Solution:
Open your code project.
Open Project Properties.
In the left pane, expand the Configuration Properties node.
Expand the Linker node.
Click on the Debugging node.
In the right pane, find the Generate Program Database File entry.
Replace the value as the following:
$(OutDir)$(TargetNam...
me too. I mix and match to match codebases I work with. Although, when it matters I do the strict order
@PhilippClaßen To my dismay, I forgot that qi::rule does in fact present an erasure point (hence an inlining barrier) to the optimizer. So I reduced my answer a whole lot, and the result should have become a lot faster (as the assembly shows, mostly by being 2x shorter) — sehe15 secs ago
The spirit solution from my answer is faster still. See compared live on coliru (even faster with suitably reserved containers instead of using forward_list: live on coliru). Also, it supports NaN and ±infinity. (It is also a lot more generic, at the cost of taking a lot longer to compile, I guess). — sehe33 secs ago
@Rapptz cough. what script :)
@Borgleader I much simplified that answer now :| I had made it more complex than it needed to be (and now it's 2x shorter code).
I dropped the comparative assembly listings and the explanation too
@Pris where would width,height get passed from when accessing bigness? (btw. should be names biggity)
Problem:
A developer would like to create new Program Database Files (PDB) every time a build has started.
For what scenario:
C++ hot-swapping, debugging on the fly, DLL code plugins for the main program to execute code.
Hello, does anybody know a small c portable string library with functions like strtoupper, strtolower , explode and implode ? i've searching a lot and found complicated libraries with missing docs
Effects: Constructs an object of class path, storing the effective range of source (8.3) or the range [first,last) in pathname, converting format and encoding if required (8.2.1).
I don't really think it's possible without <codecvt> either since the specification aims to support char16_t and char32_t in addition to wchar_t and char.
and I don't think GCC even has the proper std::codecvt thing for those 2 char types.
Unicode != UTF-8. Most implementations of unicode also use 16bit characters internally because many operations wouldn't be efficient otherwise. So wchar_t is maybe a senile ancestor of Unicode. — Aaron DigullaNov 30 '10 at 17:39
People intending to go to unconference If the 13th does not work for you (or if it was moved to some other weekend around then) please ping me your conflicting times! Aiming for that weekend though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's a god date, one that everyone so far has been working towards, now, once we finally have to location agreed, it wants to be moved. I'd rather it not move, but rather more so that people are able to come. AFAIK it's only ell and Andy who wouldn't be able to make the 13th. No idea who could only make the 13th (you know, like if it's their only free weekend that month).
@R.MartinhoFernandes but I also meant more you personally... you seemed to be the first person to suggest moving it, but for no reason at all. Lack of reason at all is enough reason to not move it IMO.