IME Programmers is a toxic hole full of oop-crazies and it doesn't help that half the people there are those guys looking to ask totally off-topic questions because SO closed them as OT.
@Pawnguy7 It's more about closing than downvoting. I haven't added up recently, but at one point counted between two thirds and three fourths questions being closed.
We should implement his into stack overflow:
if (user.Rep < 10 && question.Text.Length < 100)
{
throw new NewUserException("Not again", user);
}
mean while...
try
{
QandA.Run();
}
catch (NewUserException e)
{
e.User.GetLastQuestion().Comment("Please read stack overflow rules and ot...
I have never quite gotten where the difference was between SO and programmers. Is programmers sort of... development practices, while SO is more... Q&A?
@Pawnguy7 Therein lies the major problem: nearly nobody's sure what's really topical there -- and the five who do know are all in vehement disagreement with each other.
@Pawnguy7 Why the fuck would anyone derive from an exception base class, if you cannot use that class in it's primary function in a polymorphic fashion because you can't refer to it in an exception handler?
slicing is a copy operation, nothing more, nothing less.
it's just that the destination isn't of the most derived type and the reference to the source is implicitly cast to the base, thus matching the copy constructor.
slicing doesn't entail any strange runtime behaviour different to any other copy of any other type.
@Pawnguy7 Simple. If I allocate a region of memory big enough for T, how the fuck can I put a type derived from T that requires arbitrary size and alignment in that space? The memory isn't big enough or correctly aligned, and can never be.
@DeadMG I guess I have always thought of pointers pointing to a base instance, not the combined base/derived. I guess as it turns out, it, like other untested assumptions, were incorrect.
It's another example of C++ doing something behind your back so that when you shoot yourself, you don't notice it until you're bleeding all over the place.
to understand how this works, let's consider a base and derived class, where both have some virtual functions.
for each virtual function in the base that Derived overrides, the Derived class places it's own special function pointer in the vtable.
now, when that function pointer is invoked by a virtual call, the Base* pointer is passed along to it.
for our Derived class, we know where in the Derived class the Base instance lies- say, it's 4 bytes in. So all we have to do is subtract 4 from the pointer, and voila- a valid Derived instance.
In order to provide evidence that i am no joke. i will show you
how to start your own google.
first go to alexa.com, which is owned by amazon, they provide
a downloadable cvs file with the top 1 million web sites in the world.
but only URLS but updated daily, but owned by amazon.
and amazon is ...
@StackedCrooked Access to member data is normally via an offset from this. With single inheritance, this points to the beginning of the object, with base class members first, and derived class members after that. With multiple inheritance, however, you can't start both (or all) base classes at the same place. To make up for that, the compiler adjusts this to point to the beginning of the object you're working with, so you'll get the correct offsets from there.
@A.H. No, it's not common. It can break things completely because the "stuff" that's declared in the header is now being declared as members of the namespace. Since they weren't defined there, linking won't work. Still works if everything in the header is declared as extern "C" though (automatically puts the name in the global namespace).
I think it's time to censor this. I'm all for free speech and all, but we just can't have this sort of off-message post hanging around here. (I can't wait until someone quotes this out of context! When it happens, I win Teh Intarwebz!) — Andrew Barber46 mins ago
I'd like to be mod for a day. So i can play whack-a-mole with all the terrible questions. You get insta-closed, you get insta-closed, all the terrible questions get insta-closed.
The more I see it, the more I think we did things right on the Fidonet C and C++ "echo"s. A mod gets elected for one year, then somebody else takes over the position. Doing it for too long just burns people out -- it's probably a little less pressure here, but it's still a serious amount of work, and I'm pretty sure almost everybody is better off limiting the time the spend doing it.
@Borgleader No, I believe that's accurate -- but on many sites, for the ratio to be as low as it is on SO, you'd end up with only a small fraction of one mod. :-)
How can you declare variables from a textfile?
Example:
sample.txt :
int num1
int num2
-How will you then read that sample.txt in c++ in such a way that two integer variables(num1 and num2) will be declared in c++? We are in the topics of stacking. But so far I have no idea how to do this. T...
This is probably a dumb question, but i've looked everywhere, and It doesn't seem I can find a solution, so I decided to come to the one place where questions always get answered, so, Is there any way whatsoever, that I can write C/C++ on my windows?
@JerryCoffin Ah. The shorter parallel port. (That's really how I remember it) :P
@Rapptz I can't think of some good solution for I don't really understand what you're really trying to do. Still, I think dynamically allocating an object isn't necessary.