@BartekBanachewicz So in the future, you could easily get one object trying to use a name for one thing, and another object trying to use it for another- i.e, that every property is in effect a totally unscoped global variable?
Appropriate functions and classes are availabe in standard <chrono> header.
In particular, system_clock, steady_clock and high_resolution_clock timers are available, and you can build your functionality on top of them.
If you want the events to be fired asynchronously, threading facilities from <...
@BartekBanachewicz Well, the exact problem is that it's stringly typed. If you decided to, I dunno, key it by the address of some unique type or constant, it would be impossible for anyone to get a clash (which, incidentally, is exactly what the Lua manual recommends doing in the Lua registry).
@LewsTherin I haven't insulted anyone. I've merely strongly stood with my point that C++11 is a current standard (which is true) and the community can benefit from C++11 insights (which is also true). I rather felt attacked by the OP for not providing a ready answer he demanded.
@LewsTherin Well. It's especially unfruitful to go sell opinions in chat rooms, methinks. There's always meta. Can't we just... separate concerns, leave Stack Overflow be the mainsite, and provide feedback there?
@DeadMG FWIW I think that "cheating" a bit and going runtime with such cases can't really harm. Especially because you can easily trace all the access to the Config and find the offending one easily.
@Pawnguy7 It's a waste of time to show people a chunk of code out of context. If you're considering a particular design, show people the requirements first, not the code.
I'm using a program that does not have the ability to close the windows it opens. The company says this is because it's cross platform software.
I'm only using it on Windows. So I'm trying to learn how to close the topmost window for the Windows OS.
I'm new to HWND stuff. But I've found lots of ...
So I recently discovered Github and learned about how it offers free code/file hosting. I just finished installing the Git command line client and am currently in the progress of configuring it.
I want to use it to back up my entire C drive. The drive can hold 650 GB but right now only about 25...
@not-rightfold I'm not sure. They just didn't reckon with non-regulars. Just check all the places where it's used, and double check that none of them actually requires regular files
learned about how it offers free code/file hosting
If everything on your machine is code, and if you don't mind sharing the contents of your computer with the world, then sure, go ahead.
-1 due to "your local .git folder will take as much space as the content of the drive". This is factually inaccurate, as it depends on a multitude of factors (compression, deduplication, ignored files etc.) — sehe16 mins ago
Really? I'm being serious here but my .git folder is always larger than the sum of the contents of the directory.
@Rapptz It's certainly possible to have a git repo that is smaller than the working dir. For example, one with lots and lots of files with the exact same content.
I keep code files inside? It's not like I keep track of .dlls or executables. I just checked right now. Directory contents without executable/.o files is about 4.5 MB and the .git folder is 5 MB on disk.
there's a reason why every single player in the World of Warcraft is the hero who saved umpteen lives and killed all those demons and personally defeated the Scourge.
This reads like a comment + a highly suggestive FUD at the end. In particular "So i is a local variable" is a questionable claim, for largely the same reasons. — sehe7 secs ago
@Ell Yes, as long as they don't talk :) Honestly, yes there's some overlap. Same goes for English to a lesser extent, then