@StackedCrooked Yeah. I'd make (much) more expressive names though
@StackedCrooked Oh. I was completely convinced you meantstring there (which is why I suggested better naming!). Because, you know, an escaped character makes zero sense
That's like the musician's joke: "semi-quavers are the simples. You try playing sixtheens!" - "oh that's nothing, I can play 32nds in triplets without skipping a beat. I bet you can play 64ths?" - "Oh sure. Here: <plong>. That's one!"
@StackedCrooked So my take on it would be more like string<escaped>; of course you get into DSP model pretty quickly: processed_string<url_encoding> or processed_string<xml_pcdata>;
"How do I hammer in this nail with a screwdriver? I know it's the wrong tool, but I hate hammers and lover screwdrivers." If you need to do this then you need to use a different language. If that is not obvious to you then I'm afraid you will likely mess up the implementation anyway. — Ed S.1 hour ago
Actually, I would interview him. He's quite eloquent. I think I'd turn out to agree with him on most things. Just, the "retarded" things, and arguing-by-offensive-imagery is ... a bad habit
I would say texture/model cache is a complicated problem, since it is hard to load from disk, and you might want it cached as long as possible, even that you are not using it.
@Nican C code. Heavily multithreaded. Combines all layers (raw device access, volume management, block, filesystem level). Everything is a versioned merkle tree (aka log structured). And there's mutexes at all levels.
It's the hardz
@Nican I ended up never touching that code because I realized I lacked that "overview" that is required to keep it correct.
I shy-ed away (and out) when the LLNL stepped up to do the kernel port
And often, the prototype parser will serve just fine for all the production years. However, for a serious language parser, I'd "graduate" it as soon as the grammar is stable
@MartinJames Depends. ^
@Cinch ANTLR, Flexx/Bison. Coco/R C++ is friendly (albeit perhaps a bit messy in the compilation model; but it's easy to get down to the metal)
@andrew Like I said, I'd use Spirit in a heartbeat. Mostly because I have most of the knacks and I know I hardly ever produce a parser worth hand tuning and fiddling with for too long.
@Cinch I think you realized that this is not working: i.imgur.com/TndGnbv.png - I can tell because you started using colors. (That's a good idea, actually). But it doesn't cure "large, boring wall of text with no meaningful contexts"
On the whole it looks very neat and nice-paced. I think I'd use less space in the "state boxes", but then again, I'm no beginner so I can't "feel" the pace as a beginner
@JerryCoffin From reading I think that's what's meant. But not "density" (there's quite a lot of "wavy" terms like "variable i is now 3". I think that's probably ok for the beginner.
They can always "graduate" to a proper textbook if they desire
@sehe I was just pointing to the fact that "brevity" is more concise than "conciseness" (and if you don't like "brevity", I'd prefer "concision" over "conciseness").
@sehe It is, but there are a few things that probably should be fixed, like calling int i; a declaration when it's really a definition (technically yes, it is also a declaration, but for beginners it's best to keep the two separate, since the difference between the two frequently causes confusion).
@Cinch Along with changing the "declaration" to "definition", I'd recommend changing: "assigning a simple variable to a constant" to "assigning a constant to a simple variable" (and probably leave out the "simple"). The variable is the target, and the constant the source.
Should I use
std::sort(numbers.begin(), numbers.end(), std::greater<int>());
or
std::sort(numbers.rbegin(), numbers.rend()); // note: reverse iterators
to sort a vector in descending order? Are there any benefits/drawbacks with one approach or the other?
@sehe More or less, yes. A declaration tells the compiler about the existence of something, but does not (necessarily) make that thing exist. A definition makes the thing exist.
@JerryCoffin No, the compiler knows that it exists if you declare it, but it will give you a linking error because "what" it is hasn't been defined yet