Well, my colleague is pretty in depth nitpicking about eliminating unnecessarily code instantiations for destructor functions. Still same situation, as mentioned in this question:
Very limited space for .text section (less 256 KB)
Code base should scale among several targets, including the mos...
I think you should verify exactly what your colleague is doing, and make sure they are using a sensible optimisation level for a small device (try both -O2 and -Os). These second-hand questions involving ugly workarounds for unverifiable claims someone else has made are not very useful for other SO users :) — Jonathan Wakely8 mins ago
@ethang I certainly won't call him an idiot (though I have my doubt's what he's actually doing). He's a highly intelligent, and well versed C-programmer learning C++ now, and looking at things analyzing the stuff at assembly level (and what the footprint results are and why). — πάντα ῥεῖ7 mins ago
^ This sounds like the a problem. If your whole frame of reference is "I must fight any overhead of C++"... You should first get to know the C++ way / ecosystem. Then you can slowly marry the two from experience
I normally do struct storage { storage_type data; void* address() { return this; } }; and as long as storage_type is Standard-layout and suitably sized & aligned it works out, everything conforming (as long as you don’t alias with data at the wrong times).
@sehe I never had to defense usage of C++ at that level he's forcing me to do. As mentioned, that guy is well versed with C language, and much better at interpreting assembly level operations seen when debugging the actual artifacts. Nevertheless I don't suppose nm is just lying at us by showing (inlined or not) instantiations of these destructor function codes, unless they're going to be called or not.
This question has nothing to do with "drivers", nothing to do with recursion, and almost nothing to do with "divide and conquer" except for the fact that you should have applied that very debugging technique before posting!! — Lightness Races in Orbit36 secs ago
If I want to insert a series of data into a linked list, I must first insert the first element as head before I make use of a while loop to automatically set other nodes?
while (temp != NULL) will always succeed, or always fail. Based on your code, it will always succeed, since you assign temp once, and never touch it again.
Write your algorithm out on paper in your chosen notation, then and only then translate it into C++ using your C++ book and a standard library reference.
Actually, it's even more important when you're inexperienced!
When you're learning to drive a car you don't just press random buttons and slam your foot down on random pedals before you know what they do. So why the fuck do people write lines of code for the hell of it without a clue what it'll do
@d14, in your original question, the answer is yes, because you have to start with something. If you wanted to be able to just right in, then you'd need to create a class, which handles the linked list part. Actually, your current implementation is horrible since you link your data and your structure together. They should really be separate.
Well, without really understanding WHAT you're doing, the code seems pretty clean and well written, especially since I have a (very) vague idea of what is happening without a single comment (which is horrible) after just reading through it. Your linked list implementation looks solid as well, though I think I would have delete backwards, and then forward, rather than moving back, and then deleting forward.
FYI, I'm not super familiar with C, so there may be some things I missed.
Never, ever take that opinion. You're only familiar with it for about a week after you're done working with it. Frankly, Hello World should probably be commented, but then again, I tend to write books with my comments. :)
My commenting method is a bit extreme. I basically try to make it to where I know what's happening by just reading the comments. (I don't always go that far though)
Ya know, if identifiers can have UCNs, and if only the source character set is guaranteed to be widenable, how does one write a generic demangling typeinfo name thing?
Valgrind lies though. For example it reports the packet checksum calculation to be the biggest bottleneck, yet when disabling the checksum the performance gain is very small. (Turns out that when profiling each write to a variable is like writing to a volatile.)
You would implement the child class yourself as a template. Make the constructors of the abstract class private. Make the template child class final. And friend the child class from the parent class.
Then the "implementing classes" would be implemented via template instantiations.
Until version 8, ICC shipped with Dinkumware, i.e. the standard library implementation that also ships with Microsoft Visual Studio:
The Intel C++ Compiler for Windows uses the Microsoft Visual C++ header files, libraries and linker. Microsoft controls the header files that define the namespa...
@Cinch the binaries you get from mingw.org are pretty outdated, so you'll only get older gcc features. I couldn't find anything about how to get a recent gcc mingw
so... with templates... can I have two template class 'foo' and 'bar' and then have a function that takes a foo and bar but only if foo and bar are 'templated' with the same type... sort of like fn(foo<T> f, bar<T> b);