So apparently, there are a lot of trolls on pcpartpicker. Tons of accounts with no builds running around trashing everybody's build - mostly on the higher-end builds. lol
I guess that makes the name apt enough. Though by this point I think it's unfortunate that convention has made atomic_ the prefix for things that are lock-free
@Morwenn Okay, I guess I can see some use for that. Still doesn't seem to fit with the committee's publicly stated position about enabling new techniques and such, rather than just slightly different syntax for existing capabilities.
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main(int argc,char* argv[]){
return 0;
}
root@kali:~/projects/Linux-Commands# c++ remove.cpp -o rm
root@kali:~/projects/Linux-Commands# ./rm /a.out
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::out_of_range'
what(): basic_string::at: __n (...
@Typhon if you go to the coffee room in the computer science faculty of your university you can bet your ass the default topic there is computer science
You must be a real disappointment to all communities you meet, then. I know of very few communities that appreciate spelling errors as well as tropical storms
Always the same... look, we don't want questions here, that's why we have the other room. Because many regulars hate dealing with random question dumps.
And the ones that don't and are willing to help will be in that other room
It makes exactly as much as sense as you demanding our room name to make sense (for you). I _demand_ your name to make sense to me. Typhon is a spelling error for typhoon. End of story.
@sehe you're being a dick. all I was saying was that the room appeared to be c++ based and thee was no need to jump down my throat for posting a question.
named params are nice, IMO unnamed params should be the opt-in part but that's way too radical (not just for C++, obviously that's never happening, but even for a concept language)
I hate fluent API because it invites cutesy-pantsy naming that is supposed to resemble engrish but really just ends up being an excuse for inconsistent domain terminology and undiscoverable APIs.
Most of these arguments don't go for proper named-arg use, because by definition the naming should predictable and discoverable by the same logic that function call params are discoverable.
But bad examples are Fluent Assertions and their ilk ("behaviour driven tests", anyone). It's really something that behooves Ruby e.a.
@StackedCrooked The object.x().y().z() kind of thing. As originally intended, you write it to read like a sentence: object(input).initialize().process().format().write(output_file);
Can you show us the problem? That code looks ok, it compiles. Include a SSCCE that demonstrates the problem. — sehe14 hours ago
See. This would be another one of my "snarky" "complaints" about "minutiae". (context).
Thanks sehe, that worked like a charm. Learnt a lot from your code but std::chrono is still quite foreign to me, so I'll be reading up on it today. Thanks! — chocobo_ff2 mins ago
Apparently, attitude still has a lot to do with how people deal with it
@StackedCrooked aka the "named parameter idiom". It works well enough for that (when you can't reasonably break something up into small enough pieces to render it pointless).