@Fred BTW, I still think you shouldn't post code that's wrong, even if the text says so. It's one of the things I learned when teaching C++: Neverever show code that's wrong (except with a read line striking right through it). People don't read the text, they just scan over the whole thing and see the code. You should fix the assignment in stackoverflow.com/questions/4172722/4172724#4172724
really if you want to test something gcc is very bad because it accepts a huge host of invalid code (in my experience they don't really care about accepts-invalid bugs). clang is way better there
@FredOverflow Yep, that. Never mind the comments, people will paste them right with your code. (Yep, they do. I learned this the hard way.) Remember: neverever show them wrong code.
@FredOverflow I can understand this. In fact, this is why I suggested just skipping over implementations and just emphasizing the requirement to actually have all three in the first place.
It is basically assumed that if you have something that is multi-line, you're either pasting a block of text and submitting it, or you're posting a block of code and the whole thing is going to be fixed-font/code.
Markdown is only processed for single-line messages, unless the entire thing is co...
I guess we could safely switch to German by now. @Prasoon is gone, @thecosh (SCNR) ihas been quiet for long, and @Jerry never said a word when he showed up. That leaves us three. :)
I have this question, which i thought about earlier, but figured it's not trivial to answer
int x = x + 1;
int main() {
return x;
}
My question is whether the behavior of the program is defined or undefined if it's valid at all. If it's defined, is the value of x known in main?
Here's something I've wondered: will "ordinary" C++ programmers need to know about rvalue references once the new standard comes out, or can they pretend rvalue references don't exist? Hm, may I should ask that on SO :)
@sbi I'm still here -- just reading through the last few minutes worth to see what's being discussed. Switching to German won't hurt though: I'm accustomed to not being able to understand what's being discussed anyway...
@JohannesSchaublitb A normal program should be able to ignore rvalue references. They're mostly an optimization, and you can get benefit (faster execution) without even realizing they exist. At some point they might want to learn about it to get perfect forwarding though...
I see lots of people having problems understanding rvalue references. Will "ordinary" C++ programmers need to know about rvalue references once the new standard comes out, or can they just pretend rvalue references don't exist? Do rvalue references primarily concern library implementors or all pr...
BTW, *some advice for newcomers* here: You can edit your messages for 2mins. Try the `v` arrow to the left of it. You can edit your last messages using `cursor up`, `escape` cancels this. Markdown sort of works here, but we've come to rename it as Letdown, because it's pretty buggy. Links to a few sites (all SE site, Wikipedia, Twitter etc.) will inline an excerpt of the page linked to, when they are the only text in a message. Reply to others using the familiar @syntax. Reply to specific messages by clicking on the little down-right arrow appearing at its very right when you hover over it.
I am very pleased to find out that GCC 4.6 supports the range-based for loop. I found an experimental release of MinGW 4.6 on xvidvideo.ru, is that a well-known, reliable website? What other options do I have (besides compiling myself from source code)?
The nice thing about FF is that, when I need to boot my notebook and just shut it down, it will come up again and ask to restore the session. I have tabs open for months, with article I meant to read but haven't got around to yet...
Important change
End users can not mark questions wiki anymore, so the only appropriate way to get action on a question you believe really should be wiki, is to flag it for moderator attention.
A couple points..
Vote-to-wiki will not be implemented. When the answer to a problem is "let's ma...
@Fred I might remember this wrong. Maybe it did not cover what I remember.
Well, it's 7pm on a Saturday night here. I really need to go to buy some groceries now. I will have to cook for a bunch of kids tomorrow. Need to fill the fridge before that. See y'all later!
@JerryCoffin @JohannesSchaublitb said: "someone of the finnland delegation reportet to us on ##c++ about the progress. they are going to have context keywords for void f() override; and void f() final; i think i like that"
@JerryCoffin I think contextual keywords are great. Bjarne could have invented the syntax "virtual void fun() abstract" instead of "virtual void fun() = 0" without breaking old code using "abstract" as in identifier.
someone of the finnland delegation reportet to us on ##c++ about the progress. they are going to have context keywords for void f() override; and void f() final; i think i like that
Well, I'm probably handicapped by having written one too many parsers in my life, but the idea of adding context sensitivity (of any kind) just gives me chills, even when I can see how it wouldn't necessarily be a massive problem for users.
@JerryCoffin why? you simply scan "return-type virtual identifier (parameters) identifier" and then check if the last "identifier" is "final" or "override"...
BTW, *some advice for newcomers* here: You can edit your messages for 2mins. Try the `v` arrow to the left of it. You can edit your last messages using `cursor up`, `escape` cancels this. Markdown sort of works here, but we've come to rename it as Letdown, because it's pretty buggy. Links to a few sites (all SE site, Wikipedia, Twitter etc.) will inline an excerpt of the page linked to, when they are the only text in a message. Reply to others using the familiar @syntax. Reply to specific messages by clicking on the little down-right arrow appearing at its very right when you hover over it.
@FredOverflow Because, among other things, it means you can't separate lexing from parsing -- and not even partial parsing at that. You need a full-blown parser that keeps track of the context correctly before you can even lex things correctly.
@JerryCoffin (Noob question) How is this different than, say, the token "+" which represents two different operators? Is it because both of the things it represents are operators but in the case of override it could represent either a contextual keyword or an identifier?
@JohannesSchaublitb In current (03) C++ you can. The >> thing makes it a tiny bit harder, but only minutely -- yes, you technically have to add a bit of state to your lexer, but basically all you have to do is track whether you've lexing a template parameter list or not. The difficulty it adds is pretty minor by comparison.
@JamesMcNellis From a viewpoint of lexing, + is always the same token. During parsing, you look at the type, and decide whether that's a built-in operator, an overloaded operator, or illegal -- but you can always figure out what token you have without that.
@JerryCoffin So, you can't cheat and say during lexing that override is an identifier and then when parsing say that when parsing a member function declaration it may be followed by the override identifier?
@JamesMcNellis You probably can, but then your parser can't really do its job the way you normally would any more (i.e., normally, the parse rule will reject incorrect input, but in this case you'd have to write the parse rule to accept any identifier there, and only reject anything else in the semantic action. It can be done, but it's ugly at best.
@JamesMcNellis Chat tends to favor quick exchanges that can happen with relatively little thought or research. C++ tends to be rather the opposite, favoring a slower more thoughtful approach.
@FredOverflow I don't think that's true of most of the C++ talks I've been to, but I'm very picky about what I go to. I tend to dislike most talks because it's so difficult to find an audience that's close enough to a uniform skill level that they almost inevitably leave half the people lost and the other half bored, with only two or three really learning much.
@FredOverflow Well, that's the way it is with C++. You can hardly write ten lines of C++ without having an error, so how can you speak ten sentences without?
@FredOverflow Oh, they almost all contain at least a few errors, but rarely what I'd call "serious technical" errors. At least to me, the errors are rarely the real problem.
@FredOverflow: it's really nothing I should be surprised about, just normal crap that's everywhere, but seems persistent on SO (persistent as in both continuous and lasting impact)
@FredOverflow Watch stackoverflow.com/questions/4174144/…. I came latest to the party and got accepted with only one up-vote, with two other questions having the same. I bet I'll have top-votes by tomorrow morning. (I won't bet anything substantial, though, lest you guys go in and come up with some brilliant answer, vastly outshining mine.)
the recent (~2 months) post deletions by admins on meta, which I just became aware of this past week, plus the reaction when I mailed about it, don't help
@RogerPate Try to tune it down a bit. I see that you're putting a lot of effort into SO, much more than you could ever get out of it. Try to make this more balanced, and it won't be as depressing.
Most of us got far enough to do some housecleaning on SO, closing dupes, posting helpful comments, etc., but not all the time. Often enough, we just answer questions or even (Gasp!) ask some to get our work done.
IBM has had a identity problem for their midrange system over the past decade. There are several names for the same system. The tags I see mostly being used now in SO is [as400] and [iseries]. I have been trying to keep them updated to the current name [ibm-i]. The actual name for the system righ...
this is my quiz no.1 unfortunately my works were incorrect, my professor told me to use loop inside a loop, i hope someone can help me solve this as a reference for the next quizzes(i know it would get harder the next time :) )
Write a program named Exer11.java that will generate the given num...
They've been talking about adding a new privilege for 20K+ rep. I wonder if one possibility wouldn't be forming some discussion areas where only higher-rep users are allowed to post at all. While such things have been tried (unsuccessfully in most cases) before, it might be worth another shot. Should at least remove most "I prefer to ignore the rules/mores of this society" kind of stuff.
Re the looping problem, the only "pattern" I can see for #1 is a complex one, sum of integers 1 through n except for multiples of 6 double previous item. Only two examples of that double rule so it's not like a very good pattern. Is there simpler?
I have been teaching a programming language (C++) for years. The last thing I needed when looking at the students' homework was was to spend time on searching the whole web for the place one of them copied their homework from. Of course it's often obvious when they just pasted code from somewhere...
yeah, but i get sort of attracted to things that should be simple but that i don't understand
i mean, as exercise for programming novice you don't give "print the answer (yes or no) to [a problem equivalent to Fermat's last theorem]. printing trivial while problem giving data to be printed pretty complex?
@sbi Flag one of your own questions for the mods to look at and say "i can haz recalc reps?" or something to that effect. I have no idea if that would help; it just might since that causes the rep displayed on your user page to sync up with your real rep.
@sbi The reputation that gets displayed is cached for performance reasons. If a question you answered gets deleted or if posts you downvoted get deleted your displayed rep is not updated.
@sbi Another fun fact about the rep: even the numbers on the rep report are sometimes wrong... I got Legendary at 146 or 148. (I'm not too interested in badges... except maybe tag badges: that's why I'm only answering questions tagged vector from now on :-P)
Pure virtual functions are those member functions that are virtual and have the pure-specifier ( = 0; )
Clause 10.4 paragraph 2 of C++03 tells us what an abstract class is and, as a side note, the following:
[Note: a function declaration cannot provide both a pure-specifier and a definition
—en...
Wow. Today is the day of the old answers. I have just earned 5 up-votes on How to pass objects to functions in C++? Unfortuantely, this was after hitting the rep cap. :-x