@RMartinhoFernandes LOL! Over time, archaeologists from virtually every part of the world have presented findings indicating that humans developed first in their part of the world. :) Let's see what will have happened to this theory in a decode or so. (Also, I like how they write that the disappearance of the elephants "must have imposed considerable nutritional stress on Homo erectus." But maybe H.E. made them "disappear"?)
Say I have an enumeration:
typedef enum MyEnum_
{
MY_ENUM_BLUE,
MY_ENUM_RED,
MY_ENUM_GREEN
} MyEnum;
And that I have a method that gets an "MyEnum" as parameter. I'd like write to log file the value of that MyEnum, but I don't want 0, 1 or 2 to appear there--- I'd like to output the actu...
If I try to insert a duplicate into a std::set, I get an iterator to the existing element in the set. Why the fuck does Java not offer something similar in java.util.Set? Or should I say java.useless.Set?
@Xeo I have a cow-worker who says he has a hard time staring at modern monitors. They are straining his eyes. He's always on the outlook for a new CRT monitor, as a replacement when his current one goes belly-up.
@Xeo You laugh, but as a programmer he is really afraid of the time the last CRT will be gone and he has to stare on a flat screen monitor all day. (By the way, he is no nutcase at all, and I'm absolutely sure he has some unique medical condition causing a real problem. Just saying...)
@Pubby None of them would work for the rest of his life, though. And also, when everyone is working with real high resolutions, being the only one stuck at 1280x1024 might become a severe disadvantage.
I have a lot of classes in my project accessed by a singleton like so:
_inline GUI_BS_Map* GUI_GetBS_Map()
{
static GUI_BS_Map obj;
return &obj;
};
As I understand it, this code should be inlined. I have the Visual Studio (2005) options set to inline anything suitable, and my profi...
For context, I'm a Clang developer working at Google. At Google, we've rolled
Clang's diagnostics out to (essentially) all of our C++ developers, and we
treat Clang's warnings as errors as well. As both a Clang developer and one of the larger users of Clang's diagnostics I'll try to shed some lig...
> TL;DR Version: Please use -Wall and -Werror at a minimum on any new code you are developing. We (the compiler developers) add warnings here for good reasons: they find bugs.
WTF isn't this the fucking default?
My compiler only works decently if I ask politely. That only makes sense if you're talking about ick.
If we all voted him up and he came in here, and then we all downvoted him, would he be kicked out of the room immediately? That would be sweet. It should have a message "Sorry, but you suck. Take a hike." or something.
@JohannesSchaublitb On going to post this to my dev team at work :) Stuff like this greatly supports my petitioning for increased attention to compiler warings.
I wrote a simple C++ code to check the speed of sorting data , represented in the form of a list and then a vector.
In the case of the list I am getting time as 27 seconds. For a vector I get 10 seconds. Why the huge performance gap? Aren't the algorithms used for sorting the list and the vecto...
@RMartinhoFernandes Two recent examples: (1) forgetting a return statement in a non-void function (again), (2) adding a catch block for an exception type that already had a catch block of that type.
@RMartinhoFernandes However we recently released a new version of the software which means that now (post-release, a fresh new start) is the best moment to introduce this. I'll discuss it at the next meeting. And I'll forward this post mentioned by Johannes to our dev team.