(With begin being inclusive and end being exclusive.)
For example, if you want pseudo-random numbers between 50 and 59, you would write rand() % 10 + 50, because there are 10 different numbers, and they start at 50.
@FredOverflow well, this vector of "Animals" and I have to write a procedure where 1 animal interacts in certain ways with 4 other animals at random from the environment. Env is represented by a vector
and the excercise demands I use rand() to get a number to act as index into the vector
Come on! The least you could do is store the numbers that you have already picked in a vector or something and then reject them should they occur again.
To clear a vector and consume as little capacity as possible, use the swap trick:
std::vector<T>().swap(foo);
This creates an empty vector, swaps its internals with foo, and then destroys the temporary vector, getting rid of the elements that once belonged to foo and leaving foo as if it...
@TonyTheTiger Do you understand the % operator?
for (int i = 0; i < 100; ++i) std::cout << (i % 7) << ' ';
@FredOverflow Doch, it does, only in a different way than the one you thought of. (And, anyway, since you're now trying to nitpick on me for revenge: You did not say the sentence makes no sense, you said I forgot those quotes. That's not necessarily two 100% congruent statements.)
@TonyTheTiger Well, the girl's shirt could say "Legalize Gay", which would be funny on a girl's shirt, but it would fit my hypothesis, so for the moment I'm going with that theory.
@DeadMG I knew someone would manage to break into the middle of these two messages while imgur delayed the second one. Could have counted on you, actually...
I really need to work on my communication skills sometimes
I tend to be quite in-your-face and informal, even when there's no possible way that over the Internets or as a fresh acquaintance, you could know that it's not supposed to be offensive
I have recently been learning D, and am starting to get some sort of familiarity with the language. I know what it offers, I don't yet know how to use everything, and I don't know much about D idioms and so on, but I am learning.
I like D. It is a nice language, being, in some sort of ways, a hu...
after reading some of the points in that post, I wouldn't touch it with a six-foot barge pole
"D assumes that all objects can be moved by bitwise copy". Yeah, thanks D, I didn't want to, y'know, update another class on the move, or something like that.
I'm never quite sure about the syntax of bind, since I never got the chance to play with it before I had to use C#, so could anyone tell me whether I messed it up here, please?
I could not sleep last night and started thinking about std::swap. Here is the familiar C++98 version:
template <typename T>
void swap(T& a, T& b)
{
T c(a);
a = b;
b = c;
}
If a user-defined class Foo uses external ressources, this is inefficient. The common idiom is ...
A problem of "value types" with external resources (like std::vector<T> or std::string) is that copying them tends to be quite expensive, and copies are created implicitly in various contexts, so this tends to be a performance concern. C++0x's answer to this problem is move semantics, which...
have a look at the question on programmers- in the comments to Andrei Alexandrescu's answer, the D guy there basically says "You'd have to use a reference type".
@DeadMG I'm still not sure we got them 100% right. They have gone through many revisions already.
And there were lots of papers. Should we do implicit moves or not? What's the state of a moved-from object? What about class invariants, do we break old code? etc.
I have already asked a similar question a while ago, but I'm still unclear on some details.
Under what circumstances is the postblit constructor called?
What are the semantics of moving an object? Will it be postblitted and/or destructed?
What happens if I return a local variable by value? Will...
As far as I understand:
1) When a struct is copied, as opposed to moved or constructed.
2) The point of move semantics is that neither of the two needs to happen. The new location of the struct is initialized with a bit-wise copy of the struct, and the old location goes out of scope and becomes...
And I think he is right. Otherwise, moving in D would not work at all.
@FredOverflow Alright, now that I have some time -- the safest types to memcpy around are the ones that are trivially copyable IIRC.
> Containers are generally reference types (in Phobos, they're structs rather than classes, since they don't need polymorphism, but copying them does not copy their contents, so they're still reference types)
It's not that far from a language that I'd appreciate :( Just the forced polymorphism/reference types/forced dynamic allocation is simply the plague of OOP.
light user data aren't collected, they're values (pointers)
strings themselves are interned and you could probably get away with never collecting them
and you know that userdata never contain any pointers to Lua values
tables and functions are the only types that could
foreach(lua variable on the stack) if (type(variable) == 'table' or type(variable) == 'function`)) then mark as active, look inside and recurse on them. foreach(lua variable in existence) remove all which aren't marked
and because those types are fixed, you can hard-code the "look inside" code