@Telkitty猫咪咪 None of those pursuits come remotely close to surviving a pub brawl in the Shakespeare on a Saturday night. No amount of fitness, bravery, toughness, training, arctic clothing, GPS, satphones etc. will help you avoid a glassing or a pool cue to the face. Only experience, and knowledge of all the fire exits, will do :)
#define TEST_API TEST_API void some_kind_of_func(int a, int b){...}
I noticed there are lots of these in projects, is there a reason other than documentation of that preprocessor empty constant? If it's for documentation then why not just use comments? And is there a standard name for it?
@Pawnguy7 A conversion operator and a constructor always go in opposite directions. If A has a constructor, that always starts with something, and creates an A. If A has a conversion operator, that always starts with an A and creates something else. The only ambiguity is if A has a conversion operator to create a B, and B also has a constructor to create a B from an A.
@Pawnguy7 I, on the other hand, have -- quite a bit. It's my contrary nature at work: many people condemn all implicit conversions as evil, so I create safe implicit conversions every chance I get... :-)
I think the way some tutorial explained it once was, a reference is sort of like a const pointer (that is, where it cannot change what it points to, not the one that thinks what it is pointing to is const), that was implicitly referenced.
@DeadMG You, it can receive a pointer, but it doesn't have the same effect. Array types are special because an array passed as a parameter normally decays to a pointer -- but a reference to the array does not.
Like, the allocation. Anyway, the idea behind this was if one should ever potentially... delay things, somehow. For example, if it actually created a noticable startup difference, if one could show the user some sort of UI.
@ThePhD Well, start by fixing your options. My options class has several members as a refcountptr that yours does not. That shit isn't because I want to share them.
Welp I just read the description of the mission I just told you about, I could have warped out much sooner. I stayed and killed everything. The loot + bounties were kinda worth it though
@CatPlusPlus I was wondering, because I have a tractor beam on mine. and i usually manage to grab a few wrecks during fight but most times i have to loot the rest after
What naming scheme do I use for type-erasing holders? E.g. I'd favour any_function over just function, but what about distinguishing move-only from copyable holders? The function/unique_function scheme somewhat follows e.g. std::function but drops the any_*.
Timer there should store a copy, and MakeTimer just forwards parameters to the Timer constructor (if any), so I think std::remove_reference should be used.
@DeadMG Think e.g. networking, I/O and the like. Handles will be involved, and those things are typically move-only. Try to close over a function or anything with those, and you get a move-only functor. Then anything that unduly requires copyable functors sucks (e.g. things involving std::function<Sig>).
@LucDanton Right. But if in the implementation of function you store a shared_ptr to the function object on the heap, and simply copy that pointer when you copy the function, then you don't ever call the function type's copy constructor.
On the other side of things, if you want to store functors that will come and go and you'll need to be copying (e.g. to broadcast them to several threads, can't avoid the copy), then you need a copyable holder.
@DeadMG Yes, and Uruguay is in South America, but that's pretty much irrelevant.
A copyable holder that doesn't copy is different semantics altogether.
@LucDanton Arghhh... That's absolutely my problem with Boost.Asio handlers right now. Though I can sometimes make move-only functions to work, it still require them being CopyConstructible.