this isnt about c++ so please forgive me. but i cant find an answer about this anywhere. If i have a question about blogging and blog content and content sourcing etc which stack site should i ask the question on? or other websites?
Am I the only one that finds it rude to barge into the room, where you have never been before, and interject into someone else's conversation to ask for help?
@MrAnubis: That's not why it doesn't work. It doesn't work because it's wrong. Considering (a) a parameter list is just a side effect of it being wrong
Let me use a metaphor to describe why non-local flagging is wrong: your favourite bar. You like your favourite bar because it is a bar that plays your favourite type of music (e.g., Jingle Cats).
Everyone in this bar is here because of the music. It is everyone's favourite music. Suffice it to s...
intereresting. so when the pic is adjusted so that humans perceive one blue/green color, then aliens may perceive it as having two different colors. so, easy test to detect aliens, or robots.
Let me use a metaphor to describe why non-local flagging is wrong: your favourite bar. You like your favourite bar because it is a bar that plays your favourite type of music (e.g., Jingle Cats).
Everyone in this bar is here because of the music. It is everyone's favourite music. Suffice it to s...
I was looking through some university under-graduate programs when I ran the
AUS Undergraduate Programs , where they offered two programs in the same department. Computer Science and Computer Engineering. At first I thought maybe computer science focused on software and computer engineering focu...
@IntermediateHacker computer science is more like intellectual masturbation. it started out as a legitimate academic pursuit following groundbreaking work by Knuth, Hoare and Dijkstra. but then people flocked to the new discipline, thinking that they if they were not good enough to program, then they must be the geniuses who could lay out the theoretical foundation that programmers are too dumb to do themselves. thus was born the science of computer science. with things like assymetric equality etc.
just about every job i see posted anywhere wants a CS degree. not to say that the job actually has anything to do with CS, they just think it means something.
Pointers are like a Swiss Army knife. You can use them for optionality, for reference semantics, for iteration, for type erasure... Anything I'm forgetting here?
i once had success installing qt by trying 3 times. it had quirks like not recognizing backspace key and such (that's so difficult to achieve that i suspect they have hired an expert bugmaker). it didn't uninstall properly from visual studio.
however, for a microsoft installation (after year 2000) it's normal that it's stuck for a few hours
reportedly that's because the folks who worked on the windows update thing, did not have any understanding of what quadratic time means
ok, so i managed to make a kind of stew, by starting with freeze-dried "vegetable soup" as base and adding vegetables, sausage pieces and pepper and oregano. the next thing, norwegian "fårikål", is more of a challenge. in theory very simple, but murphy is everywhere!
@FredOverflow no. in computer science a computer can be e.g. a turing machine, or a register machine, or a network thingy, or any number of purely theoretical constructs. in computer engineering a computer is a digital computer with more or less von Neumann architecture, except for having two or more processors
@Als no. no (non-member) pointer is larger than void* though. and char* is typically the same because it has to be able to point anywhere. member "pointers" are a different kind of fish, swimming in their own kettle. they're more like offset things.
@Als yes
btw., that was the practical. the formal is different, where a bool can be 1 GiB, and a pointer can be any size.
Sometimes it is tempting to name a variable as plural when its a collection of objects like an array or list. Is this okay or should we always stick to singular names for variables? As one example a collection of cars could be called 'cars' or 'car'
Consider another example:
vector< stri...
I also like std::tuple<T, U, V> tuple; when the scope is small enough and I guess I wouldn't mind foo_tuple but I would never use std::vector<T> foo_vector;
EDIT:
Though badly formatted this Question had a nice catch.So, I am editing this to retain this in a better format for future visitors who stumble across this question.
In the code sample below can someone please explain Why is the size of class different than expected after memcpy? What is t...
I take a bus to and from work, a company provided bus, usually i take a window seat and today(er lets say more frequent times) a member of opp sex sat beside me in the aisle seat, Usually, people sleep during the journey this female did too, My bus stop was before hers and while i needed to get down she's fast asleep, I tried the polite excuse me thing but darn usually they are just too sound asleep
Let me use a metaphor to describe why non-local flagging is wrong: your favourite bar. You like your favourite bar because it is a bar that plays your favourite type of music (e.g., Jingle Cats).
Everyone in this bar is here because of the music. It is everyone's favourite music. Suffice it to s...