@CatPlusPlus just factoid: many persons are not aware that in Windows the process gets a "command line" instead of arguments. it does not work well with C/C++ main. the standard suggests using utf-8 for the arguments, but ISO standard does not beat strongly entrenched convention, it's a mess
@CatPlusPlus just factoid: many persons are not aware that in Windows the process gets a "command line" instead of arguments. it does not work well with C/C++ main. the standard suggests using utf-8 for the arguments, but ISO standard does not beat strongly entrenched convention, it's a mess
@LewsTherin Okay, you have three more to go. As written, it's really six books (that were intended to be published as one volume). Breaking it into three volumes was done by the publisher, apparently contrary to Tolkein's wishes.
@CatPlusPlus Keep in mind that it wasn't really intended to be published as it was. It's a collection of notes, long with a few really polished bits and pieces, that his son mashed together into something the publishers would accept. Under normal circumstances, I doubt any publisher would have accepted such a mess at all. Being Tolkein, however, they were happy to.
Now, My favorite book of all times I read in English, it was Umberto Eco's "I'l pendolo di Focault" or something similar. "Focault's pendulum" was the English title. I crap on you native English readers for deciding a novel is too dense.
@LewsTherin If you define it inside a function, it'll be stored like any other auto-class variable (e.g., on the stack or possibly in a register). If you define it outside a function, it'll be stored like any other static-class variable (typically in an initialized data segment).
@LewsTherin The pointer isn't const itself, so you could do an assignment like str[0] = "Goodbye";, and that would work fine. You haven't defined it as a pointer to const either, but it's pointing at const data, so if you tried to do something like str[0][0] = 'g'; the compiler wouldn't stop you, but you'd get undefined behavior -- it might do what you expect, or it might blow up the computer, or just about anything else.
@CatPlusPlus Unfortunately, still only "likely", not "sure". For example, MS C used to do string pooling on MS-DOS -- but MS-DOS didn't do any memory protection, so modifying a pooled string would just modify all the strings in the pool. OTOH, you're not likely to see that on any reasonably modern system.
@RMartinhoFernandes It was a good way to pull some tricks. Nobody expects "printf("whatever");` to suddenly produce something entirely different than "whatever".
It's not possible in C#, just like it's not possible in C++. In C++, if the object is really const, you cannot const_cast the constness away and write to it without invoking undefined behaviour:
struct foo { const int x; };
foo a;
int& b = const_cast<int&>(a.x);
b = 17; // invokes...
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, it does at least make it slightly difficult. The best was a few ancient FORTRAN compilers that would let you modify values of integers. Pass an integer literal to a function, modify it in the function, and that literal took the new value everywhere. Fortunately, even the FORTRAN people figured out that was a problem pretty quickly.
So guys, I've been looking for a way to iterate over all members of a given class once every 1/60th of a second in order to update their position, rotation, and velocity angles. Is there a way to do that with C++?
So guys, I've been looking for a way to iterate over all members of a given class once every 1/60th of a second in order to update their position, rotation, and velocity. Is there a way to do that with C++?
@CaptainLightning Oh, you didn't intend to post that? Probably sitting in some buffer somewhere, and got re-transmitted because something though the first attempt failed.