So, i've been noticing this pattern often. You have have some cavernous function that takes a const reference, for example doWork(const settings& setting), then somewhere in it has a callback which changes the const settings& setting. Whats the correct solution, maybe split the function up? Maybe don't use a reference...
Also, was there some wacky thing that happens when smart pointers try to delete incomplete types? Like the type information needs to be visible in the compilation unit where the destructor is created? Was there some boost library that checked that you weren't deleting/free an incomplete type?
There was. std::unique_ptr<T> calls delete. delete must know if there's a destructor to call. Though, fairly sure std::unique_ptr<T> makes that a hard error instead of UB
Yeah, I got bit by that a few times in MSVC, where the compiler omitted the delete because it was an incomplete type. Would be nice if there was some way to choke compilation on delete and an incomplete type.
Curious if there is a way to force generation of a default destructor in another compilation unit, where the type is known.
> Although std::unique_ptr<T> with the default deleter may be constructed with incomplete type T, the type T must be complete at the point of code where the destructor is called.
"the destructor" here refers to the destructor of std::unique_ptr<T>
Doesn't say whether it's a hard error or not, but that's trivial to diagnose, so I expect the implementations to issue errors here as a matter of QoI
Be ready to uninstall te parts a few times, to have that little sqare base fitting correctly with all the other sections. Also have a saw and some super glue ready. Lol.
Such a great review, gives so much 'confidence' to assemble my flat pack robots ...
I transferred our app from Objective-C and Cocoa to C++.
In Objective-C I was frequently using Grand Central Dispatch and the very handy dispatch_async functions.
When moving to C++11, I found std::async as the closest equivalent.
I'm using Scott Meyers variant of it which makes sure it's really...
Perhaps one day, they're going to realize that having 3 ways to layout a UI (programmatically like Fusion, via the pusedo CSS settings, or via XML) was a terrible design decision. Or maybe the mistake is using Qt Widgets rather than the other thing (QtQuick?). For example, I can't solve my issue with title boxes being draw when there is no title, as the values are hard coded into the "fusion" theme. So I'd need to rebuild the Qt dlls to fix the problem.