@KerrekSB I can write you a C++ compiler in two hours, and it will compile C++ code faster than any other C++ compiler. In the same way that IE6 was a browser.
(Seriously though: We had some very simple, just long table (some business interface), about 3MB HTML. Opera and Firefox flat out died. IE6 spend a second or two computing and then bam displayed the whole thing in one go. You could scroll anywhere, no problem.)
This only became clear to me when I talked to some people who do different things... not everyone has flashy poster-type websites. Some people want to view massive amounts of data. I think Opera is still not very good at it.
Wait, why were we worrying with web woes and SGML? Oh... the FPAs: does anyone have any good SO questions that can always be pasted as "exact duplicate" candidates?
I was wondering with my colleague today whether std::vector can be implemented to make use of small buffer optimization. By looking into the C++11 draft, I read at 23.3.1p8
The expression a.swap(b), for containers a and b of a standard container type other than array, shall exchange the valu...
@JohannesSchaublitb Does "small buffer optimization" mean that a small buffer is allocated along with the object on the stack? (For example as an array member variable?)
@CatPlusPlus Did you read the discussion between Chao and me? There are things you can do with the data, and you might even just want to show an error message.
Second, there is no finally in C++; third, you have too many try blocks; catch( io_error & ) goes outside everything else that could throw an I/O error since the data being flushed at close isn't special.
And "finally" (no pun intended), it is likely that no action should be taken by the caller anyway. This is functionality that should be in a subclass of std::filebuf, which would implement its own close calling filebuf::close and catching the exception there.
@StackedCrooked I'm just gonna stop arguing with y'all, but there are applications that really care about whether some data did not reach the output device.
The issue is what happens to data when the ~filebuf calls close calls flush calls *write but the I/O fails. The error is swallowed and a C++ program receives no notification at all. If you want more reliability, you can subclass filebuf. But what that subclass can accomplish is ambiguous.
In the C++ and beyond debriefing interview there was a brief discussion about the D programming language. You know D is supposed to be a better C++. But then Andrei mentioned that they had a closer look at many of the design decisions of C++ and they came to the constatation that they were the right decisions. Even if they appeared wrong when looking at them for the first time.
Yes, remarkably so. But Bjarne has help too, probably better help than Andrei.
There's remarkably little back-and-forth bickering in C++ language development, from what I can see anyway. Maybe because the language is so ugly, everyone is willing to focus on meaningful semantics and not bicycle shed color.
It would be interesting to compare C++03 and C++11 to other huge standardization efforts, like Ada and Fortran and Algol, using some kind of metric incorporating the volume of discussion and its signal-to-noise ratio.
Interesting phenomenon: when I linked to Wikipedia's article on the SOPA bill, Facebook produced an apparent quote that was really a misleading paraphrase. Containing wording that according to Wikipedia's history search has never been in the page.
The apparent quote:
> SOPA is also known by some as the E-PARASITE (Enforcing and Protecting American Rights Against Sites Intent on Theft and Exploitation) Act.[6] According to co-sponsor Representative Bob Goodlatte [R-VA], chairman of the House Judiciary Committee's Intellectual Property sub-panel, SOPA represents a r...
E.g., the phrase "known by some" is not actually in the Wikipedia article, and has apparently never been there.
weird. Something's wrong with facebook lately. I watched EuroNews in the morning and they were telling something about how facebook had been infiltrated, and videos etc. were being posted on the walls of people etc. know anything about that?
I edit a lot of posts everyday. I often run across posts with 'Hi' and 'Thanks' on the top and the bottom of the post respectively. I also run across things like:
--User
Should these items be removed during the editing of the post by an editor?
I noticed that in order for someone to be eligible as moderator, the person is required to have gone on a flagging spree, an editing spree, and to have been conformist, with the relevant badges to prove this. The question "who are these folks putting themselves forth as moderator candidates" has thus been answered.
@StackedCrooked I think jeans should be blue only. Any other color should be banned. Those other colors are distracting to the public.
someone edited my question only to add an extra space between "delete_event ?" changing it to "delete_event ?" I wonder why.
according to his CV @awoodland studied the same subjects I plan to study in AS and A2 Maths, Physics , Chemistry and Further Maths... Further Maths is difficult though.
No reason. Better do like this instead of bool = !!int orbool = int
define _boolx(a) [(a == 1) ? 1 : 0] or [(a != 0) ? 1 : 0 or 0 : 1]
int A = 349493;
bool B = _boolx(A);
and for cHao.. yes u can do with ur ugly if (A <= 0) { bool B = true or false else ....} but this ur answer....
if ( a...
!! is an idiomatic way to convert to bool, and it works to shut up the Visual C++ compiler's sillywarning about alleged inefficiency of such conversion.
I see by the other answers and comments that many people are not familiar with this idiom's usefulness in Windows programming. Which means they...
@keithlayne Generics can become quite confusing due to type erasure. Besides that, there probably aren't many "esoteric" language features in Java. Anonymous inner classes, maybe.
Am I allowed to move elements out of a std::initializer_list<T>?
template<typename T>
void foo(std::initializer_list<T> list)
{
for (auto it = list.begin(); it != list.end(); ++it)
{
bar(std::move(*it)); // kosher?
}
}
Since std::intializer_list<T>...
Here you wanna make a pointer to the first element of the array
uint8_t (*matrix_ptr)[20] = l_matrix;
With typedef, this looks cleaner
typedef uint8_t array_of_20_uint8_t[20];
array_of_20_uint8_t *matrix_ptr = l_matrix;
Then you can enjoy life again :)
matrix_ptr[0][1] = ...;
Beware of t...
i don't get the undefined behavior because the arrays are supposed be contiguous.
@RMartinhoFernandes you can compute the n+1 pointer. in C++99 you can also dereference it, as long as you immediately apply address operator. not sure how that worked out for c++11
i found out that all the fooling around with UTF-8 facets (writing my own, using the half-documented one in Boost, using the C++11 one) was unnecessary. it was just that i'd forgotten to call a fixup function in the test code. so i thought g++ support more lacking than it was.
it's like, i know that when one looks back, then, if one is not yet senile, one sees that one were dumb yesterday and even more so yesterweek and so on, but does it have to be by such a large margin?
static_cast produces a result with the same value but different type. reinterpret_cast produces something platform-dependent, usually same bit-pattern even if it's nonsense.
Obviously, we're talking about a situation where both can do the job, right? It's pointless to talk about one where only one works: use the one that works.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes, for example reinterpret_casting one unsigned type to another. That's uninteresting and irrelevant — you should use static_cast because you invariably care about the resulting value in that case.
@Potatoswatter ideally, for casting unsigned to unsigned you should not use any cast, because the result is guaranteed by the standard. i believe using reinterpret_cast directly, won't even compile. however, visual c++ tends to warn about such well defined things, so it may be necessary to use a nowarning cast.
@Potatoswatter The example in the book is, I believe, about emulating reinterpret_cast by a silly sequnce of static_casts via void*. And the unstated reason was that C++98 had a defect where you couldn't do void* with reinterpret_cast. It's been fixed.
Oh, my long 700 MB music video finished. What shall I listen to now?
I never think of intent in those terms. Writing static_cast there should be accompanied by a note that the narrowing is OK, not by making that assumption more tacit.
!! is an idiomatic way to convert to bool, and it works to shut up the Visual C++ compiler's sillywarning about alleged inefficiency of such conversion.
I see by the other answers and comments that many people are not familiar with this idiom's usefulness in Windows programming. Which means they...
LOL @ "performance warning". But that's not even correctness-related. Is that on by default? There must be a reason you're getting that. I've never really used MSVC, so forgive my ignorance.
@Potatoswatter no C++ compiler I know of is standard-compliant by default. you have to turn off non-standard features, turn on standard-required features (such as exception handling and rtti), and up the warning levels to something sensible.
E.g. with g++you should as a minimum use -pedantic and -Wall
I just tried porting my g++ app to MSVC++ , the compiler gave errors on every char* or std::string I had used on windows functions. Had to cast it all to LPCWSTR. It compiled fine on g++
No reason. Better do like this instead of bool = !!int orbool = int
#define _boolx(a) [(a == 1) ? 1 : 0] or [(a != 0) ? 1 : 0 or 0 : 1]
or....
int A = 349493;
bool B = _boolx(A);
Can you explain me this sentence "&height In C a function cannot change the value of a parameter which is supplied to it." - C Programming by Rob Miles
@Failed_Noob No need. Instead of trying to manipulate the parameter, we pass a proxy parameter instead which tells us something else we can manipulate (namely the original variable).
@Failed_Noob In C, when you pass an argument, its value is assigned to a new variable in the called function. The caller and callee always each have their own separate variables.
What are you trying to do? Email consists of several components. Do you mean to write the SMTP server? That one usually just passes on the ingoing mails to some other agent.
(E.g. local storage if it's the final destination.)
@Potatoswatter If you care about data getting to the device, you should flush explicitly, and not only software buffers. close throwing is just disrupting the flow for no good reason.
d:\dev\test> type con >foo.cpp
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main() { cout << "Hello, cling-clong world!" << endl; }
^Z
d:\dev\test> clang++ foo.cpp
foo-839435.o : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __ZSt4cout referenced in function _main
foo-839435.o : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __ZdlPv referenced in function __ZNSt14error_categoryD0Ev
foo-839435.o : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __ZSt18uncaught_exceptionv referenced in function __ZNSo6sentry
D2Ev
I wanan use C++ send packets or make macro like f1-f12 1-9 keys with no delay, but i have no idea wehat program instal, i download c++ but dont know how use it, Please if anyone have any good idea what helps me, post here ;)
Thanks !
Martin.
@keithlayne well thanks for the compliment. but really what i and i think most people who mostly answer questions, do, is to know just a few key facts and relations, and then figure out things. sometimes involves a little experimentation. i'm terribly bad at remembering arbitrary names and facts. for example.
I just downloaded the CLang sources, made a Visual C++ 10 IDE workspace by using CMake, and built everything from Visual C++ 10.0 (express).
Now I get a bunch of linker errors on hello world:
d:\dev\test> type con >foo.cpp
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main() { cout ...
I have no idea what that sentence means, but yes, binding arguments to parameters is a tricky part of most languages. So in that context the difference is important.