> Tarn has been single since graduate school, when he dated a Cisco systems administrator for a short time. I asked him whether he wanted children. “I don’t mind the idea of never having kids,” he said. “I want to stay focused on the game, and if I had kids, I’d wind up paying attention to them instead.”
quiz: a template is given: template<typename T, int N> struct C;. Write a partial specialization such that all uses of C will use the partial specialization!
const in C always generate storage and only means that it's value doesnt change in execution. You cannot use it like a #define MACRO the way you can use const in C++
@jalf forget "Linux", I'm talking about concepts that every top programmer should know about them , such as "Dynamic Libraries" , "Multi Threading" , "Interrupts" and ....
@EmAdpres Interrupts are pretty damn specialized. Most programmers have little need for knowing about those. Dynamic libraries are both platform-specific and specific to C/C++. And there are a lot of good books on multithreading.
I have the following c function declaration:
float Sum2d( const unsigned int nRows, const unsigned int mCols, float arr[nRows][mCols] )
{
float sumAll = 0;
// I would like to make this change illegal!
arr[0][0] = 15;
for (int i = 0; i < nRows; i++)
for (int j = 0; j...
I know there is many good book for each of them , but the book I referred, talk about all of them as minor . that way I can understood , what's a thread exactly, and if I interested , I can learn it more in a separate book < sry for weak eng :D >
@EmAdpres The problem is, I know of a lot of good books, many of which I haven't read. When some random person tells me on a chat room that "this book is really good", why should I care? Why should that book get priority above all the other good books I haven't read?
each player picks a randomly-generated combination of race and special power, and play that race as long as you like. Then you can let it go into decline, leaving your race's tokens on the board to score more points for you, but while you take control of a new race
@EmAdpres I'm taking it very easy. I just don't find it very persuasive when a completely random stranger walks up to me and says "you should read this book"
@EmAdpres yes, but it's still a recommendation from someone I know nothing of. That carries about as much weight as a recommendation made by someone in a TV commercial
I am writing a file in C/C++ which generates 100000 lines of records (name, int[5] grade, double[5].value). The code should generate 100000 random characters for name and integer for value. I am getting stckoverflow error. Can anyone pls help?
@jalf Let's introduce myself :)) A Top Student @ Computer Engineering , which love programming and love know about everything at least , as define and purpose of that thing ! B-)
> For performance-critical code, runtime checks such as uses of assert can impose a significant performance penalty. In these cases, you can compile your code with the NDEBUG macro defined, by using the -DNDEBUG flag on your compiler command line. With NDEBUG set, appearances of the assert macro will be preprocessed away. It’ s a good idea to do this only when necessary for performance reasons, though, and only with performance-critical source files.
> Because it is possible to preprocess assert macros away, be careful that any expres-sion you use with assert has no side effects. Specifically, you shouldn’ t call functions inside assert expressions, assign variables, or use modifying operators such as ++.
@EmAdpres It's poorly worded, because you can safely do assert(some_function_that_doesnt_affect_the_program_flow_because_oh_well_its_for_debugging_purposes(foo, bar, baz))
Not that standard assert is any good, with it breaking to debugger inside C library.
> Another thing to bear in mind is that you should not use assert to test for invalid user input. [...] Use assert for internal run-time checks only. Some good places to use assert are these: [...] Check conditions on function parameter values.
It's OK to use accessor functions in assertions. If the only failure mode is illegal memory access, then the assertion might crash when -DNDEBUG is disabled, but that's a good thing.
> Often, when a system call fails, it’ s appropriate to cancel the current operation but not to terminate the program because it may be possible to recover from the error.
ok, so anyway, @EmAdpres, thanks for the recommendation but as you can hear, most of us tend to be skeptical of unsolicited recommendations from people we've never met before. :)
But oh well, I think you'd be able to see the problem.
Again, someone said something about being familiar with C.
> Linux cleans up allocated memory, open files, and most other resources when a pro-gram terminates, so it’ s not necessary to deallocate buffers and close files before calling exit.
> One major advantage of a shared library is that it saves space on the system where the program is installed. If you are installing 10 programs, and they all make use of the same shared library, then you save a lot of space by using a shared library. If you used a static archive instead, the archive is included in all 10 programs. So, using shared libraries saves disk space. It also reduces download times if your program is being downloaded from the Web.
@MartinhoFernandes "When a fork() system call is issued, a copy of all the pages corresponding to the parent process is created, loaded into a separate memory location by the OS for the child process."
In computing, the fork bomb is a form of denial-of-service attack against a computer system which makes use of the fork operation (or equivalent functionality) whereby a running process can create another running process. Fork bombs typically do not spread as worms or viruses; to incapacitate a system, they rely on the (generally valid) assumption that the number of programs and processes which may execute simultaneously on a computer has a limit. This type of self-replicating program is sometimes called a wabbit.
A fork bomb works by creating a large number of processes very quickly in...
@TonyTheTiger I posted a detailed description of how Cygwin implements it here. Note that the Cygwin implementation is probably more complex because it doesn't fit the Windows API very well.
@JohannesSchaublitb §7.1.5/9: "A constexpr specifier used in an object declaration declares the object as const." — However I'm not sure if const is allowed to precede constexpr; constexpr const Animal *const is the properly confusing alias to constexpr const Animal *.