The standard only says that std::sorts *first must be MoveAssignable and MoveConstructable. Does this mean that a standard-conforming implementation of std::sort is not allowed to ever copy an element?
yeah, stating "I have a puppy" is more or less saying "my personality is so ____ that I can't produce anything valuable on my own, so I use my animal to attract your attention and feelings"
The standard only says that std::sorts *first must be MoveAssignable and MoveConstructable. Does this mean that a standard-conforming implementation of std::sort is not allowed to ever copy an element?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It was full retard long before C++11. It's just more obvious where it's full retard now because there's less of it, so it's easier to see.
your move constructor question applies identically to copy constructors but in the other direction, and they were like that in C++03 too.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Literally nobody abides by the speed limit on motorways here. It's an open secret. The police won't even stop you if you drive past them at anything under 90mph (the limit being 70mph).
The requirements that are imposed on the elements depend on the actual operations performed on the container. Generally, it is required that element type is a complete type and meets the requirements of MoveConstructible and MoveAssignable, but many member functions impose stricter requirements.
@nightcracker Right but then if it was "relaxed" to require (a) move, (b) copy if move not available (which it obviously was), then surely the defs in Tables 20, 21 are backwards :/
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I seem to carry a death-field around with me. I live on, but co-workers die. I suspect that's why I ended up working for myself:)
It appears that you get to blink stars on any message as frequently as you want, as long as you want. Some child on The Bridge has just found out about this and the only approach I can think of - banning people at random until the abuse stops - is not something I feel like applying right now.
Pl...
I'm trying to improve performance in my script.
I have a massive (PHP)array who contains 3543 lines.
I'm outputing this in a (HTML)table.
For each line(TR) the script takes 0.003 seconds. As I have 3543 records it takes : 3543 * 0.003 seconds = 10.6 seconds <-- that is not ok.
Please help me...
@R.MartinhoFernandes naah... you move slightly to the sides to keep balance (obviously can't with that thing, it looks more like Segway). It's impossible with a track bike, but then again, it's also impossible on the tandem bike.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit don't know the precise terminology in english, the point is the front wheel doesn't go exactly straight ahead, and thanks to it the bike keeps balance itself
Selecting a keynote speaker who is well known for his or her expertise in a particular field, or who has wide name recognition due to other accomplishments, will probably raise enthusiasm among prospective attendees for a meeting or conference.