If you have a global variable that many functions depend on then you can't just reuse those functions in another program that doesn't have the global variable. ...This is not a great explanation..
@Maxpm Suppose you write a tetris game and all your game state is in global variables. Then you proudly show your game to everyone and they think it's cool. Then you want to impress them even more by adding multiplayer feature. That's when you discover that you practically need to rewrite all of your code...
std::cout is an ostream instance that outputs to stdout. Since there is only one stdout I see no problem. However, it's a good practice to design your APIs so that they output to a user-provided ostream object instead of cout.
@Xeo To answer your implicit question: When I take care of the kids, I don't get to work as many hours as my contract says, so I am working longer hours when I do not take care of the kids.
@StackedCrooked yes there's only one, but when I do << setprecision(20) << 3.0f; the people after me get really confused. Also, I believe the state thing is why it's (in MSVC at least) slower than printf.
@Maxpm Yeah, the bit compression thing. It was a bad idea. std::bitset is far superior.
@Maxpm no, it's mostly a theoretical distaste. std::vector<bool>::iterator::iterator_category is a matter of debate, since *it doesn't return a reference to the object in question, so technically can only be an output iterator...
> The executable was so huge, it took five minutes to load, on an HP workstation, with 128MB of RAM. Then it ran like molasses. Actually, I thought this would be a major stumbling-block, and I'd get found out within a week, but nobody cared. Sun and HP were only too glad to sell enormously powerful boxes, with huge resources just to run trivial programs. You know, when we had our first C++ compiler, at AT&T, I compiled 'Hello World', and couldn't believe the size of the executable. 2.1MB
BTW, when I was trying to create a room named "sucky performance", the system suggested the R and C# rooms as already existing alternatives. Sometimes this chat system's intelligence is truly amazing...
@Xeo To answer your implicit question: When I take care of the kids, I don't get to work as many hours as my contract says, so I am working longer hours when I do not take care of the kids.
> By default, the operator == tests for reference equality by determining if two references indicate the same object, so reference types do not need to implement operator == in order to gain this functionality. When a type is immutable, meaning the data contained in the instance cannot be changed, overloading operator == to compare value equality instead of reference equality can be useful because, as immutable objects, they can be considered the same as long as they have the same value.
@cHao Actually, Effective C#, while leaving much to desire, does discuss the issue: Item 6:Understand the Relationship Among the Many Different Concepts of Equality.
I have a managed handle class and always want to compare equivalence, not identity.
Specifically, if two collections of handles get deserialized from different archives, the collections aren't equality comparable because they don't refer to the same object anymore.
@keithlayne no variadic templates makes me cry. But I've never bothered to learn GCC so... At least in the next version they'll add =delete and =default.
^ I'll just make a wrapper around boost::smart_ptr<> for the deep comparison problem. Seems weird that I'm the only one that seems to have ever wanted it, though.
syntactically, the biggest changes are rvalue refs and lambdas, right? Oh yeah variadic templates, but I think of that as more or less recycling syntax in another context
vim chokes on lambdas :( I've been considering learning how to mess with those syntax files for a while now, but I been expecting someone else does it.
Any IDE you can't add syntax and styling rules to isn't worth the trouble.
Ideally, on a per-project basis or based on some other expression.
I'm yet to work on two projects with the same coding style, and not having the organisation's style at least supported by the front-end tools is a recipe for time wasting.
@keithlayne According to wikipedia, there's a LONG list of tiny language changes. I attempted to list them, but the message was too long. MSVC10 has at least half. It's also missing initializer lists, which depends on variadic templates
erm...there aren't many ide's that you can add arbitrary syntax to. little details like spaces vs tabs and brace styles and such, sure. but there's a limit...past that limit, you end up having to define a whole language
@MooingDuck I was really getting at the syntactic constructs that are brand new. I know implementing initializer lists is a whole other ball game, but the syntax is nothing new.
A preview version of Visual Studio 11 (the next version after VS2010) is now available.
Does anyone know what new C++11 features it supports? (I'm not in a position to try it out at the moment).
Yeah. I like GUIs. I love Visual Studio's GUI. I just want to have an option to compile with GCC instead on occasion, to test portability, standards, and speeds.
@keithlayne That actually sounds like a good idea.
With a makefile and a custom tool that invokes make you could get "Compile on g++" in a button, with trivial VS setup (making a plugin is not trivial).
@RMartinhoFernandes I vaguely got the impression that G++'s makefiles and MSVC's makefiles were different, and I never looked into how different. It might be possible that G++ could interpret one.