> If I were king I’d just start beheading people for writing factories that make factories. It’d collectively save us billions of dollars. And every time you make a singleton, God kills a start-up, two if you think you’ve made it thread-safe. – Landon Dyer
We should set up a bot that posts as a comment to all questions in the singleton tag the sentence "And every time you make a singleton, God kills a start-up, two if you think you’ve made it thread-safe." And when the bot is through, it just starts all over, replacing the old comments with a new copy, so everyone in that tag is so annoyed, they stop using singletons just because they can't endure the comments anymore.
Damn, my google fu is failing me. There was this great article, where someone showed how to make a simple fnargle algorithm in Java, and then kept adding to and complicating the thing, until it almost collapsed under its own weight. And only then he said "this is all bullshit". What was it? Where was this?
The Singleton pattern is a fully paid up member of the GoF Patterns Book but lately seems rather orphaned by the developer world. I still use quite a lot of singletons, especially for Factory classes, and while you have to be a bit careful about multithreading issues (like any class actually), I ...
@Ell An invariant is, for example, that list.size() will always (invariantly) return the number of nodes in the list. While you're in insert(), this is hard to make sure. That's no problem in single-threaded code, but might become in MT code.
@RMartinhoFernandes class Foo {}; class FooSingleton : Foo { static FooSingleton& instance(); }; - Foo can have multiple instances, FooSingleton is singleton.
I just spent an hour debugging my "find" function. Turns out it was fine. bool iterator::operator!=(const iterator& rhs) const {return data==rhs.data;}
Actually, I can't remember whether I have, in the last twenty years as a programmer, ever needed to reverse a string. Probably not. When would you need to do this?
@Ell Oh, I misread what you said. I don't think you can have a "statically typed dynamic language". You can't do a lot of the dynamic language magic with static types.
@sbi <cough>You could of course use it as an optimization before calling std::reverse on a very large container - avoid the case where the output would be identical</cough>
@DeadMG We are still awaiting the verdict. Some of the contestants in our lab project are not quite Dead-enough-MGs yet and so we can't call the winner yet
@RMartinhoFernandes Languages like C++ are homoiconic - oriented: their source code and machine code representations both consist of nothing but 0's and 1s
@RMartinhoFernandes You know, Larry Wall? "God". Guido van Rossum? "God". Bertrand Meyer? "God". So, it makes sense for the Chief Architect of the world next dominant programming language to start invoking his own name for authority
@sbi No, there are interesting properties of the expression 5 && 42. Mainly, that it has the same Half-life and criticall mass as "Hello" ~= "World" in WideC