@TonyK Here it's just proper instruction. People come to SO and just take code... rather indiscriminately. It's better to have the code up to certain standards. I can make a judgement call on my own code, but it's not about that here — sehe13 secs ago
@Nelxiost They do this spacing thing. (It's outrageous. It's not like they're in Amsterdam or something)
@Chantola Some of the regulars don't like non-regulars posting links to questions. It comes across as spamming. I personally don't give a flying fuck, but you should read the rules to which you've been linked several times now.
Mine has like two modes... One, which has ludicrously high delay and is completely unplayable even against bots and one called "gaming mode" or something similar, which has just stupidly high delay. >.>
Some 3D TVs do 120hz because they do 60hz per eye, and one of the sony ones does 240hz because afaik it supports split screen gaming, so separated 3d for 2 different pairs of glasses. and thats the highest ive seen, there no reason for any higher
@Nelxiost my point in posting it was to pre-empt the common myth that this is somehow a "French" thing to do. Of course, like most French typographical customs, it's highly antiquated
Quick question: Should operator overloading functions inside classes be called with the class namespace? As in, bool Foo::operator==(const Foo& a, const Foo& b)?
That's a less-known feature of C++, as @jrok pointed out blazingly fast, Koenig Lookup, or in modern C++ 1), ADL (Argument-Dependent Lookup). What it does is basically searching in namespaces of the arguments for the function that you want to call (make_pair in this example). The argument trigger...
So, bool Foo::operator==(const Foo& x, const Foo& y) is not allowed because Intellisense said, class Foo has no member "operator==". I have placed a prototype function in Foo header file as class Foo { /*...*/ public: bool operator==(const Foo&, const Foo&); };, yet the error is still showing. So, how should it be called?
@CaptainGiraffe There's pretty little I go to DB for to be honest. I used to not be so sensitive about piano interpretations. Nowadays, it needs to be Zimmerman, Richter, Gould or similar class :/ That Beethoven was plenty sloppy in terms of tempo. I've heard Lang Lang do better at that particular movement, and that is saying a lot
@tom_mai78101 If you are overloading operator==() as a member function, it should only have on parameter. The other parameter is the implicit this. Alternatively, you can overload the operator as a global function with two parameters.
@sehe I apologize for tossing that sloppy piece into "Lounge<C++>". Now that you bring Gould into it, he is a normative reference. Here is another normative ref. youtube.com/watch?v=-pZOcVvbEhw