@sehe Well, that's certainly a good thing to do, but you may not have control over what other people deliver and still need to cope with the SW they wrote. Also, those people may fail to apply the guideline, because humans. Code reviews are great, but we (for instance) have no capacity for reviewing the whole codebase.
@sehe I didn't avoid answering. The answer is that I cannot force my colleagues to write code (including commenting out code or not doing so) the way I think should be done.
@sehe for the most part, it's noise. if it's like /* if(list.size() == 0){ */ if(list.empty()){ that comment serves no purpose. It should be removed before the change is accepted.
@sehe I thought the answer was clear: in an ideal world, no. In the real world, partially - what's wrong with automated tools that can detect potential issues?
@thecoshman Speaking less practically, it makes me suspicious of the programmer that wrote it. To what other parts of their design, code, testing, process are they applying such a lack of rigour?
@thecoshman Yes you can, and as I wrote before, code reviews are great, but they cannot cover the whole codebase - there's no capacity for that. Yet, we have to maintain the whole codebase. I don't see anything wrong with having automated tools that help you, as long as there's a "shut up, automated tool" option
I developed the weird complex, when I get a new task, I am always afraid of adding new stuff the the existing code. I hope this is jsut a beginner problem
@AndyProwl You review changes, not entire codebases. Careful change reviews can take overarching architecture and design into account and, theoretically, allow you to essentially review the codebase by aggregation.
People fixate on edge case paradoxes with a strict definition of "omnipotent" in order to "disprove" the existence of God, which is somewhat ludicrous. What you should be doing is questioning the use of the term, and asking what implied constraints there are to the [near-]"omnipotence".
It's like saying that C++ cannot exist because Vlad once said you can do anything with C++ yet I still can't find a decent way to make sandwiches with it
@AndyProwl oh. it's just that I've only seen this come with terrible repressive cultures with no freedom. At all. Where literally all code you wrote need 1 or two touch-ups each line, and then several incremental passes to order the damn class members as required, add/remove whitespace lines where required/forbidden. All the while these rules are arbitrary and in reordering the class members you always lose information.
I'm personally a fan of "SemanticFormatting". Format dense where no information is lurking. Format verbose where information is lurking. Group related implementation details (preferrably in their own class, of course)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit We don't have enough people for that. Everyone's very busy maintaining their own part of the codebase, reviewing/understanding other people's code, making notes, discussing stuff, takes a lot of time.
What I don't support is blind acceptance of various stories and tales (mostly those which have nothing at all to do with God) used to justify various strange and harmful behaviours
The IDE can simply warn you "hey you have commented out code here" - and you are free to keep that error window hidden or disable the warning or something
@AndyProwl Good. I didn't say that either. I asked. And I said that I had not encountered tools like that except in very badly overcontrolled environments
I try to solve N-Queen problem with C++ but I still can't
someone can share a peuso code or a C++ code for me?
or explain how to solve N-Queen problem pls.
I need to finish this before tmr.
Since your title suggests you're on a spectrum, and waiting for the point where you'll definitely succeed, let me help you from experience: the roads lead to assembly. Solve it in assembly. Either you'll surely succeed then, or you will learn not to try. — sehe17 secs ago
@Jefffrey Hi there and welcome to the Lounge. In here sometimes we talk about C++. C++ is a multi-paradigm pile of crap used across the world to create computer programs. Enjoy your stay!
So you have 2 warps * 2 instructions, that's 4 instructions executed on 48 cores, so 16 cores have the same instruction, but then you need to repeat one somehow? arg