Cool :) Do tell them the bit about zooming in & clipping plane though. Unless they want to just scale it up and do their own thing with size values. It's to proportion so
// should I take param by ref here?
template<typename Exception>
auto MakeExceptionalFuture(Exception e) -> std::future<void> {
std::promise<void> prom;
prom.set_exception(std::make_exception_ptr(e));
return prom.get_future();
}
My Fingerspitzengefühl tells me that you just haven't found the place where it's aliased. And it's likely actually something like STLPort, or EASTL, or STXXL etc. Or indeed, std::vector. Heh. You could even drop namespace bpstl = std; in some strategically placed header and you don't technically change those lines of code... — sehe11 secs ago
stupid checkout mechanism. so when i go to my "pending changes" window, i see... a bunch of files with no pending changes, because I changed them back.
@Columbo Because MakeReadyFuture has a non-template overload which needs to be inline. In order to not forget the inline there I put it everwhere... :/
I honestly think that (Semi)regular would fade into the background if templates were sanely type-checked. Imposing default constructors on producers is a way to relieve consumers from doing that type-checking by hand.
@CatPlusPlus Then I suppose you know that for this matter function templates are covered by the ODR the same way inline functions with external linkage are.
@Abyx Did you do Ctrl + Break? Because doing that doesn't work sometimes so you have to reconfigure the keyboard shortcut to something else. Doing it manually works though (Tools > Cancel Build)
For one thing, "failed to be delivered" is too vague to be meaningful, since any promise is "failed to be delivered" until it's delivered, and clearly we don't consider all promises broken until they are fulfilled. However, if the promise object is destroyed before a result is provided, then clearly the promise has been broken because it can now never be fulfilled.
Therefore, I'd personally say a strict combination of both. However, as I said a moment ago, I don't believe there's any such "official" definition for the term.
> When an asynchronous provider is said to abandon its shared state, it means: — first, if that state is not ready, the provider — stores an exception object of type future_error with an error condition of broken_promise within its shared state;
I thought of that myself, but then the following question came up: If I'm able to alter the contents of a variable by writing code, isn't that considered to be compile-time alteration, instead of run-time? — AutomEng1 min ago
[1 0] x [1 0] = [1 0 0 0]
[1 0] x [0 1] = [0 1 0 0]
[0 1] x [1 0] = [0 0 1 0]
[0 1] x [0 1] = [0 0 0 1]
Despite the clear pattern, I've not come across it before and am wondering whether it has a name.