@cHao i don't think you can do that without delving into undocumented territory. it was never an issue whether you can do it. you can.
.
U:\> g++ listit.boost-filesystem.cpp -lboost_filesystem-mgw44-1_47 -o gnulist
In file included from listit.boost-filesystem.cpp:3:
string_conversions.h: In function 'std::string ansiWithFillersFrom(const std::wstring&, char)':
string_conversions.h:24: error: 'WC_NO_BEST_FIT_CHARS' was not declared in this scope
U:\> g++ listit.boost-filesystem.cpp -D WINVER=0x0500 -lboost_filesystem-mgw44-1_47 -o gnulist
C:\Users\Alf\AppData\Local\Temp\ccL5e5Px.o:listit.boost-filesystem.cpp:(.text+0xafd): undefined reference to `boost::sys
I am not going to go back to my parents and go "Oh by the way, I was led to believe by you directly that it would be X and instead I got <X, wtf u doing"
Well, if you really need the money, yeah ask for it. If on the other hand you're looking for the symbolic gesture then I don't know, I don't have siblings.
IMO I think it's inconsiderate of the parents to just give less and not an explanation why. They should realize that this is likely to make their kid feel somehow less worthy than the others.
Me and my brother and sister also were going to receive money when we got 25. But after our parents divorced my dad took all the money from this account to himself. (The accounts were created under his name.) So that kind of sucks as well.
20 bytes
.MODEL TINY
.CODE
CODE SEGMENT BYTE PUBLIC 'CODE'
ASSUME CS:CODE,DS:CODE
ORG 0100H
DB 'HELLO WORLD$', 0
INC DH
MOV AH,9
INT 21H
RET
Assemble with Microsoft Macro Assembler using:
ML /AT HELLO.ASM
File...
@SSight3 If you have struct foo { int i; }; std::vector<foo> v; then you can do v.push_back({ 42 }); but not v.emplace_back({ 42 });. DeadMG suggested replacing push_back entirely by emplace_back, which would break the first example.
look at all the member functions and ask yourself (1) how many of them can be trivially implemented in terms of other members, and are therefore unnecessary, and (2) how many of them should be generalized so they can be used on other containers or other string classes. Those should be made free functions :)
@SSight3 right now, std::string is just a dumb byte container, basically. It doesn't know which encoding is used, and it doesn't enforce any particular encoding
a sane string class should store characters, members of a particular character set, and not just bytes that might or might not correspond to characters
@DeadMG the problem with that is that it's a hugely complicated operation. Should it implicitly normalize the strings? Using which of the four normalization forms? And what about updates to the unicode spec? Different locales?
@DeadMG there are many different ways to encode the same string in Unicode. So they define normalization forms allowing you convert a string into a single canonical form
@SSight3 The complexity of Unicode + locales is the underlying complexity of text. You can forgo it altogether, and that would mean forgoing anything else but ASCII text.
I think I'd prefer to just make == do the simple thing, a byte-wise comparison. Then you can have a normalize function for example to explicitly normalize strings when you want to
@SSight3 Even english speakers sometimes need to write the name of someone who was born in another country
@DeadMG You have the right idea. Operating on UTF-32 text with a sane normal form is probably the best way to avoid headaches. (I say probably because this is straining my knowledge of Unicode and I haven't really been in that problem space.) Then store/transmit everything as UTF-8.
but there are degrees of Unicode. It's fairly simple to just make a string class use (for example) UTF8 encoding, which would be a sensible thing to do