@CatPlusPlus I know that best practices is to use one own's assertions, since it's the kind of thing that, like log reporting, is very much needed but different from one application to the other. However, unlike log reporting, I've never seen a C++ 'library' for assertions.
What's would be the aims of an assertion solution? Allows assertion site to possibly build a nice assertion message (with relevant information like function & line), and allows several behaviours to be switched out project-wide?
In MSVC, DebugBreak() or __debugbreak cause a debugger to break. On x86 it is equivalent to writing "_asm int 3", on x64 it is something different. When compiling with gcc (or any other standard compiler) I want to do a break into debugger, too. Is there a platform independent function or intrins...
Some environments don't have a console though, so you may need to log the assertion before a quick exit. I guess.
@EtiennedeMartel Since we're talking about a hypothetical library, any mention of user I've made were referring to the library user. Not the application user (which I would usually refer to with 'end-user').
I'm trying to do some kind of Macro "Overloading", so that MACRO(something), gets expanded differently than MACRO(something, else).
Using a snippet I got from here (I'm not sure if it's 100% portable) and some functions from the Boost PP Library, I was able to make it work :D
//THESE TWO COUNT ...
I got the following implementation to get the number of arguments in a variadic macro (currently limited to 16 args). However, for VS2010 the output is always 1, no matter how many arguments are passed. On Ideone.com, the output is correct, bringing me to the conclusion that I must have missed so...
Seen on this site, the code shows macro invocations using a tilde in parentheses:
HAS_COMMA(_TRIGGER_PARENTHESIS_ __VA_ARGS__ (~))
// ^^^
What does it mean / do? I suspect it to just be an empty argument, but I'm not sure. Is it maybe specific to C(99) ...
I am going to learn a second language. Would you learn Python or Ruby? Going to use is it for "normal" programming problems as well as web applications
const Container is probably very inefficient. With immutable containers, you can get O(log n) or even O(1) "insertion" depending on the underlying data structure.
Still, good point about making a new container out of an old one. However, that won't work in C++, since it's not garbage collected and as such you can't just create a new container from an old one without explicitly binding the lifetime of the old one to the new one
Sure, immutable containers would almost certainly need to be implemented as proxy/handle objects to shared immutable state or something. Not very C++ish, I know.
Right. I would be surprised if there weren't at least half a dozen immutable container libraries for C++ already. Let's pick one of those and make it standard.
@EtiennedeMartel I wrote "C++" for years without even knowing that there was such a thing as a standard C++ library. So my code was littered with pointers and manual memory management :)
@Xeo What we need is a cool lib with a cool name with a cool looking site that shows a small code snippet and a huge "Fork me on Github!" ribbon in the top right corner.
@Als yes, I know what MinGW is - I used to use it when all I had was a Windows box. These days, vbox+unix_distro(like Ubuntu) is so easy to use that I thought it would make MinGW obsolete. That's why I was wondering if you were using MinGW for something Windows-specific.
@FredOverflow: It seems only have to replace the MinGW folder under codeblocks but seems the folder names are difference once i unzipped the toolchain.
I actually have two servers that run Ubuntu straight-up, but the vbox + lubuntu on my iMac is much much faster (using multiple i7 cores) so I use this setup for all my builds/devs
ok - the idea is, virtualbox runs a thin-layer emulating the hardware underneath you install the Lubuntu .iso on top of a virtualbox instead of the hardware itself
as far as Lubuntu is concerned, it thinks it's sitting on hardware, not a virtual machine
the virtual machine that is vbox has drivers to connect to the outside (keyboard drivers, network drivers, video drivers)
so that it behaves correctly on top of your host OS
Hmm. Apparently StackOverflow has a lonely database server --- "Stack Overflow will be going offline for maintenance in a few minutes while we give a database server some love". Odd way to phrase that.
@FredOverflow A wiki in the truest sense of the word. Not that Wikipedia and clones aren't wikis either, but they've had had to put up with a lot of red tape due to their popularity. Less popular wikis look much more like c2 (tvtropes is a good example, too).
@FredOverflow I was going with 'no', but had to make sure by checking the Wiki article on Wikipedia. Surprise, not only did wikis predate Wikipedia (that's not the surprising part), they were invented by Ward Cunningham, curatof of c2.com!
@FredOverflow how old is it? iirc, maybe quite old - in that case, it might only contain the "classic" ways of shooting yourself in the foot with a rope...
Sam & Max is a media franchise focusing on the fictional characters of Sam and Max, the Freelance Police. The characters, who occupy a universe that parodies American popular culture, were created by Steve Purcell in his youth, and later debuted in a 1987 comic book series. The characters have since been the subject of a graphic adventure video game developed by LucasArts, a television series produced for Fox in cooperation with Nelvana Limited, and a series of episodic adventure games developed by Telltale Games. In addition, a variety of machinima and a webcomic have been produced for ...
@FredOverflow I recommend all the new ones (that would be three seasons IIRC?), although I can't compare them to the original games since they were a bit before my time and I never played them.
If you're wondering the Monkey Island one is very good, too.
Besides @Xeo's answer, you can also do
template<typename T = int> // thanks to Xeo for suggesting the default parameter
void SetItem(Key&& key, const Value& value) {
static_assert(sizeof(T) == 0, "SetItem cannot be used with temporary values as keys");
}
This has the adva...
quick C++11 question - after I do a std::move( p ), p will always be nullptr, right? (I've confirmed this with a quick test - makes sense, but I want to confirm that this is guaranteed...)
@LucDanton sry to bother you - one more question - if I have a std::unique_ptr<int> giveup() { return move(p); } I can expect p to be nullptr, correct?
after a call, I mean, and assuming there is a receiver
std::unique_ptr p = /* ... */; /* use it */; something_involving_a_move(std::move(p)); /* don't assume any state for p */; p.reset(/* ... */); /* it's okay to reuse it! */
In general the one operation you can do on a moved-from object is reassigning to a new state. Both operator= and reset achieve that for std::unique_ptr.
whenever I go away from C++ for a few months, I miss the semantic richness of C++ it's nice to know a programmer's intentions just by looking at how parameters are passed
I mean that the way he or she answered is not the preferred way, but that's not something that couldn't be fixed by someone that doesn't know C++ that much.
Also is it worth it to salvage a 2009 question, even though no answer is accepted?