@MarkGarcia "Indeterminately sequenced" is more like "unspecified" -- the implementation is required to documentation implementation defined stuff, but not unspecified stuff.
@ScottW 6502 is one of the more difficult to write well. You have to practice it a lot to get a nice "flow" when you only have three registers -- though a lot of code mostly uses Y as an index into page 0, and uses page 0 as a basically a lot of slow registers.
@ScottW Not just fewer bytes. Quite a few instructions are only available for page 0 -- especially most that involve indirection. So, if you want a pointer, you pretty much put it in page 0.
@ScottW Right. There's also an indexed indirect using X, but it's rarely as useful.
@ScottW When you do, chances are probably at least 90% that it'll be with X=0.
There are MANY reasons to use brace initialization, but you should be aware that the initializer_list<> is preferred to normal constructor. This leads to problems with constructors and templates where the type T constructor can be either an initializer list or a plain old ctor.
struct Foo {
...
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Certainly too much work for a useless number. It can be justified (IMO, anyway) if your intent is to actually help people though. Of course, that depends on whether you care about helping people.
I have a very big text file (10 GB). Both Notepad and Notepad++ tell me that the file is too big for them to open. What editor can handle such a large file? It's a log file.
@thecoshman There's people who will stamp on, rape, slash, or burn kittens, and you get excited about someone trying to feed it in a way that keeps other animals alive...
@thecoshman "No one in this world, so far as I know—and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me—has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people." (H.L. Mencken).
@ScottW One stupid, malicious person may not be particularly dangerous -- but there are enough of them to be quite dangerous when considered as a whole.
There was a paper in the C++ committee recently which describe a library that allow to do just that:
Open and Efficient Type Switch for C++ by Stroustup, Dos Reis and Solodkyy
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2012/n3449.pdf
A link to a page with source code :
https://parasol.t...
For C++ there is a "The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List" at The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List"
However there is no such Link which unifies the important articles that have been written on C++ at various places like GOTW,Dr Dobbs Journal,ACCU's Overload magazine etc.
In the 90s there use...
@chris We've been off for a week twice First time, lightning strike blew up all the cables, (and my laptop). Then we moved here and we were treated to another week of no comms when rabbits burrowed under a large tree, which then fell over onto the switch building, destroying it :(
In Qt, is there a way to check if a byte array is a valid UTF-8 sequence?
It seems that QString::fromUtf8() silently suppresses or replaces invalid sequences, without notifying the caller that there were any. This is from its documentation:
However, invalid sequences are possible with
UTF-...
we have ~3 different server processes which are constantly causing us headaches. I took a few days to make a quick prototype of a rewrite of one of them using node.js, and told my manager about it. Now I just got an email from him proposing we rewrite all three to use node.js :D
Yeah, should be fun to see where this goes, but it was a bit of a surprise to get that email just now. I just did my prototype completely unplanned and without telling anyone until afterwards, just for fun
And then suddenly "HEY LET'S REWRITE EVERYTHING IN NODE.JS!"
In the dusty corners of a code base I work on, I've come across a class hierarchy that looks like this:
class Base1
{
int base1;
};
class Base2
{
int base2;
};
template <typename T> class A : public Base1
{
T _specialT;
};
template <> class A<int> : public Base2
{
int _special;
...