the problem with clock is not resolution, and the resolution is never as low as 1 sec. the problem is that it has different behavior on *nix and Windows. in Windows it measures real time.
@hexa Don't get PHP into that. @ChristianSciberras What problem do you have with C++? If you don't get pointer, just don't use C++, okay? Don't blame the language on your own faults.
@ChristianSciberras C++ is a horrible language. It's made more horrible by the fact that a lot of substandard programmers use it, to the point where it's much much easier to generate total and utter crap with it.
R.O.B. (Robotic Operating Buddy), released in Japan as the , is an accessory for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It was released in July 1985 in Japan and later that year in North America. It had a short product lifespan, with support for only two games which comprised the "Robot Series"; Gyromite and Stack-Up. R.O.B. was released with the intention of portraying the Nintendo Entertainment System as something novel in order to alleviate retail fears following the video game crash of 1983. R.O.B. was available in the Deluxe Set, a configuration for the console that included, among ...
@RMartinhoFernandes I have written a nice utility recently and I'm not too sure about the interface. I've asked the chat already but I'd like your opinion on it.
If f is an overloaded name (either overloaded functions or templates), you can create an overloaded functor from it. The problem is that there is repetition when using it.
we should be able to post standard test pics (as I did here), or pics of body-painted women (as Andrew did), without getting banned by silly US morals, like tits are dangerous
in norway woman breast-feed in parliament, it should be so also for US Congress
@RMartinhoFernandes I've gone through iterations and I believe I can make it look like make_overload</* list function types here */>(BETTER_FIND_A_CLEVER_NAME(overloaded_name));
Which, I think, doesn't look that bad provided I find a clever name for the macro.
Firstly, you must cast a to the appropriate pointer type and then de-reference it. Secondly, use a template- that's what they're for. Thirdly, malloc and free is baaaad, OK? Don't. If you think that this is good code, you need serious remedial C++.
this is why I hate "C/C++" so goddamn badly
you visit a question, you see the C++ tag, you give a C++ answer, and it turns out the OP wants C.
When I discovered the default parameters trick I moved to with_signatures</* function types go here */>::MAKE_OVERLOAD(overloaded_name);. But a 'scoped' variable seems so awful.
@AlfPSteinbach template<typename First, typename... Rest> unspecified make_overload(First&& first, Rest&&... rest, /* repeat First* = 0 here a preset number of times */);
by the way, the question is made of the whole question, not just the code sample
if I said, "I'm writing a compiler in C++ to compile C code, here is my C code snippet but my compiler compiles it wrong", do you think that's a C question?
He clearly states he's going to put it in a class. That's C++ specific. Then, he states he's going to put it in a class in C++, which is even more specific. And then he only tags C++. I think that he's pretty damn clear about what language he's in
@Luc I can't really think of a nice name for that macro that isn't just a preposition or something like that. And that's definitely not a good name for a macro.
Ugh, this thing throws, catches and swallows 12 exceptions (of the NullReference and InvalidOperation persuasions) before it gets to the splash screen.