I'm hazarding a guess that a x86 program converted to some obscure 18-bits-in-a-byte architecture is going to have a lot more problems from wrong assumptions than the speed of an int
The PDP-11 was a series of 16-bit minicomputers sold by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) from 1970 into the 1990s, one of a succession of products in the PDP series. The PDP-11 replaced the PDP-8 in many real-time applications, although both product lines lived in parallel for more than 10 years. The PDP-11 had several uniquely innovative features, and was easier to program than its predecessors with its use of general registers. Its successor in the mid-range minicomputer niche was the 32-bit VAX-11.
Design features of the PDP-11 influenced the design of microprocessors such as the Mo...
@sehe Yeah, sometimes a guy comes in and complains about int, of all things. C++ has a million billion flaws, but no, the guy had to whine about fucking int.
@RMartinhoFernandes yea well today I have to do without, the GNU blacked out. :P
meh
how is std::string s; /*do some whatever*/ s = "somestring"; slower then just doing this std::string s = "somestring"; when and where you need it?
I'm just reading "The C++ Programming Language Special Edition" By Bjarne, and it says that the first in my example "can easily be much slower than" the latter
@Pubby ok, and where does that technical difference come from? I mean, the only thing I know is that the CPU can move the first statements around, can't it?
I'm currently reading in "The C++ Programming Language: Special Edition" by Bjarne Stroustrup and on page 133 it states the following:
For user-defined types, postponing the definition of a variable until
a suitable initializer is available can also lead to better
performance. For exampl...
@rubenvb typename T says that T in this case is a placeholder for a type. Whereas if you were to have an actual type in your template, template<int N> the compiler know the type of N, so you don't have a placeholder.
@rubenvb well, it's not specific enough for the compiler I guess. the typename keyword ensures that the compiler really knows that you want T to be a placeholder
@RMartinhoFernandes Actually, the German Wikipedia claims to have 1,345,405 articles, the Portuguese says 710,925. That's not that big of a difference.
Suppose I have a C++ program that has excessively deep inheritance as follows:
using namespace std;
class AbstractParentGeneration0 {
private:
...
protected:
...
public:
virtual returnVal funcName(void) = 0;
};
class AbstractParentGeneration1: virtual public Abs...
This call:
thread.join();
explicitely tells your program to wait until the function the thread is executing, returns. Your function never returns, so you program never gets past this function call. You can start extra threads between the thread creation and the corresponding call to join(). Fo...
user142019
What does he mean by "Ok, thx. What run thread in parallel stream ?"?
hi guys, just a short question. i'm trying to store a vector (std::vector<T> data) into a file using std::copy ( std::copy(data.begin(), data.end(), std::ostream_iterator<T>(fid," "))). how could i establish the precision of float numbers? for instance %.4f?
All threads must eventually make progress, and one of the following: 1) terminate, 2) make a call to a library I/O function, 3) access or modify a volatile object, or 3) perform a synchronization operation or an atomic operation.
The implementation is allowed to assume that holds.
So, optimizing the "infinite" loop away is allowed.
@RMartinhoFernandes, i just found a way. it's by calling ofstream.setf(), but still can't define the exact number of digits after the decimal point,ofstream.precision is not working in my case. any ideas? pastebin.com/QwzQmh1M
@WTP I think it was wrong closing this. I think this was asking about orange::orange() ("resolution operator"), not about member initialization lists. I don't doubt that there's a dupe for this one, too, but this isn't it. // @Als, @Jerry, @RMartinho, @ruben