can't use capitalization to distinguished between constructor arguments and class members. Indeed I can't use capitalization for anything...
@jaggedSpire I could've sworn that I was the only person in the world who prepended with m_. Everybody else does with a leading or trailing underscore.
Hey guys! Just wanted to show you guys that the project I was making a few months ago(and discussing it here) made it to the top of the /r/MachineLearning subreddit :) reddit.com/r/MachineLearning/comments/77w42a/…
Recently I've seen an example like the following:
#include <iostream>
class Foo {
public:
int bar;
Foo(int num): bar(num) {};
};
int main(void) {
std::cout << Foo(42).bar << std::endl;
return 0;
}
What does this strange : bar(num) mean? It somehow seems to initialize the member varia...
So I was looking for old versions of Bibutils to create a Git repository archiving as many revisions as I could find. It turns out somebody has already done that before and managed to find many more revisions than I did.
I am not very familiar with git, when my cowork pushes something, and I had something already committed locally, I get a error like error: failed to push some refs to repository, then if I pull and then push, it works fine, but on bitbucket page it was rebased(I think that is the name? there was 2 paths and they meet at the top)? Is there a way to avoid that? My problem is that I often commit things locally, and if my cowork does a push, my commit will produce that issue.
OpenSSL has been pretty aggressive with depreciations lately. First, this week my RSA SSH key stopped working in Cygwin because it is less 1024 bits and today I have noticed that I had to provide password even though ssh-agent was running.
Hey, so disregarding how horrible that someone is - I have a friend who (gulp) wants to learn C++ as a first programming language. They have an interview in a week about C++ and they don't know any coding let alone in C++.
I warned them they are in for a world of suffering and I warmly recommend against it.
That said, are there any C++ books you guys would recommend for "C++ as a first language"? inb4 already sent him all the books about suicide and mental help.
(My go to books in C++ assume it's not the first language, even "The C++ Programming Language" assumes it's not a first language IIRC)
@BenjaminGruenbaum TBH, nobody can learn C++ in a week. I'm not sure how he thought it was a good idea to try to get a programming job with no programming experience at all.
> Accelerated C++ (Andrew Koenig and Barbara Moo) This basically covers the same ground as the C++ Primer, but does so on a fourth of its space. This is largely because it does not attempt to be an introduction to programming, but an introduction to C++ for people who've previously programmed in some other language
Beginner
Introductory, no previous programming experience
Programming: Principles and Practice Using C++ (Bjarne Stroustrup) (updated for C++11/C++14) An introduction to programming using C++ by the creator of the language. A good read, that assumes no previous programming experience, but is n...
That said, when I say he wants to know C++ in a week, that means I'd expect him to write the same code I'd expect him to be able to write in Python after a few days.
@fredoverflow I honestly memorized the abstract equality and abstract comparison algorithms, but that's a really bad sign not a good one :D
He has a mathematics B.Sc and quit his M.Sc, he's not stupid, I recommended Python as a first language.
Thanks for the tips and for the confirmation this is an impractical task.
@EuriPinhollow Foremost, all language including C++ would benefit from a JIT. Here is a fun idea, make an easy to use wrapper around GCC that compile C++ for the =native target on first run, similar to Android's ART.
Then the user would gets a 30 minute "installing" message :-)
The problem which led me to such question is that I have hit C++ template restrictions while trying to write a program in sort of optimal way (performance + code reusage + fewer unreadable template usages). Besides that it can be solved with if constexpr it could also be solved with machine code substitution at runtime so that when you point a pointer at function which is then invoked what actually happens is machine code gets linked together.
@Mikhail Not being able to partially specialize function templates. Partial ordering requirements. Non-generic handling of template template arguments and or non-type arguments. Duality of sfinae. Disallowing template members in local types. The works.
Try to implement structured binding for Fusion sequences for fun.
@EuriPinhollow hmmm. That sounds a lot like type erasure of the sort function
@Mikhail On a purely theoretical basis, you're undoubtedly correct--all else being equal, compiling on the final target lets you gather more information about that target, and optimize appropriately. All else is never equal though. Experience with .NET, Java, etc., indicates that the theoretical strengths of JIT are consistently outweighed by its weaknesses (mostly: user waits during optimization).
@NeilButterworth Thanks for the authoritative link. In practice, I'll take the risk of a user typing in over 16 megabyte of text data at the console, all without ever being tempted to hit Enter. To the OP: the linked question shows you the details of how to best skip the remaining input till the end of line. — sehe14 secs ago
Why are people being so dense.
Don't they see the difference between "I'm prompting the user for input" and language-lawyering questions.
Yeah. Of course there just needs to be the overload, but since we don't have Uniform Function Call syntax, there's no way to extend the standard library with it.
lol cryptocurrency, ride sharing services ... or other sharing economy technology - are they really new innovative technology of just new ways of doing old things?
@sehe I will posit that it's best to not pass std::numeric_limits::max() to ignore. As soon as you've read enough to be certain there's a problem, you should stop and report the error. Programming the machine to read and ignore input for hours (or potentially even years) is clearly a bad idea, and should be avoided.