> Some compilers also answer "You have been deemed unfit to operate me. Please shutdown the computer and go play The Sims for facebook". – Kheldar just now
@jalf Yes, but that's only the BSI imprinted version. The INCITS/ISO version is $30. And no, I'm pretty sure there's no difference beyond the title page.
it smells of microsoft but i can't see how they could have got into that act. but consider, first publishing the thing on the net. then charging insane price for it. it's just pure microsoft style. i don't understand!
A synonym is meant to capture all a tag's name spellings. Therefor, like real internet search engines do, Stackoverflow should list both C++11 and C++0x questions when searching for c++0x or c++11, since they denote the same tag with different spelling. The list of results should be equivalent.
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If other media are any indication slashing down the price might dramatically increase volume of sales. Of course other media have big, fat user bases so that might not be comparable at all.
@jalf: How is it helping? there are hundreds and thousands of mirror websites already hoisting copies of the very standard, it just makes illegal trade flourish
If you control the base class AbstractDep then you can enforce that concrete leaf classes must be created by using a class template WithCloning. This leaf can then be sealed so that it cannot be inherited. Or more precisely, instances cannot be created of a derived class.
class AbstractDep
{
tem...
they're trying to get money out of companies that rely on the standard. As such, they expect to get nothing from "private" users, whether or not they pirate the standard
They sell a product which an individual would want to have for all the very right reasons...And they make it so costly that he wont buy it the rightful way.
ISO is quite specifically saying "if you want to use our standard, pay what we charge". I'm just pointing out that they're not really hurt by you pirating the standard, because they weren't really counting on you buying it in the first place
@Als why would they care? ISO isn't in the business of safeguarding the morals of individuals worldwide
Also, remember that most ISO standards are even more corporation-centric. Programming languages are an exception because they're actually of some use to certain individuals
They should care because they are a reputed worldwide representation of an language and they should be setting petty goals but rather be looking at the bigger picture
But ISO is built to handle standards for shipping container dimensions, electrical wall sockets, concrete production or a million other things that are of zero interest to individuals
@Als What is the bigger picture, exactly? They need to cover their costs, and the simplest way to do that is to charge money from the audience who 1) need access to your product, and 2) are willing to pay more than the price of a pizza for it
@jalf no, the easiest way to make money on the product would be to sell it for reasonable price to lots of people. there are far more people than companies
@AlfPSteinbach Is it? What about their thousands of other standards which might be of interest to, say, 50 corporations worldwide, and zero individuals? Imagine how much money they'd lose by selling those standards at $30
@jalf: I thought, since it is an representative of the language in the worldly sense it is bound to some morals, true that if that doesn't hold good then nothing to discuss, all is fair in capitalist ventures.
The purpose of a standard is just to make sure that everyone agrees on the way to do something. C++ wasn't standardized for the sake of morals, but simply to ensure that different C++ compilers interpret your code the same way
I'm just pointing out that there's zero overlap between the organizations concerned with morals (including, but not limited to, religions and governments), and ISO