I've been testing this new code to load our old files from 1993, but I kept getting this error saying the file was corrupted. Turns out the file is corrupted >.< Somebody overwrote some of the data with "trailing zeros"
auto is always a value, auto&& always a reference, and you need something that can be either.
tbh, I'm starting to understand the need for garbage collection in functional languages for example. Takes away the pain of having to deal with ownership and lifetimes (which is a real bitch for lazy-evaluated ranges I found).
@not-rightfold I agree that a hybrid may well be the best system. GC has some places where it's clearly advantageous. The problem is that GC is very detrimental in places where it's not advantageous, and you really need a graceful degradation.
#include <stdio.h>
int main ()
{
unsigned char a=250,b=20, c;
c=a+b;
printf ("%d\n",c);
return 0;
}
What can I do for it to show 270?
Besides declaring c as int.