As I'm not doing any work with C++ I can't tell you if it will work. It fixed visual studio for C# though. The symptoms where, not able to build anything and missing libraries... VS2012 crashing while opening a project... Still wonder why people use IDEs
To follow the example of The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List for C Books here is a wiki post for organization.
A tag search for "C" and "Books" returns no complete book list results as of writing this question. That search is here.
This post is to providing QUALITY books and an approximate ...
I theorise that the reason new C versions don't get a lot of adoption is that the only people that want to use C are the ones that want to remain attached to the past for some reason, and that kind of conflicts with modernising.
After more search I found this discussion. It seems it is an old strange problem and there are 2 solutions for this:
1) install a fresh copy of Windows and afresh copy of Visual Studio
2) copy VC folder from a friend who has a good version of Vsiaul Studio installed
Templates have so much syntactic noise. On the other hand template code must be treated a bit differently from regular code, so there is a point in having them noisy - you'll know immediately what you're working with.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, I'm not talking about that noise. I'm more annoyed by the typename stuff. And in certain situations template could just go away together with typename. Having auto in the argument list is enough to identify it as a template.
Btw, will it be possible to put template code in source files with modules? (for whatever "module" currently means)
I know what you mean.. I don't see why that guy is arguing. Compile time is the only cost. You're not going to factor in coding it and documenting as a cost are you? He's not talking about cost as in "money's worth". He's talking about run-time & compile-time performance cost/overhead and for someone with 98k+ rep, you're giving him a hard time for no reason. — CantChooseUsernames2 mins ago
IME variadic templates produce as scrutable error messages as other templates. They also tend to result in less complex code than the alternatives. — R. Martinho Fernandes3 mins ago
Of course, if you ask me "should I abuse variadic templates for a situation where something entirely different is needed?" I will reply "yes". — R. Martinho Fernandes1 min ago
Hmm. "yes"? I was expecting a "no" there. /cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
@R.MartinhoFernandes: IME they encourage me to write a generic solution where, without them, I'd probably have made do with a hacky but simpler point solution. The result is undoubtedly better in the long run, but with more work up front. — Mike Seymour15 mins ago
I could have a catalog for each document, but that creates a chicken-and-egg problem because I create documents through ExportFactory, so I can't create the document before the catalog and vice-versa.
@DeadMG Yes. Just for example, it has an "exchange register with register" instruction. The usual NOP exchanges EAX with EAX, but exchanging any other register with itself has the same lack of effect. The difference is that it has a special encoding for the accumulator (AX, EAX, RAX, depending on mode) so that instruction occupies only one byte; another register will use more code.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's what making cute pony tails and pigtails are for.
user3010322
17:04
Also awesome nordic beard braids and elvish twists.
@EtiennedeMartel Indeed. On the other hand, I can't imagine that a guy who genuinely had consensual sex with a woman who then decided to call it rape would have any fucking chance whatsoever. It's not just that he wouldn't be believed: anyone who dared to even utter the possibility would immediately be branded a rape sympathiser. We're such a mob culture.
I'm not applying that here though, yikes.
> "But there is a culture in some offices that sexual assault is sort of overstated or victims tend to lie. That might be what's going on here—a culture of indifference."
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Keep in mind that this comment from somebody else who used to work for the DoJ, and is no longer in a position to know any more than we do about this case. IOW, it's purely a comment about a general possibility, with (apparently) no real basis in this case.
@JerryCoffin Yes, it was a general statement from Sarah Deer, who worked for the Justice Department's Office on Violence Against Women in the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations.
Far too general if you ask me, or if you don't
My issue is that she equates a notion of frequent false charges with "indifference", which seems a bit bigoted
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Poorly stated, but I do think she has a little bit of a point: even though false charges undoubtedly happen all too often, they can't ignore (or under-investigate) one charge just because there are lots of other charges that turned out to be false.
And, I suppose, if the claim that it's a "culture" holds up (the implication being that it's pervasive to the point of casual assumption) then, yes, that would be a problem.
For that matter, there's not always a clear line between charges that are false and those that aren't. For the obvious example, guy picks up girl at bar. They have sex. She then claims she didn't consent so it was rape. 1) she may have consented, but not remember, and 2) almost nobody keeps a breathalyzer handy to figure out if she was drunk enough to be incapacitated so the consent didn't really qualify.
There are quite a few more borderline cases. I'm currently paying (in a way) for one that happened here recently. A rape was reported, which is rare enough here that it made local headlines. Reading between the lines, it was apparently an exchange of sex for drugs, but he thought the drugs they did together before having sex should count as part of the payment, and she didn't agree.
Long before the actual facts came out, however, my wife was convinced there was a mad rapist loose in our neighborhood, and we needed to get a burglar alarm to protect ourselves.