Ideally, if we want to have a swiss army knife following SRP, each tool would be a modular part of it that could be swapped in/out easily. The key thing about SRP is allowing easy maintenance without any (or as little as necessary) overlap between parts.
The key thing about SRP is that it states that a component should have exactly one responsibility. Easier maintenance etc are nice consequences of this, but the SRP is about responsibility, not maintenance
and the single responsibility in this case is basically "provide a fuckton of serviceable tools in a single unit so you don't accidentally lose half of them". If you make it modular then congrats, you've just reinvented the toolbox :p
Well, some physical tools are designed for easy maintenance too. And some software is designed to be nearly impossible to maintain, and just require no maintenance.
But there is still a fundamental difference in that what we usually mean when we talk about "maintaining" software isn't just "repairing" it, but "adding new stuff to it and making it better"
so how I point it to github site? and how easy is it to have a subdomain point to some other server? say if I want minecraft.cosh.ie to point to my server, but cosh.ie to point to github
@jalf You know, I considered changing career, but I didn't find anything that wouldn't a) cost me a fortune in schooling costs and b) was as good paying as programming and c) I could do without dying in agony. (I even considered becoming an airline pilot, but see criteria above)
@R.MartinhoFernandes :S selection of DNS servers? OVH, a dedicated I already have (but will soon be returned as I am getting a new one) or Customize my own?
I have to write a math library for internal use. I started to look at different implementation from open source libs and I found some weird things on operator overloading - they don't respect mathematical/logical requirements
Example 1: Irrlight Matrix (http://irrlicht.sourceforge.net/docu/matri...
@Bartek regarding your last sentence here stackoverflow.com/a/18104836/46642: his point was that, with multiplication not being commutative, one should not overload * for it.
(Don't take that as my agreement with the idea; it's merely a clarification)
"assert(a*b == b*a) should not fail in any context." That's just wrong: the fact that all built-in types exhibit this behavior does not mean that user-defined types must do the same. In particular, an operator that lets you multiply matrices must not be commutative, otherwise it would not do its job correctly. — dasblinkenlight42 secs ago
@BartekBanachewicz - why don't you think it's better to use named functions instead of operator overloading when the operators don't have the same behavior as for built in types?
*, for example, is not in general a commutative operation in algebra. So why should we require it to be commutative in C++? But it is very much well-defined for matrices. So I see no problem in a C++ matrix class implementing * to perform matrix multiplicatino
@Felics sure, that one is questionable, and I would use a named function instead. Not because you can't multiply vectors by vectors, but because there different ways to do it and it is not clear which one is intended