Suppose I have this function:
void my_test()
{
A a1 = A_factory_func();
A a2(A_factory_func());
double b1 = 0.5;
double b2(0.5);
A c1;
A c2 = A();
A c3(A());
}
In each grouping, are these statements identical? Or is there an extra (possibly optimizable) copy in so...
We can initialize the variable in two ways in C++11
One:
int abc = 7;
Two:
int abc {7};
What is the difference between these two methods?
How compiler treats them differently or the way these codes are executed?
I know, but it was hard to find, so I got stuck with being not allowed to ask questions or comment on other peoples questions. So I just endlessly edit other peoples questions
@Jefffrey Well, it could be anything. That's part of what I'm trying to figure out: how T's identity changes what the statement is and what it's doing.
But I just found this question, which I'm reading now.
@abergmeier What? There is no problem. So of course it doesn't appear. (I think I don't know what you meant with common_type and or problem there?) — sehe15 secs ago
@CatPlusPlus random_device::entropy() is required to tell you if it's a proper implementation with actual (OS-provided) entropy, or just a fallback prng, isn't it?
> GL_INVALID_OPERATION is generated if a geometry shader is active and mode is incompatible with the input primitive type of the geometry shader in the currently installed program object.
My view is that if the n values belong together they should be together (so who cares about tie?), and if they don't belong together then I should probably design the function better.