@StackedCrooked So I think the underlying problem is that you are notifying a collection of objects with your own loop. A more paradigmatic way is to have the loop performed implicitly, aka connect the signal to each object.
I've been doing Qt for years and haven't had to delete later anything, ever.
Typically, if you want GUI manipulation like deleting rows from a table, there are specialized commands like removeItem()that are responsible for freeing memory. A common mistake is keeping a series of pointers to widgets, mirroring the functionality of a layout. You should always directly access the layout.
My more serious problem with Qt is that it takes forever to code because there aren't many good default delegates. So one of my apps has hundreds of custom widgets. This wasn't fun.
One has to submit a privacy policy with each app submission/update. So I copied and pasted the two lines it from my other app. After 10 hours, I suddenly realise that I have not altered the app name in the privacy policy.
How do we know humans don't exist on earth like fish in an aquarium and geniuses are not just good receptors of aliens transmissions?
@Morwenn Once you meet up in real life, you become real life friends. You could say someone is 0.1r + 0.9i friend, but it gets awkward when telling people you have altogether 3.14 real life friends.
@sehe He's literally spent years on that and it shows
somehow makes me glad I dumped all that Lua-C++ effort
with all the years, and all the effort, C++ is still so unusable that you can't get it done right
it's the same with OpenGL wrappers and every other library
it looks promising, it shows signs of being doable, you see the idea, and then it turns out that one language "feature" or another fucks up miserably and you can never quite get it to be good and usable
Incidentally, I just finished a 3-day "Advanced Modern C++" training which was a good reminder of mostly what I already knew, but also of what I hate about C++
TL;DR that language is doomed, they're paying me to write it and so I'll have to keep learning it but frankly I wish for it to die ASAP.
at this point I don't even mind the useless knowledge of it I have, it's kinda amortized already
I'd happily lose all that and start all new with something that's actually sensibly designed
To me the major pains of C++ are the ergonomics, overall I'd say it's on the same level as Rust. Rust to me has the ergonomics issues in the language itself. C++ has them more distributed everywhere.
That said I wish the cult of rust would stop being so absolutist on "Rust would have saved you" every single time a bug comes out
Python is after QBasic the first language I used, and I switched away from it due to a lack of tooling and features. No debugger, no breakpoints, no auto-complete, can't define a function that takes an int, no diagnostics for anything unless it causes a runtime error and so on.
With a few loops and condition statements within each other, indentation can get quite ugly quite quickly, especially when you use longer and more explicit names for variables.
If you have 3 nested loops and 3 nested condition statements and 3 spaces for each layer, then you have variable names such as InternalFrameInternalFrameTitlePaneInternalFrameTitlePaneMaximizeButtonWindowNotFocusedState.
I actually searched for the longest variable name and that's one in com.sun.java.swing.plaf.nimbus :p
Python didn't have those things when I switched to C++. Or I was too dumb to find them. I switched away from QBasic because it didn't have proper functions.
Subroutines, but it didn't jump back to where it came from and you couldn't return to where you called it from. I did kinda hack it together by storing arguments and the line where I called from in global variables, but I couldn't figure out how to do that without manually typing out the line. It's very vague memory from a long time ago. There was probably a better way.
@nwp the type checks aren't part of the code, similarly to other, compiled languages
so you can still run this if you so choose
as for "concepts", bidirectional type inference, generics, callable types, abstract base classes, multiple inheritance and tuple types are supported by mypy specifically
Having optional typechecking means you can used different checkers with different capabilities
I guess the hard part would be finding C++ people who have heard of GADTs and see the value. From my perspective it's kinda cool, but for example std::chrono has that or something similar without deduction guides.
Also you can't get away with "We begin with an example of building a simple embedded domain specific language" with a C++ audience. I would expect people to stop reading as soon as you mention "DSL" because it doesn't apply to them.
Hmpfh the more I think about it the more I see that subtyping in C++ already allows you to do everything that I did
Well okay the guides for ops allow you to make the whole class a template and then make the inheritance base on template and the ctor arguments deduce the result
But this is only useful if the ops have multiple overloads themselves
If you treat each op as one ctor it can simply inherit from the proper type and so it's ctor will create the base value of that type thanks to subtyping
This is an odd aspect of C++'s lifetime rules. [basic.life]/1 tells us that an object's lifetime ends:
if T is a class type with a non-trivial destructor ([class.dtor]), the destructor call starts, or
the storage which the object occupies is released, or is reused by an object that is no...
Hi there guys! Does anyone have much experience with C++ and numercal methods? I am trying to code up a c++ script for Runge Kutta 4th order and have hit a wall!!