@Loebl I'm guessing that Puppy's tummy was acting up a bit (and if you care to, feel free to read through ancient Lounge history to understand that "tummy acting up" once bordered on life-threatening for him, so a decent quality of life still depends on medication in his case).
Anyone had to support a struct hack before and make it safe? I'm thinking of something like foo::make_hack<T, H, P...>(std::size_t, P) where T is the main type, H is the hack element type, and P is the constructor args.
I'm writing a skip list.
What I have:
template<typename T>
struct SkipListNode
{
T data;
SkipListNode* next[32];
};
The problem with this code is that it wastes space - it requires all nodes to contain 32 pointers. Especially considering that in typical list, half of the nodes will on...
honestly there's a lot of such types around (for example, in WinAPI, which didn't have the luxury of C99), so if a compiler would break that code, everyone would rebel, I think
just like no one would break dlsym that needs a cast to a function pointer from void* on the assumption that C standard doesn't define the behaviour