Hi, I just wanted to know if it's "best practice" to write function prototypes along with their variable names such as int foo(int a) or is it "better" to write int foo(int) ? Thanks for your opinion.
@AmberRoxanna The only real advantage here is that many IDEs will show the names when you are calling that function with their completion information. So if you give it a descriptive name, the IDE can show that name and help you know what parameters to pass.
I know in your title you say "in dos" but I get the impression you are just looking for a way to do this and are wondering if that is the best way.
The absolute best tool I have found for this is Bulk Rename Utility.
It isn't a command line tool, but they do have a command line version if y...
@LucDanton There, removed the gratuitous abuse of (stateful (mutable)) lambdas and the abuse of set to order solution_sizes. Much better, no? /cc @Rapptz coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/840899b23963ddd7
I find that it's grown a bit out of hand. Some things I actually like, some things I've written because it's a playground. I think they clash together.
Oh, I don't want to get rid out of it altogether. But put it somewhere. Almost anything I write in C++ depends on annex already, because I don't want to spend time writing, say, ResultOf over and over. But that means I bring some completely unrelated stuff in, too.
Oh, I assume that as a would-be project it lives in people's heads, emails and mailing lists. Since that's how Boost operates. There's mention of an IRC channel though.
The goal of such a system is not to give a way to distribute any and all kind of software easily. It's to distribute some software. E.g. small libs and stand-alone executables.
Something like CPAN keeps track of dependencies. So a CPAN-hosted package can depend on other packages.
Then the language can have no standard library at all and it doesn't matter as long as someone wrote the dependency you need and the system can install it for you (and your users).
@Ell It's unfortunately not that consistent from what I've seen. For example, we always talk about the "size" of memory even though memory is addressed linearly in virtually all modern systems.
Do you feel that TODO in your source give you false sense of accomplishment. For example I need to make something a seperate class (io worker thread) but instead I wrote a todo comment saying I would do it at a later time
fuck I got pointers to threads now
You can't spell the interjection 'oops' without object oriented programming
To clamp is to fit a number in a range, but what do you call it when you want to move a range (meaning maximum - minimum is constant) to fit a number? :|
you have x = 40, and a range [70, 80]. You want to move the range so that 40 is included, and the result would be a range [40, 50]. This is trivial to accomplish, but I have no idea if this operation has a name of some sort
I made an interview with Nokia Gate5 in Berlin over phone on a (Qt/QML/Linux software engineer).
Now i have been invited for an on-site interviews.
what is the kind of questions that i would be asked?
Is there any one passed over those interviews?
> error| '*((void*)(& range)+12).std::_Head_base<0ul, unsigned int, false>::_M_head_impl' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
@Karimkhan This isn't a "dump my C++ questions" room. You should go to Stack Overflow for that. See the tag that says: no-questions and the Newbie hints.
It talks about std::vector in chapter 7, C-style strings in chapter 9, and then talks about dynamic arrays (you know, what std::vector replaces) in chapter 10. And.. templates all the way in chapter 16.
Anybody know how to make VS make a audible knows when it finnishes building. I usually do this in Linux, I am wondering if there is a good way to do this in windows (maybe a post build event?)
> The GoingNative 2013 conference starts Wednesday and is just about sold out. A few seats remain, so register now (or get on the waitlist in case there’s a last-minute cancellation you can snag).
I recently came across new way to generate random numbers in C++11 but couldn't digest the papers that I read about it (what is that engine, maths term like distribution, "where all integers produced are equally likely").
So can anyone please explain what are they, what does they mean , how to ...
@FredOverflow Ah well, that's Implementation Defined, IYAM (of rand, that is). Anyways, of course <random> is way superior, that's just not what I asked you about. See this message
> Note that std::random_device may be implemented in terms of a pseudo-random number engine if a non-deterministic source (e.g. a hardware device) is not available to the implementation.
The fact your code 'works' is just chance. Until you properly understand what it means to write thread-safe code, stop writing threaded code. Go learn what it means, and why it is important.
@sehe Well, I would say that it is more thread-safe than rand(), because the C++11 random objects are scoped, so you can be sure that nobody else is using them at the same time.
@sehe I wonder if if race conditions in rand() actually make it more random because the next value is generated from a write collision (some of the time)? But seriously shit never crashed...
@Mikhail And yeah, it could become more random, e.g. by returning 1 each time. You'll have to agree, this is completely unexpected and extremely random
@FredOverflow I honestly don't know why you tell me that <random> is better with regard to threadsafety, since that was the very first thing I said, in immmediate response the original question. You might have missed it - perhaps I shall link to it.
> C++ has indeed become too "expert friendly" at a time where the degree of effective formal education of the average software developer has declined. However, the solution is not to dumb down the programming languages but to use a variety of programming languages and educate more experts. There has to be languages for those experts to use-- and C++ is one of those languages.
> I think [making computer languages easier for average people] would be misguided. The idea of programming as a semiskilled task, practiced by people with a few months' training, is dangerous. We wouldn't tolerate plumbers or accountants that poorly educated.
> We don't have as an aim that architecture (of buildings) and engineering (of bridges and trains) should become more accessible to people with progressively less training. Indeed, one serious problem is that currently, too many software developers are undereducated and undertrained. [source]
@FredOverflow Yeah, but most programming isn't mission critical... Most programs are more like paintings done for amusement and less like structures on whose integrity rest people. I am sure my non threadsafe usage of rand() (about which I don't give a fuck) would not be tolerated in mission critical cases (where you need rand()?) but it might be fine for me and my silly scattering codes