Wait, what is the correct syntax for alignas? alignas(X) struct blah {}; or struct alignas(X) blah {};? GCC accepts the alignment specifier pretty much anywhere, but I don't think that's standard.
Someone on IRC claimed that, although allocating with new[] and deleting with delete (not delete[]) is UB, on Linux platforms (no further details about the OS) it would be safe.
Is this true? Is it guaranteed? Is it to do with something in POSIX that specifies that dynamically-allocated blocks s...
can someone tell me what this means: "Like a member declaration, a friend declaration does not introduce a name into an enclosing scope." I'm not sure what it means with "introduce a name into an enclosing scope" ?
@jalf So you despise the idea of doing this, but since we do it anyways, you wouldn't mind to benefit? :) I see what you did^Wwere trying to do there...
yes, it's an annoyingly frequently asked question. But for me to benefit from it going in the FAQ, I'd have to believe that the FAQ actually solved that problem
I don't. But since you believe otherwise, I figured you might want to add the question to the FAQ :)
@RMartinhoFernandes yup, makes sense, but again, by thinking about the destructors, rather than the memory, the answer is clear. Because delete[] has to have a way to know how many dtors to call. So it has to do something extra on top of what delete does (read the number of elements from somewhere)
@RMartinhoFernandes It would still be UB according to the C++ standard. Only it would be UB which you could expect to manifest itself in a certain way on POSIX-compliant systems — according to POSIX.
@RMartinhoFernandes I never said it was silly. I said it was frequently asked, and that the reason it is frequently asked is because people forget to consider the relevant part, and merely think in terms of memory (de)allocation
if you think about destructors, then it becomes obvious that "they could be interchangable, but it'd be needlessly complex, and there's no reason for them to be so"
@thecoshman Ah, that's what you were getting at. Well, see the comment:
> FWIW, writing this took the better part of my Sunday, an article draft that actually was meant to get published one day, and a big overdraw on my good-will credit with the kids (who wanted me to play LEGO with them instead). Please don't begrudge me the rep I get for it.
If the browser has blocked use of pop-ups in JavaScript, it has blocked them. There is no way you can force the browser to let them through.
You can always try creating a pop-up like element on your page, it won't force the user to deal with it first (except on your page) but will still 'look' ...
last night I dreamt that robots had taken over the world. I , together with a cat , a puppy and an ape devise a plan to defeat the robots. we build a giant magnet that attracts all the metallic robots and that launch the magnet to outer space taking the robots with it. ¬_¬ I think I'm going bananas.
tree check: expected tree_list, have H ß è MÕ þÿ ø tx ø ts ø º in eq_local_specializations, at cp/pt.c:1687
Please submit a full bug report,
with preprocessed source if appropriate.
wat.
An entity from beyond our mundane dimensions has taken possession of my compiler. Please advise.
What should the meta "trolling" tag be?
Currently there are three related tags
troll x2
trolling x14
trolls x1
Which tag should we use when referring to issues with trolls on the SE network?
> Also this is a level 5 pointer i'm working with, i've only used level 1 or 2 pointers but i'm guessing it's around the same. Just read the address from the pointers until I get a base address to write to.
so i'm writing sort of an engine where some functionality exists but i want to leave the room to add more functionality.
So consider these classes to exists in the engine
class Object
{
public:
Object(){};
virtual ~Object(){};
ActionProc* pAP;
};
class Sphere: public Object
{
p...