@AlfPSteinbach I once considered rewriting it on top of Poco XML library. Poco provides a full DOM implementation. I could then create bindings to JavaScript. However, I never found the energy to do so.
@AlfPSteinbach In case you would look at the code. I know it sucks :D It's embarrasing.
@FredOverflow you can do i/o by time coding, e.g. frequency of execution of first instruction in program
@StackedCrooked i just looked at the header. i admire people who sit down and create a thing like that, showing that it's possible. or exploring the idea.
@RMartinhoFernandes When he came here first, he'd type properly (as in the newsgroups). When he came back after he had disappeared for a while, it was suddenly worse. What's happened, @Alf?
@StackedCrooked when we say a language is turing complete, it's BS. It's turing complete if you run on it a machine with infinite memory. But any practical implementation won't have that, so it's not strictly speaking turing complete
"With Knuth's MIX assembly language u stored the return address right into the routine's return instruction, b4 calling it" - return instruction can't keep more than one return address, isn't?
but for most languages, the specification is probably turing complete, since it doesn't say anything about having limited memory. It's only the implementations that aren't
you could probably come up with some kind of trickery where, say, pointers have a fixed size, and can address the N bytes nearest the instruction pointer. So you have a "small" window of memory visible at all times
but you can slide the window, to access all of your infinite memory
@Abyx In MIX you would write something like JMP 0 for your return statement. And when calling a routine you would do SET $address_of_the_JMP_operand_of_routine, $address_after_next_instruction; CALL $routine.
I don't remember the exact syntax. It's something like that.
int* p = new int(); int* q = std::move(p); if(p) std::cout << "blah!"; does not invoke UB. It may or may not print "blah", but it's not undefined: it cannot order pizza.
@RMartinhoFernandes I thought of doing a pointer template. It actually default initializes to 0, moves the rhs (leaves it at 0) and does something else that I'm currently forgetting but that I wanted for builtin pointers
What changes for C++11?
Aggregates
The standard definition of an aggregate has changed slightly, but it's still pretty much the same:
An aggregate is an array or a class (Clause 9) with no user-provided constructors (12.1),
no brace-or-equal-initializers for non-static data members (9.2),...
Also, it's kinda addicting. I had 2 weeks holydays earlier this year in school and wasted all of it with all-nighters and sleep deprivation on Tsukihime.
@KerrekSB I was trying to say that the language itself does not prevent the usage of infinite memory. If you can provide infinite memory, you can use it in C++.
@StackedCrooked Visual Novels are like books with pictures for the most part. There will be points in time though, where you are asked to make a descision. Usually, if you make the wrong descision, or a series of wrong descisions, you get what's called a "bad end", meaning you failed the novel. There are several ends for most VNs.
TYPE-MOON VNs are known to be quite hard on the player with those descisions
Even one wrong descision and you could play yourself into a "bad end" (what usually constitutes your death in TYPE-MOON games) for over half an hour without knowing anything.
@RMartinhoFernandes lol, no. You really get all the information you need, but you need to think like the main character you're playing. Wrong descision can quickly knock you out. :)
@LucDanton OK, I'm happy that memory can be infinite, but I believe only countably so. Any C++ program, being a finite piece of text and only having finite loops, can only ever see countable amounts of memory.
@KerrekSB the compiler may assume that all loops terminate. And "infinite" loops usually do. They usually have some kind of side effect which will eventually terminate them
We would only need a countable amount of steps, but that's already past a well-formed computer program. We don't have transfinite programs :-)
So if we wanted to address uncountable amounts of memory, we'd basically need to be able to perform one such long loop each time we want to form a pointer.
So it's not enough to only form a pointer while nobody presses any keys! :-)
@KerrekSB Do you really need to address all that memory? Gimme an infinite memory tape "file" and I can use fseek to move back and forth like a bra*nfuck program does.
@RMartinhoFernandes Moving back and forth only allows you to see a small infinity worth of places, and any terminating program can only see a finite amount of space...
@RMartinhoFernandes I guess. It's just hard to describe what a program does if it isn't required to terminate. You could say that "eventually it will visit every memory location" or something like that...
@RMartinhoFernandes Just the baby example, start at 0 and add 1 each step. What does this program do? Does it use "infinite space"? In a way yes, since it will step past any natural number eventually
Although at every step it is just at some finite number.
@Xeo Endlessly prints the character whose code is 1. The [.] is the printing loop. The [-] is "zero current cell", and + sets the cell to one, so that the loop never ends.
The implementation may assume that any thread will eventually do one of the following: — terminate, — make a call to a library I/O function, — access or modify a volatile object, or — perform a synchronization operation or an atomic operation. [ Note: This is intended to allow compiler transformations such as removal of empty loops, even when termination cannot be proven. — end note ]
1.10 Multi-threaded executions and data races [intro.multithread] paragraph 24
Is there a bignum library for JavaScript that I can include like
<script type="text/javascript" src="the_bignum_library.js"></script>
?
I think my users would prefer to enter numbers in a web page and wait a 7 seconds for a result, rather than download an executable and click thro...
I am currently working on a project which forbids the inclusion of C++'s STL. One of the compiled files we are using lists the following symbol:
_Xran__Q2_3std12_String_baseCFv
I believe this relates to STL strings. Am I incorrect in thinking so? If not, is anyone aware of an effective way of...