It's true though. You can't just dismiss the whole idea. And it's not about the physical memory getting "dirty" - the layman didn't claim as much, either
meanwhile:
test.cpp|13 col 39 error| initializer list cannot be used on the right hand side of operator '=='
test.cpp|30 col 37 error| no matching member function for call to 'emplace'
I have a java program that is brute force searching a game tree trying to find the best combination of moves. I have my actual program about as tuned as I can get it and am searching over 400k nodes a second on a Intel Core i5-2520M (2.5GHz) with 8.00GB of RAM running in Eclipse on 64bit Windows ...
Isn't it odd that in code it is always color::blue or whatever, but in sentences I feel compelled to write it with colour. In my mind it is to differentiate it from code, not a US / British thing.
I have no idea. Posted by Microsoft on 11/25/2013 at 2:37 PM Hi: Thanks for reporting the issue. A fix for this issue has been checked into the compiler sources. The fix should show up in the future release of Visual C++.