"Native code generation is performed by converting the linked bitcode into native assembly (.s) or C code and running the system compiler (typically gcc) on the result."
so it'd still boil down to using Visual Studio's linker
> Native code generation is performed by converting the linked bitcode into native assembly (.s) or C code and running the system compiler (typically gcc) on the result.
Linkers give lack of flexibility, more costly evolution, inhibit the use of the database acting as a service to applications and make it an inhibitor to evolution. As such, please remove from all production databases.
> After a brief debriefing, Daniel learned that it all started with a single-character bug in the Chief Architect’s code. On a certain key table, the sequence trigger computed max value minus one. Normally, that’d trigger a primary key constraint violation, but since the Chief Architect had removed those, the table filled up with duplicate data.
> Not null constraints give lack of flexibility, more costly evolution, inhibit the use of the database acting as a service to applications and make it an inhibitor to evolution."
When I run the code below, in my trainingVector I get {(10,0),(10,0),(10,0)...} instead of {(0,0),(1,0),(2,0)...}. How do i make this work correctly?
vector< vector< double > * > trainingVector;
for(int i=0;i<10;i++){
vector<double> ok (2,0);
...
> Thanks a lot! The first thing is exactly what I needed. I cannot use the second one, since my trainingVector must have pointers in it...
Sigh.
In Hell++ all raw pointers are actually smart reference-counted pointers. If the ref-count reaches 0 and the pointer was not deleted, the program blows.