I guess it depends on your point of view. It's easy enough to use a single library, like, say, Boost.Thread in isolation, but they're still distributed and build as a single multi-gigabyte blob
@CatPlusPlus there is a tool for generating subsets, but it's solving the problem of complexity by introducing more of it. not to my liking. a smallest subset would just have the stuff that one really needs, mostly the stuff that's now in the standard library (smart pointers, fixed sized types, function and bind), plus workarounds for the various compiler idiosyncracies.
@RMartinhoFernandes yes and no. By downloading all of boost, and using the build system for all of boost, and simply configuring it to build specific libraries only
At least on Windows. I did have to link libgcc and libstdc++ statically on Linux, because it's pain in the ass to get a build working across distributions otherwise.
You can embed the DLL as a array literal in the source code. You can have the application dump the the DLL files in the current directory by creating a global variable that performs this in its constructor.
You usually don't have a control over where user installs the app, and if your app requires admin rights to run from Program Files, you're doing it wrong.
that was fine, until they started shipping __IMAGE_BASE* base; HINSTANCE MyHinstance = (HINSTANCE)base; as a way to get your own HINSTANCE from the linker
HMODULE arguments are documented as "A handle to the DLL module that contains the function or variable. The LoadLibrary, LoadLibraryEx, or GetModuleHandle function returns this handle." or similar.
3. a. A group of people gathered for religious worship. b. The members of a specific religious group who regularly worship at a church or synagogue. 4. Roman Catholic Church a. A religious institute in which only simple vows, not solemn vows, are taken. b. A division of the Curia.
@CatPlusPlus Ah, so a congregator is an assembler!
@RMartinhoFernandes Here is another evidence that references are not pointers: there is no such thing as an rvalue pointer, but there is an rvalue reference :)
Hm, Bjarne is more open to library extensions than to language extensions. How about a purely functional STL? You know, list.sorted() returns a new, ordered list and does not modify the original.
@DeadMG You do as little copying as possible thanks to structural sharing. For example, in Clojure, creating a Vector with one differing element requires only O(log n) instead of O(n). You don't copy the whole thing, only the differing branch.
the roslyn thing at Microsoft uses immutable data structures for that reason. Allows them to cheaply add to their AST without modifying the bits that others might be reading
Larry Wall (born September 27, 1954) is a programmer and author, most widely known for his creation of the Perl programming language in 1987.
Education
Wall earned his bachelor's degree from Seattle Pacific University in 1976.
While in graduate school at UC Berkeley, Wall and his wife were studying linguistics with the intention afterwards of finding an unwritten language, perhaps in Africa, and creating a writing system for it. They would then use this new writing system to translate various texts into the language, among them the Bible. Due to health reasons these plans were cancelle...
I am in doubt with using objects from multiple threads.
First of all it is no problem to protect the object against simultaneous access with std::lock_guard or others.
The next step is to declare the objects with volatile.
class A
{
public: int val;
};
volatile A a;
But doing this ends u...
As demonstrated in this answer I recently posted, I seem to be confused about the utility (or lack thereof) of volatile in multi-threaded programming contexts.
My understanding is this: any time a variable may be changed outside the flow of control of a piece of code accessing it, that variable ...
hmm yeah, always bugs me how people talk about "thread safety" as some kind of universal thing that's completely independent of context
As if it's a binary thing, either an object is "thread-safe" and thus is safe *no matter how many threads you have and no matter what they do to the object" or it is not.
usually the only relevant form of thread safety is "this object is safe if you use it in these specific ways, and if you don't, it's your own damn fault if it blows up"
@LucDanton - I wouldn't have assumed "good performance" to be even remotely related to thread safety. If someone said thread safety I would assume it meant "reentrant with no race conditions" and not much more
@awoodland The bit about good performance is actually often implied. I.e. even on those times you can answer 'yes, it's safe' you can expect the OP to come back and ask 'I multithreaded my code and it's performing worse; why?'.
I am reading from ebook Templates complete guide and question which i'm gonna ask might be stupid to you but..
There is section in that 9.4.2 Dependent Base Classes which i am unable to understand.
Here is the partial text from it: http://tinypaste.com/633f0
// Variation 2:
template<typen...
it's my 21st, and my siblings received quite a large sum of money, and my parents implied that I would get the same, but actually it was quite a bit less
@DeadMG - hard to say. It might be that it's not possible for them to give you the same, or they might simply have forgotten what the amount in question was.