In addition of what visitor said :
The function void emplace_back(Type&& _Val) provided by MSCV10 is non conforming and useless, because as you noted it is stricly equivalent to push_back(Type&& _Val).
But the real C++0x form of emplace_back is really usefull : void emplace_back...
Mhmm. The guy lives in PA, BTW. They could almost throw the mail with the shirt at him, rather then paying for shipping. I suppose it's different for us here in Europe.
@thecoshman You mean the one where you need to get to the first five pages of dedicated followers in order to be given a shirt without even being able to pick your own design?
In computer science, a predicate is called an invariant to a sequence of operations provided that: if the predicate is true before starting the sequence, then it is true at the end of the sequence.
Use
Although computer programs are typically mainly specified in terms of what they change, it's equally important to know or specify the invariants of a program. This is especially useful when reasoning about the program. The theory of optimizing compilers, the methodology of design by contract, and formal methods for determining program correctness, all pay close attention to invariants in ...
:This article is about class invariants in computer programming, for use of the term in mathematics, see equivalence class and invariant.
In computer programming, specifically object-oriented programming, a class invariant is an invariant used to constrain objects of a class. Methods of the class should preserve the invariant. The class invariant constrains the state stored in the object.
Class invariants are established during construction and constantly maintained between calls to public methods. Temporary breaking of class invariance between private method calls is possible, although n...
> High fantasy has become one of the two genres most commonly associated with the general term fantasy, the other being sword and sorcery [...]
> High fantasy is defined as fantasy fiction set in an alternative, entirely fictional ("secondary") world, rather than the real, or "primary" world. The secondary world is usually internally consistent but its rules differ in some way(s) from those of the primary world. By contrast, low fantasy is characterized by being set in the primary, or "real" world, or a rational and familiar fictional world, with the inclusion of magical elements.
Am I right in thinking, (given the situation stated in the question) that if you copy such an object (where pointers point to something declared in the same class) that there are multiple sets of pointers but they all point to the same objects?
Does this mean there are other objects in the othe...
I was just surprised to see that on GCC (4.3.2) the left hand side of an assignment expression might be evaluated before the right hand side:
int x,y;
int& getX()
{
std::cout << "getX\n";
return x;
}
int& getY()
{
std::cout << "getY\n";
return y;
}
void test()
{
...
I am working on a multithreaded process written in C++, and am considering modifying SIGSEGV handling using google-coredumper to keep the process alive when a segmentation fault occurs.
However, this use of google-coredumper seems ripe with opportunities to get stuck in an infinite loop of core ...
I am currently stuck trying to get some vertex data drawing from VBOs I keep getting caught with the following exception:
Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" javax.media.opengl.GLException:
array vertex_buffer_object must be disabled to call this method
I will refrain from posting all ...
gl.glBindBuffer(GL4.GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, bufferID[0]);
gl.glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
gl.glVertexAttribPointer(0, 4, GL.GL_FLOAT, false, 0, null); // this is the line that throw s the error
@RMartinhoFernandes Not really related to that question, more the answers it got, but you can use SIGSEGV reliably if you're careful, for example with mprotect to mark pages RO and then use some kind of COW on individual pages in user space
hmm... might have to try harder to find some one who knows wtf is up with JOGL
from what I can tell, you can either use JOGL1 which is no longer supported and only supports up to GL2 (if that) or you can use JOGL2 which is currently still in beta but at least (theoretically) supports modern openGL
You can use break with a label for the outer loop. For example:
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) {
outerloop:
for (int i=0; i < 5; i++) {
for (int j=0; j < 5; j++) {
if (i * j > 6) {
System.out.println("Breaking");
br...
labelGoesHere: { // pity you put the label far from where things goto
doSomething();
if(someCondition())
break labelGoesHere; // goto!
doSomethingElse();
}
// I want to goto here
someMoreCode();
// equivalent C code:
doSomething();
if(someCondition())
goto labelGoesHere; // goto!
doSomethingElse();
labelGoesHere: // things comefrom somewhere to this place
someMoreCode();
@thecoshman I always wondered why everybody is arguing that breaking out of nested loops is a use case for goto, when the solution is simply to write better structured code and never be tempted to consider goto.
@RMartinhoFernandes Either we're talking Java here as in the original question, in which case performance doesn't matter (or why use Java in the first place?), or we're talking C++, in which case we can use inline.
@RMartinhoFernandes Does that mean you were applying your performance concern about an additional function call around three nested loop to Java? Don't be ridiculous.
@RMartinhoFernandes So the compiler knows better. Shrug. What's your point?
the one thing that I find strangest about Java is the way it optimises on the fly... but it never caches these optimisations, so when you restart the program, you start with the raw basic slow as shit version
@thecoshman Why? If you have a loop that operates on rows, why not stick it into a function do_on_rows(), and if you want to work on columns within that, why not call a function named do_on_columns() for that? Makes perfect sense to me, and if you have messed up rows and columns, nobody will have to wonder whether that was intentional.
@RMartinhoFernandes Sigh. Of course we noted this. We were just playing along with it. Too b ad you had to be explained. That spoiled all the fun. It seems robots simply aren't subtle enough for sarcasm.
@RMartinhoFernandes I have written function templates to descent into arbitrarily nested sequences and operate on whatever non-iterator is at the bottom, and such code is not pretty at all.
You could then make something like for(auto a : x.rows()), for(auto a : x.columns()) and for(auto a : x)work and get all three iteration patterns always with a single loop.
@sbi Maybe. I guess I'm used to C# iterator blocks.
@sbi except, strictly speaking, you are not working on a column, you are working on a single cell within a row. I would rather use some sort of call back system. that would allow for you to pass in a function pointer to a 'for each row' 'for each column' or 'for each indavidual cell' though this would require some sort of table class
@RMartinhoFernandes I have written function templates to descent into arbitrarily nested sequences and operate on whatever non-iterator is at the bottom, and such code is not pretty at all.