Should have remembered before commenting. His 'you are telling me I shouldn't head down the cliff only because you can't find a way to make my car fly like I asked'
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes and no -- I don't think he's really "troublesome" exactly. Actually, I think most of his questions are interesting, but he comes up with some...unusual ones, and he seems to be quite picky about answers.
Never mind, I found a solution myself...
for (Iter i = items.begin();
i != items.end() || (finished = !finished, finished);
finished ? i : ++i, ++offset)
{
// ...
}
@R.MartinhoFernandes But speaking of which, could you glance at my edited answer? I think it's corrected, but I'm getting tired, so a second opinion wouldn't hurt.
@JerryCoffin I wouldn't say picky. I'd say he wants answers that confirm what he wants to hear. He'll get up in arms if you tell him "you shouldn't be doing that" and if you find an answer it should be the way he asked for it, not another way even if it happens to be better.
Hi, do you guys know if it's possible to override a + operator for std::string, so that concatenation (for any type) can work just like in Java? I tried to ask on SO, but I already used up my 50 questions limit this month :( I'm thinking using variadic functions, but it looks really ugly right now and I have to use stringstream :(
@Borgleader yeah i don't really don't know why. maybe because it's the perception that people here on stackoverflow give the most intelligble insights on things
@Oleksiy In C++, you mostly want to be explicit in general, especially with conversion to strings. For integer types, might be good to std::to_string the int first.
@Oleksiy Of course, for real use, you probably want to use std::to_string. If you're going to use lexical_cast, you probably want to use Boost's (which has specializations to avoid fiddling around with stringstreams for common types, checks for correct conversion, etc.)
@Oleksiy It's what you currently think you need. In reality, it's generally preferable to convert strings to a more meaningful form as quickly as possible (usually in operator>>) and delay converting things to strings as long as possible (usually in operator<<).
@JerryCoffin Well, it's the only way that works for me, so until I find a better solution, I will use this. "Generally preferable" is kind of a weak argument, no offence. I'm just tired of people criticizing something without explaining why it's so evil.
@Oleksiy Without knowing more details about how you're abusing strings, it's hard to be more specific about the problems you're causing. Bottom line though: type checking is a really good thing. Converting data to strings turns all other types into one thing that can no longer be type-checked, deprives you of overloading, etc. In short, it turns a type-checked language like C++ into a crappy imitation of a crappy language like PHP.
@A.H. Yes and no. It's a way of both converting something to a string, and concatenating the result with some existing string. You're thinking at too low a level though. The real point is (unless you're writing something like a word processor) most of the code shouldn't work with strings at all. As I already said, you should convert from string to something meaningful as soon as you can, and leave it in that meaningful form as long as you can.
@A.H. The point is that you lose any type safety on the result. If you put (for example) a name and an age in the string, the compiler can't warn you about passing that string to something that expects a string holding entirely different data like, say, an address and a phone number.
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.
@JerryCoffin Well, I don't even touch web stuff and both of those were one of the first things I learned of the little I know. It seems very hard to not find this information, coming from where I am.
@chris Oh, no argument that they seem...uneducated. I just dislike sitting around talking about how stupid/ignorant they are, with no attempt at helping (or seeing others do so). I don't mean to get preachy or moralistic (nor am I going to try to tell anybody what to do), but I do find it ... distasteful.
The point is that the OP has guessed. There is no way that they got that doctype from a learning resource. Why would anyone take the attitude of such a wild guess and treat it as a given, not even mentioning the guess in their post? It's silly.
That bit is ignorant and stupid. You don't need knowledge to be sensible, or to perform a Google search.
@StackedCrooked My old tent required to nail in 4 pegs in the ground. Current one requires nailing 15 pegs into the ground. Guess what? We camped on some really hard surface - there was probably a huge rock beneath 0.5cm dirt on the surface..
It is weird, during extreme sports some people (like me) don't feel the pain as acutely as one would under normal circumstance - probably because of the amount of endorphin flowing in the body
> Dude, apply for everything. Where I live, there was a 2k scholarship for woman who did the most for feminism. Requirements: be a girl. One person applied and that person won. It was a guy. A guy won the woman's activist scholarship.
> you can make a shank or shiv out of sheets of paper. all you have to do is roll enough paper into cone shape - tightly packed. if the point of the cone is nice and sharp, it should have enough structural integrity to pierce skin but you'll have one or two shots at most. may sound dodgy but if you strike a major artery, game over. good luck.
Your Favourite Software Development SitesI have joined a university recently and doing BS (Software Engineering) i want some informative software development sites for daily knowledge basis to improve my knowledge in this field,programming language we will be studying is C++.For example i used we...
@TonyTheLion to be fair, I don't see why 'he was under 18' is a valid defense for most crimes. Do 13 year olds really not understand the beating a child till it is nothing but a bloody pulp is wrong? Example, Bulger brothers.
@thecoshman Younger kids don't. So it's just haggling over where to draw the line, really
also, I'm pretty sure "he was under 18" has never been a valid defense for a crime. It just means you won't get thrown in jail for your crime, not that you're found innocent
@jalf indeed, except, I think it's near impossible to draw a line on such a matter. It is both highly dependent on the child in question, and constantly changing as times change.
@thecoshman but unless you want to fill the jails with toddlers, you have to draw a line somewhere and give them some freebies
Also, I believe a part of the reasoning is the outlandish idea that punishing criminals shouldn't just be to make the victims feel better, but also to encourage better behavior in the future. I'm not sure you'd achieve that by throwing a 13-year old in prison with a bunch of old seasoned criminals and child molesters ;)
@jalf or think of a better way of dealing with people who do not understand the social convention of right and wrong, something other than locking them up with others who openly flaunt such social conventions.
But I believe the "better way" in the case of minors is usually considered to be "give them a stern talking-to and keep an eye on them in the future, without otherwise upending their lives" :)
@jalf 'some', I think 'few'. But more importantly, the notion that people who go to jail for 'mr meaners' (say a speeding ticket) and come out ready to start supplying drugs or what not.