@Rapptz Joking aside, I did ensure that Concepts::check (concept to metafunction predicate) fails as early as possible without instantiating unnecessary work. And of course that’s the one that operates by default on template constraints.
@LucDanton Yeah, when I said "Concepts" I meant "all the flavors that spawned from the original proposal, and the progress made towards getting any of them into the standard"
@rightføld I think if it's worthy of flagging, then flagging them all is more effective (at least that makes it clear to passing mods that it really makes a difference; you don't want them to require visiting the actual comment thread to see that there's more going on)
@rightføld Said Esau (you can sleep under one more star now. Don't dream about stairways to heaven...)
I figured I'd ask here because the SO answers, of which I found three, aren't working for me - I'm trying to use Boost ASIO, so I've #included the asio header, and I've thrown -lboost_system into the linker parameters, but it still won't compile (undefined reference to `boost::system::generic_category()). Any suggestions? (Ubuntu 14.04 x64, g++ to compile)
You should specify the libraries after the source file(s).
Also, prefer -pthread over manually linking libpthread.so
g++ -I/home/foo/boost_1_56_0 -L/home/foo/boost_1_56_0/stage/lib -pthread main.cpp foo.cpp -lboost_system -lboost_filesystem -lboost_thread
@Rapptz That’s fair, but arguably the proposal is being consistent. Changing the grammar to have comma-separated expression in a statements would be wild ;)
> When the unexpanded parameter pack in a fold expression expands to an empty sequence, the value the expression is shown in Table N; the program is ill-formed if the operator is not listed in Table N.
That seems to mean "in general", so for the v @ ... @ pack version too :<
In order to support expansions over a parameter pack and other operands, or to customize the behavior for a fold over an empty parameter pack, you can also use the mathematically oriented phrasing:
(args + ... + an)
Would there ever be a circumstance where abs(a - b) != abs(b - a) (ignoring overflows) if a and b were floating point numbers? Or is floating point consistently inconsistent in those cases?