yeah, but for 16byte objects you have 4 objects per cacheline, so only the last 2 comparisons will benefit from it (maybe only one, depending where the cacheline boundary is)
so that advantage can easily be negated by a small additional overhead somewhere (like doing additional copying, the compiler doing worse in its optimization)
REQUIREMENT: create a matrix of size 500 X 500 with most elements are zero. matrix define a class that uses a list to store non-zero elements and use operators overloed + - and *(multiplication) for listed non zero elements of matrix.
@Grizzly I also found things that imply that. Hrm. I just really though the vector would be faster. It certainly is for construct/insert/erase, which I hadn't expected
Seems wierd to use a vector for fast random-insertion-removal, but slower lookup compared to a map.
@Ambeco: Well since the two pointers to children are most likely next to each other for maps the compiler might be able to optimize the conditional jump deciding which address to use or something like that
Can you use numbers that are not representable in unsigned long long if you use the template <char...> literal operator? I mean, 2^64 only gives you 19 decimal digits.
Like 10000000000000000000000000000000_b (32-bits where the MSB is set). 10^31 is not representable in a 64-bit int.
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The Boeing YAL-1 Airborne Laser Testbed, (formerly Airborne Laser) weapons system is a megawatt-class chemical oxygen iodine laser (COIL) mounted inside a modified Boeing 747-400F. It is primarily designed as a missile defense system to destroy tactical ballistic missiles (TBMs), while in boost phase. The aircraft was designated YAL-1A in 2004 by the U.S. Department of Defense.
The YAL-1 with a low-power laser was test-fired in flight, at an airborne target in 2007. A high-energy laser was used to intercept a test target in January 2010, Funding for the program was cut in 2010 a...
@TonyTheLion that argument is kind of like saying, nukes want effect you if they land in another country. And yes, I do think the fallout of SOPA is on par with the fallout of a nuke
I need to go through a C/C++ file and extract the list of classes and methods and where they're located on the file.
Is libclang the best option? Or is it "too much" for the task?
Would it be better to just look for pairing brackets?
In case libclang is the choice: is there a way to invoke it ...
there is a thing for gcc that supports introspection, i think based on the intel abi
can be googled
i fixed my windows api lessons blog so that the main page serves as table of contents, with links directly into the various postings.
well it should have worked that way by default, but the theme messed up relative URLs
in other news, [comp.lang.c++.moderated] is working again, after John Potter heroically fixed things at the server, after a friendly-fire "update" on 7th january (which moved/removed much critical stuff)
"bool b = intVar;" yields warning, because it generates code "bool b = intVar != 0;", "int x = boolVar" would yield warning because it generates code "int x = boolVar ? 1 : 0;"
with a lot of this windowing system, you pass a callback function that you want it to call. You want your idle function to do a time based physics, such that the more often it gets called the smaller the time step. It then needs to keep track of when it last rendered so that it can call a render function at a some what sensible frame rate
@Abyx that's stupid comment. please stop stupid fucking thing. there is no relationship between use of preprocessor macros (Microsoft's API) and "C++ way", and also, "C++ way" is your f***cking term,. not mine
@TonyTheLion you can't program windows at the api level without them. the api is all macros. thousands of them. so also in that sense is Abyx's comment just plain stupid. i get so angry
@Abyx because the language binding you're using is without macros. the language binding for C and for C++ is based on macros. it's far too much to rewrite and maintain on your own.
@Abyx you are implying it is better to do your own bit-fiddling unpacking than using Microsoft's defined and maintained macro-based API (which they've removed docs for). that's stupid. can't you please stop write stupid things? you are upsetting me.
This will be fixed next build; apparently (as I'm sure you guessed) new accounts start with a dummy name, that is filled in ASAP (using either the "user12345" pattern or a name from you or your OpenID provider) - news to me, since it happens very fast. In fact, you just proved a code-comment accu...
ok, not IKEA today. I think I'll check whether there's something simple and nutritious and cheap at the Mexican restaurant around the corner. And buy "Juggler of worlds" @sbi :-)
@thecoshman Since you link to everything you happen to bump into on the entire internet, it woule be safest to just assume that you have posted it before, next time :)
@thecoshman huh. I really don't get what you are up to. Are you angry, or just bored? You could always answer some questions on stackoverflow.com, e.g.
"Microsoft Visual Studio LightSwitch is a simplified self-service development tool that enables you to build business applications quickly and easily for the desktop and cloud. What can your business do with LightSwitch?" — "We have no idea, that's why we named it this way."
@Abyx Keep in mind that "moving" basically means making a shallow copy of an object and invalidating the original. Moving a pointer object is always shallow. (I don't really know how I should interpret the "invalidates the original" aspect here. Perhaps it means setting the pointer to 0.)
@CatPlusPlus and here I reach my limit. *value shit just seems to be more info then is really needed to do a lot of the stuff you would actually want to do with C++
I think there was some back-and forth on the committee about that, actually. Whether they should require the moved-from object to be in a consistent state, or just say that it's in some magic "don't touch" state until it gets destroyed
std::vector<int> a { 1, 2, 3 };
std::vector<int> b = std::move(a);
a.push_back(4); // works, not UB or anything
assert(a.size() == 1); // isn't guaranteed to hold
"Statically typed (...) this is called dynamic binding. That is, the method to call is selected during runtime (...) With dynamically typed languages the situation is completely different. (...) The method will be looked up during runtime, that is why these languages are called "dynamic"."
@RMartinhoFernandes I guess move-assignment could be implemented by swapping the contents the vectors. Which would indeed make the original object unsafe for use after being moved.
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, @StackedCrooked didn't specify the enclosing class. It couldn't be std::vector, because it is against ODR to modify the definition and against the standard to declare user types in that namespace.
// implementation in GCC 4.6 on my comp
vector& operator=(vector&& __x) {
// NB: DR 1204.
// NB: DR 675.
this->clear();
this->swap(__x);
return *this;
}
FSS waited two weeks before Christmas for a meeting to conclude that a 'bug' we had floating around for about a month was not really an issue as it only happens when you do something that you wouldn't normally do. Turns out some one want's a fix so you can do something that you don't need to do
@CatPlusPlus Perhaps they can use lexical template expansions and/or debug information on steroids and track the origin of the identifiers they see while analyzing (optimized) output?