What I meant was when you don't know in advance the actual needed storage, pass null as storage and let the function compute how much it would actually need
Then allocate, pass storage, and the function returns how much it actually used (same as before)
Another i've seen is bool did_it_work = to_str(input, size_of_output*, output*)
'boost::log::v2_mt_nt5::aux::record_pump<boost::log::v2_mt_nt5::sources::severity_logger_mt<log_severity_level>>[...]' marked as __forceinline not inlined
3.10/10 says:
If a program attempts to access the stored value of an object through a glvalue of other than one of the following types the behavior is undefined:
However, the term "access" is not defined anywhere. In this context does it mean read, or read or modify ?
In the C standard i...
If you're just doing the usual header / libs, then you just do... uh. Whatever you do for that.
user3010322
04:20
Fuck these classes.
user3010322
They never teach you "Here's how to use the language you have and its facilities to the maximum."
user3010322
It's always "here, reimplement pieces of the standard library in the shittiest fashion possible, and here's some optional bullshit about why its a good idea to do so."
user3010322
Would rather hack my fingers off.
user3010322
I CAN'T EVEN USE A FUNCTION POINTER TO PASS A VALIDATION FUNCTION TO THIS GETLINE
The standard is notoriously bad at this sort of thing. Even a rabid language lawyer like myself avoids such questions like the plague. You're on your own ;) — Lightness Races in Orbit19 secs ago
what about keeping the limit on the "main.cpp" file the same, raising the limits on all other files generated, but not storing the other files after the command has ran?