@Rapptz I've recently run out of space doing that. When removing the tags file, I got 1.6Gb free space back
I have the strongest suspicion (unchecked) that I might have had a symlink cycle in there. If ctags fails to distinguish between links and directories...
Didn't you read the slides? "Used instead of DX11 on supporting GPUs". Something like that, that would replace DX and OpenGL. Something possibly standard, who knows.
I'm trying to understand this line of code
vector<int>::iterator it = find(list_vector.begin(), list_vector.end(), 5)
where I have vector<int> list_vector; declared before hand.
What does the 5 do? What does it return? Does it return the 5 if it can find it at the beginning and end? If I want...
sold one of my apps (source code, rights etc) to an American company through an American company. The buyer is very nice, but agent is a prick ... they couldn't get sale price right, over charged, made mistake on seller's identification through the transaction process then blame it on me
apparently, some people also wanted more operators (for example, comparison against any U that T is comparable to), and serious questions about the wording used.
I should add, however, that I've heard from some who were present that although export was controversial, it was still a compromise that probably prevented something close to a civil war in the committee (though I've heard from others who were present that this is an exaggeration).
It got awfully quiet in here all of a sudden. I guess everybody must be working on this question, because it's just so well asked and obviously not homework. :-)
because it gives you a balloon for every new notification (I'm using the Task Manager to close extensions and it keeps messaging me that I did that.. well no shit I did)
> undefined reference to symbol '_ZSt17__throw_bad_allocv@@GLIBCXX_3.4' /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6: error adding symbols: DSO missing from command line collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
If you want to be able to augment a data structure in a uniformly efficient way, it seems to be necessary to use a node-based structure rather than an array-based one.
@Servant you found "the subfolder of your project". Seems to me (a) you have a problem if <iostream> is in you project (b) your looking in the wrong place
@Servant Create a project, include any standard header (e.g.: include <iostream>), right click on this line, first option in the context menu Open <iostream> document and bam, you have it (Hovering over the document's tab will show the path).
Jumping through hoops just to find the information that I (the programmer) should own. I'm pretty sure I'd find it <1 minute in the proper settings, if I had visual studio
Inheritance is the base-class of all evil.
A nor B are ITimers
A doesn't even implement the pure virtual, so it cannot be instantiated. Therefore, inheriting from A makes C abstract too (cannot be instantiated).
You don't want to use inheritance here. See
Liskov Substitution Principle ("is-...
@A.H. I didn't want to. However, I did so anyways. I'm not motivated to explain how you can make braindead approaches work.