Point taken on the &! The reason this was confusing to me is because in java that code would never compile (i understand they are different languages). — inquisitor1 min ago
@Mgetz: Please stop writing answers in comments!!!! This is not a chat room. Comments are for two things only: (a) requesting clarification, (b) berating people. — Lightness Races in Orbit36 secs ago
a ranged based for does not need a suitable overload of std::begin and std::end it needs a valid begin and end expression. which happens to correspond nearly (but not exactly) to having a valid overload of std::begin and std::end
In my experience, this kind of situation is remarkably common. It usually goes
in one of two directions:
Discussion in comments, and rightly placed there, does eventually elicit the
source of the problem. The commenter who solved the problem
(or even someone else) then posts the answer as an an...
Comments are just for requesting clarification and arguing with people, right? ;)
Yet lately I'm seeing this more and more often (no data available; sorry to pick you specifically, Barry):
What happens is that someone FGITWs a mini-answer as a comment on the question, diluting the value of th...
void printArray(int a[])
Despite that function seeming to accept an array, what it actually gets is a pointer to the first element of said array. This is unfortunately a fact of life in C++, due to it's origins based on the C language.
And, as a pointer itself has no size information about the...
> Now, I'm not normally the type to go about explaining my jokes (a) but, for the humour-impaired out there, this article should definitely be read tongue-in-cheek.
Try reading....
The entire post is a post about what not to do. That's its purpose.
Is there a plant (not a microscopic type but one that is visible to the naked eye) that has so much iron (or magnetite), cobalt, or nickel in its body that it can attract a magnet?
In this case "attract" would mean that a person holding a small magnet next to the plant can feel a small attractio...
This question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year.
Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...
> 1:10 PM PST -- Cops tell us there was no damage to the Kardashian's vehicle -- a black Yukon GMC -- and a motor carrier service called the slide-off into police.
TRWTF is that the Kardashians had a car crash in Bozeman, Montana, USA and not a single news "entertainment" website mentions this being the site of First Contact with Vulcans.
Kim Kardashian isn't known for her intelligence, you can be a dumbass & still be rich n famous as long as you are an attention whore & with the right connection.
We actually technically already have one right here. We also have the related question about new as well.
I don't see what a newer question would do but we could probably edit the first one to be more up to date with the C++11 rules.
Semi-tangentially (in that this is not meant as a response to what you've said), I'm less and less convinced by the whole c++-faq thing as time goes by. My answer on that meta post probably gives that away, somewhat. :)
I tend to use the dupe system more as a "your answer is here" kind of thing rather than exact dupes. Usually only do that for trivial questions though.
> the human realm is considered to be the most suitable realm for practicing the dharma, because humans are not completely distracted by pleasure (like the gods or demi-gods) or by pain and suffering (like the beings in the lower realms).
For some unknown reasons, I feel sympathetic towards the poor people who are firstly ripped off by big corporations, then by the federal & state governments, lastly but not least by ones own parents.
Why is the first letter of my question in lower-case? And why does it end in two question marks instead of one? And why is there a space before the first question mark? :o Does it mean I have bad English? Or is it that I don't bother? How do I type properly? Can anyone help me? **Re-evaluating my question because no one answered it(probably because no one is in the lounge right now).**
Why are all the messages in the starred message board by @LightnessRacesinOrbit .
@Elvisjames Nothing in the standard library fits those requirements as-is. The collections that enforce uniqueness (set, map, unordered_set, unordered_map) don't have fixed maximum sizes--it'd be up to you to (for example) check the current size, and only insert a new item if the current is less than the maximum desired size.
:21695658 Probably shouldn't derive from anything. Could contain an instance of set or unordered_set.
@Elvisjames set stores things in a specified order (either the < defined for the elements, or the comparator you specify for the container when you create it).
@Elvisjames For that you'd typically use an unordered_set to determine uniqueness, and a separate vector to do the stack-like operations.
if (my_set.insert(x).second) my_stack.push_back(x);
@Elvisjames Yes (though if the items are large, one could store just pointers to the items in the other).
The problem is fairly simple: with the items in their original order, there's really no fast way to figure out whether a new item is unique--you have to do a linear search to find it, and insert only if not found. A set reduces that from O(N) to O(log N). An unordered_set reduces it to O(1) expected complexity. If you're more concerned about storage space than speed, you can just use a std::vector with std::find to check whether an item is already present.
@chmod711telkitty Sometimes they deserve guidance about what would make the question better. Sometimes the same is true of bald statements (rather than questions).