I'm not convinced it's a good idea to have answer short URLs indistinguishable from the question ones, and we're considering changing that (of course, /q/{id} will continue to work either way, just as it did before; this is just about "what does the UI give you").
Anyhow, oneboxing answers with ...
Hey help me overcome this confusion: I have a class with a vector as a private member. When I'm in the body of the constructor is it guaranteed that the vector is already constructed?
So if I want to call another constructor than the default one for vector I have to do it either in the initialization list or I have to reconstruct it?
@MrAnubis That company makes their interviews hard to pass because they want to employ only the best. If you have a hard time getting through the interview, you might not to be up to what's coming at you should they hire you.
It's an initialization list. You should find information about it in any good C++ book.
You should, in most cases, initialize all member objects in the initialization list (however, do note the exceptions listed at the end of the FAQ entry).
The takeaway point from the FAQ entry is that,
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@TonyTheLion yeah well it almosts sounds awesome, a stir-fry with peppers, mushrooms, tomato, zucchini (thank you spell check), some unknown gourd, with vermicelli & spices etc tossed in. Just didn't work out. McDonalds it is then.
@FredOverflow I was referring to when you said "You know, CPUs are orders of magnitude faster than memory nowadays." My chat just lagged a whole bunch.
@KerrekSB That's when you are sharing cache lines between threads but not the data on the cache line, then one thread A is changing some data in the cache line that thread B is not using, but that is still forcing thread B to reload the cache line
@jli Are you seriously questioning that statement? You know that 99% of the cost of a CPU is spent on caching circuitry and only 1% on the actual computation circuitry, right?
@FredOverflow yeah, but if your program is extremely computation heavy with less mem access, then it's going to perform differently than a memory heavy program.
Slow memory is one of the reasons C++ is so popular in high performance applications. Less meta-data -> less memory access -> less waiting -> higher performance
@ManofOneWay Haskell is extremely different from every other programming language I have encounter before and ever since. Everything is special about it.