@BartoszKP I have understood the context very well opposite to you and I am sure that there is no such a context. It is simply a stupidy. — Vlad from Moscow7 mins ago
Voted for reopening! 1. The question has more upvotes than the 'duplicate' 2. @BasileStarynkevitch's answer cites standard documentation and is more sound (IMHO) than the answers in the 'duplicate' — πάντα ῥεῖ4 hours ago
Stack Exchange sites aren't good for this sort of thing as q/a. You might try the c++ chatroom, though. Just bring a thick skin... — Andrew Barber9 mins ago
@BartekBanachewicz Sometimes it's not worth closing as dupe
@LightnessRacesinOrbit There is nothing wrong with examples in a reference. Often times they help more. Especially since you can compile them in cppreference to see the output yourself.
@Rapptz as long as the samples bring in no side issues. cppreference does try and therefore the samples often seem ... meh. But in truth they just focus well
@Rapptz I said there is nothing wrong with them. But the non-examples are more useful, and adding examples on examples just encourages people to dump shitty code in their shitting coding style not actually giving an example of anything useful at all.
As far as my experience goes, the only places I've ever seen operator overloading was in boost libraries and the STL.
Any other C++ library I touched didn't use it a lot - if any.
So my question comes as follows:
In any environment (either industry, team, open source, lone project) - should I a...
The code you presented is fine (though useless; there are no calls to the function and there can't be any in other units due to the anonymous namespace). If you want this solved, post a minimal complete valid example as per this site readme. — Jan Hudec17 mins ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes "This input method may be able to collect all the text you type, including personal data like passwords and credit card numbers. Use this input method?"