@RMartinhoFernandes We have talked to the teacher now, he said we have to add new OPCODES in some way, i.e. the string comparing should not be at the higher level as it is now
Yes, but in C++ decltype produces a typename, not a value. auto x = decltype( y ) is nonsense C++ but in your language x := decltype( y ) makes x represent the type of y, right?
My connection is still not so great. It told me there was a failure and I hit retry.
Anyway… the metafunction can be used where a metafunction is needed… if for some reason you need to map a type-list to their alignments… I really wonder about the rationale for alignof though.
I just sent an article about the GTK+ toolkit for publishing by the tech section of our local newspaper, they just sent it back with a letter saying I was too young for this stuff. damn them...
The basic concepts of parsing are obvious in the first place. As you get more complicated, you're better off reading the manual for the tool you're using.
Pins die after two weeks. This is explained in the newbie hints. :)
@sbi Hey, so far I've read the first five chapters of that boost book you mentioned. It describes the library but doesn't try to teach you C++. I think it should be a good second or third book. It has a bunch of small examples, and small exercises at the end of chapters (the solutions are not free though). I think it's good :)
@sbi That online version covers version 1.42. The new edition covers the latest 1.47, but doesn't seem to be available under a CC license like this one.
hello, I have 2 vectors A[1,2,3], B[1,2] I want to have in a third vector the elements that does not exist in A which means 3, I used set_difference in C++ which creates but im having in C[3,0,0] (same lengh as A)how can I keep only 3 without the 0? I should use resize or another thing
that does not exists in B sorry for the wrong typing
ok it worked, but i have one more problem, if all elements are different in both vectors the iterator would be a negative value and doing the erase will cause an error, how can I do to put a condition to that ?
Fair nuff. My preprocessor project factors most stacks into the call stack. I think the only explicit stacks are one to track which #if .. #endif blocks have reached a #else, and one to remember what macros are currently being evaluated (and are immune to recursion).
@awoodland Hah, speak of the devil. I just upvoted your answer because I don't think there's any easier way.
@DeadMG That stuff is only hard if you try to do it fast. Just get something that works and has an isolated data structure, then switch it to something faster when the time comes.
Ok, now that this question has been fixed to include the necessary code, I could answer it. Unfortunately, it still needs to votes to be re-opened. Anyone?
I wonder how you handle string interpolation like some languages allow: "The value of x is ${x}" would be akin to (ostringstream() << "The value of x is " << x).str().
Then you can yo dawg strings into strings.
"The value of that other string is ${"The value of x is ${x}"}"
I'm wondering if such a function exists:
void str_realloc_and_concat(char *str, const char *format, ...)
This function would take a char *str (allocated or NULL), and append to it *format.
I'm looking for something like a sprintf with realocation, strcpy and concatenation.
Does it exist or do...
Is there a way to get GDB to step into function calls? step is supposed to do so but seems only to work if the function is in the same file. stepi works every time but too tedious.
Is there a way to get GDB to step into function calls? step is supposed to do so but seems only to work if the function is in the same file. stepi works every time but too tedious.
Not really. A couple of loose guidelines mostly. So that's what people are arguing about. Our QA guy said we need one to make auditors happy, so now everyone are bickering over what should be in it
tbh, it's not a super big deal. On the whole everyone here writes pretty reasonable code, and having a formal coding standard would make it a lot easier for new hires. But obviously, if you mention indentation (or tabs vs spaces), programmers are going to fight ;)
@sbi just that it should probably specify some kind of guidelines for indentation, because as it is, that's really the only aspect of our code base that's completely messed up
I came across simple java program with two for loops. The question was whether these for loops will take same time to execute or first will execute faster than second .
Below is programs :
public static void main(String[] args) {
Long t1 = System.currentTimeMillis();
for (int ...
@jalf Well, my tongue was firmly stuck in my cheek when I wrote that, but there's some serious thinking behind this. I thought a coding standard would explain whether you pass objects per reference or pointer to functions that change them and similar programming style issues, not typing style stuff.
@EtiennedeMartel Use tabs for indentation, and spaces for everything else. This allows me to use a tab width of 2, even though everybody else prefers 4. This does take a lot of discipline, though.
@jalf Then put into your coding standard to obey the current style of any source file no matter which that is. For those files that don't have a single style, let the next one running into it be a nazi and fix this.
This also has the advantage that it leaves you the option to pull an all-nighter and force your indentation style on half of the company's code base. :)
Which leads me to think that Microsoft Connect is just there to give the community the impression that their feedback is needed, while in reality they don't give a flying shit about it.
@sbi it may be a difference of "currently" and "ever". i remember as a child how baffled i was that other people got a wrong impression from a journalist reporting that "the pope categorically denies that he will go to dirty movies on this visit to new york". who would think other than that the journalist had made that up? but i learned the hard way that most people accept such claims literally. as if the pope voluntarily and unprompted had made that statement. word games.
Let's say I caused a minor car crash some time ago and today I met a woman. The conversation is as follows:
Woman: Hey, I remember that car with the scratch from the crash last
week, you must be the one who caused it.
Me: Are you sure? It didn't
necessarily have to be me, I see a ca...
But the difference can cut both ways. With a dll, the entire dll has to be loaded into memory. With a static lib, the parts that are unused can be removed by the linker, so it might result in a smaller total code size
on the other hand, if multiple components need to use that library then either they all link to the static lib, causing that code to be included in multiple component, or they all link to the same dll, causing that code to be included just once