> Then you say you also can't read the constexpr version, which is hilarious, because it's a one-liner loop on modulus, suggesting that you really shouldn't be writing a software blog.
@Rapptz that page says C++ standard says a byte must be 8 bits, AFAIK the C++ standard says a byte is the smallest addressable memory unit and sizeof(char) == byte
@A.H. Supposedly. But my doc doesn't seem to eager to actually get on with that. Surgery can have some very unpleasant chronic side effects of it's own.
go for the surgery. my wife suffered with gall stones for almost a year before they figured out what was wrong. after surgery, she was soooo much better.
no more finding her curled up in a ball crying on the bathroom floor.
Had korean BBQ buffet on Friday, ended with a sore stomach and painful tummy, but went on overnight hiking trip on Saturday anyways. Experimented with fire (BBQ in the wildness), hit my own hand with a rock while setting up the tent. Now my whole body aches, also have sore tummy and sensitive, wounded hand.
I am new to c++ programming. Could you please tell me the use of DETECT and getmaxx(),getmaxy() functions in C++ and how to implement them?
Thanks in advance.
-Dinesh
I read Scott Meyers' drafts for the auto and rvalue refs items in EC++11 and, even though nothing was new to me, seeing all the corner cases exhaustively explored in the same place makes me sick. C++11 has so many mistakes that don't have a source in C or C++03 :(
Gonna take a wild guess, universal references, hiding the copy constructor, expecting universal references to be r-value references, using auto with an initializer list but not with templates.
the errors when I use catch get so big that I can't even scroll up from my command line to see them
:(
Ugh. In C++11 this is actually prohibited due to a defect in the standard, and you technically have to use s.begin()[ 1 ] = 'a'; But it's not worth worrying about. — Potatoswatter1 min ago
@MarkGarcia Yes: "Returns: *(begin() + pos) if pos < size(). Otherwise, returns a reference to an object of type charT with value charT(), where modifying the object leads to undefined behavior."
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's required for allpos >= size, so unless you're prepared to store numeric_limit<size_t>::max()-pos NULs, you need to do a bounds check to implement it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes This limits the number of errors reported, not the length of an error message (though I haven't checked whether it still traces all the way back to get the "instantiated from..." part.
1 Requires: pos <= size().
2 Returns: *(begin() + pos) if pos < size(). Otherwise, returns a reference to an object of type
charT with value charT(), where modifying the object leads to undefined behavior.
3 Throws: Nothing.
4 Complexity: constant time.
1 Requires: pos <= size().
2 Returns: *(begin() + pos) if pos < size(). Otherwise, returns a reference to an object of type
charT with value charT(), where modifying the object leads to undefined behavior.
3 Throws: Nothing.
4 Complexity: constant time.
Doing a quick look, I do have a copy of n3290 handy though (final draft that became the standard, with no further changes, if I'm not mistaken). It has the same requirements.
Hmm... In the "returns a reference to an object..." part, the container must return some valid reference of some object (not temporary). With that, it implies returning a reference to a pre-allocated object or a global variable.
@MarkGarcia Yes -- basically, std::string is required to store a NUL at the end of the used part of the buffer. It'll normally return a reference to that, just like it would to a character in the string.
In theory, it could get away without a terminator part of the time, but quite a bit of the spec is basically written assuming it'll always store a terminator, and it does have to at least have the space allocated at all times, so it can write the NUL terminator on demand, with no possibility of an exception from re-allocating space.
OMFG, it would help me out a lot. Thank you vury vury much.
@echo off
:choice
set /P c=Are you awesome??? [y/n] %NL%
if /I "%c%" EQU "y" goto :yes
if /I "%c%" EQU "n" goto :no
cls
:yes
echo "DAMN RIGHT!!! :D"
pause
exit
:no
echo "LIES!!!"
pause
cls
goto :choice
if a bool expression is done at compile-time, say void f() { if(bool_expr_compile_time) return; else { ... } } can I assume f() will be a no-op by any decent optimising compiler?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I suppose it's technically UB, but I have a hard time imagining an architecture where you'd get anything but the NUL terminator you expect.
@Rapptz Maven't you paid attention? @Mysticial likes his multiple of 5 score enough that he won't downvote anything short of the devil himself demanding that we all write PHP.
@JerryCoffin I've been doing 5-pin for quite a while now. I somehow always manage to split my right thumbnail and rub off the side of the thumb when I do 10-pin.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, I knew that needed to be there before, which is why &s[0] is officially safe now, as opposed to C++03, where it isn't guaranteed.
@chris Not only asking a meaningful question, but also learning from the answer? You are hereby banished from SO for the next 17 years (or milliseconds, if you insist).
I have a piece of code like this:
bool finished = false;
for (Iterator i = begin; i != end || (finished = !finished); finished ? i : ++i)
{
// (body)
}
The goal is to execute the body for all iterators including end().
The loop is nice enough, but I get "assignment within conditional expr...
Anyone know offhand how I'd "zip" two lists [(Int, Int)] and [Int] into a list of triples [(Int, Int, Int)] in Haskell? (zip of course produces a list of nested tuples) I figure's probably something easy I'm missing, but not finding anything on Hoogle
@NeilKirk: That only works when this loop isn't nested inside other pieces of code. Otherwise I'll have to pass lots of parameters just for this. — Mehrdad1 min ago
I read 'this code is a horrible mess and I want to shut up a warning on it.
I'm looking for some opensource project about car navigation which works with aid of gyroscope or accelerometer, but faild to find it in current popular website i.g. github. anymore, some website is banned in China, so could someone give me a help to seek some project like this. help, help, help
@Rapptz I have a personal letter from Euler awarding me 500 meaningless internet points (true forward thinking having sent it ~300 years before the internet was invented).