Problem here is that teaching kids that everything can be abstract is fucking easy, how to avoid creating a universe for simple tasks is harder to explain
In computer programming, object orgy is a term, common in the Perl programming community, describing a common failure (or anti-pattern) in object-oriented design or object-oriented programming. In an object orgy, objects are insufficiently encapsulated via information hiding, allowing unrestricted access to their internals, usually leading to increased maintenance needs and problems, and even unmaintainable complexity.
== Consequences ==
The results of an object orgy are mainly a loss of the benefits of encapsulation, including:
Unrestricted access makes it hard for a reader to reason about the...
Yep, that's why I felt it was hard thing to argue against, certainly nobody is going to argue against code encapsulation. Hell, different .cpp files are a kind of having code and data together.
Yep, that's why I felt it was hard thing to argue against, certainly nobody is going to argue against code encapsulation. Hell, different .cpp files are a kind of having code and data together.
> Alan Kay has argued that message passing is more important than objects in OOP, and that objects themselves are often over-emphasized. The live distributed objects programming model builds upon this observation; it uses the concept of a distributed data flow to characterize the behavior of a complex distributed system in terms of message patterns, using high-level, functional-style specifications.[7]
Thing is, OOP leads to class complicated hierarchies and they rarely model things in the most useful way. I think OOP appeals to humans because it enables antropomorphic thinking
@Mikhail Everything makes sense. It making sense is a poor argument. What matters is what works best.
Its popular because it will consume resources, guarantee job security, and is easy to teach - most importantly you have a false sense of molecularity and tons of code.
So, whats a good way to profile mobile app power consumption... I want to use all the GLSL filters but, teh battery life....
@Mysticial Well. It makes some sense for such an /otherwise un-useful/ snippet to match known virus signature, right. It's annoying, but not necessarily "incorrect".
@Morwenn Strings will always keep being represented as contiguous regions of bytes in memory. NUL-termination is only a minor aspect of it. It's the allocation vs. ownership story that defines the mess.
Obviously std::string's value semantics remove all those issues, but there's a reason why (char*, size_t) is still being used: efficiency. C++ will never forget about that.
@sehe It's not that minor: if you take a string_view but need to call an API function that expects a NUL-terminated string (e.g. filesystem functions), you need to reallocate a whole new string to have NUL-termination
@Morwenn How does that reflect anything about string_view? That's like saying double nicely highlights how everything is plagued with C array-to-pointer decay to me
@sehe People are trying to change const std::string&/const char* overloads into std::string_view ones into the standard library, highlighting the NUL-termination problems that this move causes
Why is this saving all the products ? If i have names like milk, meat, mars, etc. and choose to save names containing 'm' why does this save all the products?
void saveProduct(struct varor reg[], int nrOfGoods){
getLook(reg, nrOfGoods);
FILE * fp;
char nameFile[WORDLENGTH...
By the time you finished typing your message another spam account got terminated due to reports and another was created by spammer.
However if it makes you feel better then the best way to get address spamed is to post said email address to pastebin.com and set paste to public and never expiring.
Remeber to tag it accordingly so that it can be found through search engine like using mailto or another keyword that can be searched for.
How can I do a rational_cast<int64_t> with rounding?
Currently I'm doing a hack like this:
header->pts = std::llround(boost::rational_cast<long double>(pts / time_base));
But I'd like to be able to do it "properly" without involving floating point.
A bit hard to guess what might constitute a "dirty joke". OTOH, the simple logistics of touching a woman inappropriately from a wheelchair, with your wife next to you and (apparently) not noticing seems...somewhat far-fetched, to put it mildly. Regardless of one's personal opinion of Bush himself, it seems to me that this one should (currently) be treated as what it actually is: an unsupported accusation.
@Omnifarious I'd tend to disagree as a rule. Unless you honestly need a regex to define your tokenization (which you rarely do) it's often going to be a fairly slow, heavy way to do the job--akin to renting a large commercial truck when all you need is a week's groceries for a small family.
The Qt World Summit videos were just posted, including my talk which was a condensed (40-minute) version of my CppCon 2017 metaclasses talk with some small tweaks for a Qt-specific audience. Here it is below:Filed under: C++, Uncategorized
I wonder how tied regex_token_iterator is to a regex. Whether you could supply something that worked enough like a regex that it worked with regex_token_iterator but just match any sequence of characters that are all from a set of characters you passed into the constructor.
@Omnifarious Well, let's not propagate using the cannon at all times (in a language renowned for its foot-shootability). This one though makes a lot of sense for bread-and-butter parsing of CSV-like input:
@thecoshman Like licensing hassles (yes, Boost is BSD licensed, try telling a corporate lawyer that when you include it in product code), build and dependency headaches, cross-platform build and dependency headaches, and a host of other issues. Aside from any of that, depending on external libraries is just fine.
Which is why I prefer answers that don't tell me to use Boost. Once, the standard C++ library was so incapable that it was a reasonable answer to the vast majority of questions. That's no longer true.
Sure, if someone wants to do something that's pretty complex and Boost does well, by all means, recommend Boost.
But for something so dead stupid and simple as tokenizing a string, a thing that vast majority of current languages can do with one or two lines of code, telling people to use Boost isn't really an answer I consider reasonable.
@Omnifarious Whilst your other points are fine, this I think is the key thing. There's a lot of "Just use this lib" when, the language can support it already. My main point though was your generic anti library attitude was kinda silly. Again, the issues you first raised are valid and good reasons to not use certain lib, I just don't think they justify "I don't like relying on external libraries"
Especially as your initial point sounded more that you dislike the 'reliance' part
user406009
I'm much more hesitant to use C++ libraries than libraries in other languages if only because the build systems often used in C++ are horrible.
Sturgeon's revelation, commonly referred to as Sturgeon's law, is an adage commonly cited as "ninety percent of everything is crap". It is derived from quotations by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author and critic; while Sturgeon coined another adage that he termed "Sturgeon's law", it is the "ninety percent crap" remark that is usually referred to by that term.
The phrase was derived from Sturgeon's observation that while science fiction was often derided for its low quality by critics, it could be noted that the majority of examples of works in other fields could equally be seen...
What are yall expecting with modules? To not have a header-source split? To be able to say compile main.cpp and it finds the appropriate modules through the file system? I know that the current modules ts isn't what I wanted, but it's hard to put a finger on what it is I dislike about it
There's a reason why I use #pragma once whenever I'm allowed to. But I still forget to add it to my headers sometimes.
I think my biggest concern with modules as is is that, IIUC, you aren't supposed to mix things like import std.io and #include <iostream>. That's going to be a problem when trying to use modules while also using libraries that haven't migrated.
It's a huge problem that modules didn't happen 20 years ago. But I'd rather not wait another 20 years is all I'm saying. There's nothing that repairs that 20 years of waiting though.
In both case, we can get a pretty close value but even just boiling water is complicated because water doesn't go from idle to boiling from one time to the other.
body temperature can be measured with a mercury thermometer but even that won't give me really precise result because it really depends on the accuracy of the print and my eyes
Well, the temperature profile of boiling water is that the water rises in temperature until it reaches boiling, then stays there for a long time. So, detecting when it's actually boiling isn't too hard if you have a sufficient quantity of water.
I wonder how water would react if you vaporized it, then trapped the individual molecules in a laser trap. Would they immediately start binding together into ice? Or would you get a cloud of supercool water vapor?
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Well, pretty much anything truly at 0 is essentially impossible (and yes, getting really close to 0 normally involves vacuum chambers and such).
@Omnifarious No, just water vapor wearing shades and the latest fashion in blue jeans, thinking it's super-cool.
I'm pretty sure I learned at school that water can skip the liquid phase and that at university even ice can transform itself in vapor skipping the liquid phase.
@Omnifarious I think if you really want it to be accurate, you'd probably want to use something like a pressure cooker that gives a dependable pressure (and therefore boiling point). Connecting the wires from the thermistor inside to the sensor outside is left as an exercise for the reader.
actually, if you think about it, boiling and freezing temperature would vary on different planets because of different gravity, thus atmospheric pressure