We know, that we can overload operator() to use functional style in C++ , let's look:
(PS: are there any other styles to use functional stuff in C++ with other ways, which aren't in the code? please give me your pieces of advice).
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
struct A
{
priva...
But since my Super Clever Line Code is so combinatorially awesome, a baby should be able to crack this once more than a handful of messages have gone through
@MooingDuck Well, both parties have a personal secret that nobody else knows.
From that, both parties generate a public token which they exchange publicly.
Combining the other's public token with the own personal secret yields a shared secret that only the two partners know, but nobody else.
@Maxpm For the record, I ended up repeating the assertions in the method, in case the object's internal state somehow changed between its construction and the method call.
Hello everyone :) Can someone help me on that ? (OpenCV problem) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8828064/unhandled-exception-after-reading-histogram-craeted-with-calchist
@MooingDuck That's a sensible attitude. Usually it goes like, "if it makes sense, 1) it's in std, 2) it's in Boost, 3) RMF knows where to find it, 4) Luc Danton solves it at compile time."
@KerrekSB It's especially annoying when opening a pdf in a new tab and wanting to scroll in the current... it just won't work until you tab in and out of the pdf tab...
The SO ranks confuse me. A while ago I was the week's #15 and counted among the top 0.01%. Today I'm #11 and only in the top 0.04%. How is that? Does SO ever lose members?
If I have the following code:
struct someStruct
{
int x;
int y;
}
class someClass
{
public:
someStruct m_member;
alias m_x = m_member.x; // I am aware alias is not a keyword and even if it was, I cannot assign it a value like this
alias m_y = m_member.y; // I am awa...
I dreamed about Paul and Mary, Mary was throwing a waterballon on Paul. Paul is at xP, yP, Mary throws at Mx, My. What is the function calculating the wetness of Paul
I was just looking at stackoverflow.com/questions/7884705/…, aren't there possible speed penalties associated with multiple return points when returning two different objects? Nobobdy seems to have mentioend it on the page.
§27.7.3.9 defines the following overload for operator<<:
template <class charT, class traits, class T>
basic_ostream<charT, traits>&
operator<<(basic_ostream<charT, traits>&& os, const T& x);
Effects: os << x
Returns: os
(§27.7.2.6...
Hmm, since automatic generation of move ctor / assignment op is disabled at the slightest touch... I want MSVC to add __declspec(organ_donor) to always generate them.
Because, y'know, I think of writing a string library (oh noez, another one!) that includes immutable strings. However, to be able to actually efficiently interface mutable and immutable strings, the latter needs to be convertible to the former without immediatly causing a copy. At the same time, the mutable one needs to be able to convert to an immutable one and be able to detach its internals when its no longer needed, so the immutable string has the sole ownership.
(Now that sounds a bit like interfacing std::unique_ptr and std::shared_ptr under the hoods...)
You can do so very easily with LINQ:
string[] items = {"a", "b", "c", "d"};
var query = from i1 in items
from i2 in items
from i3 in items
from i4 in items
select i1 + i2 + i3 + i4;
foreach(var result in query)
Console.WriteLine(result);
If ...