@FredOverflow I'm not sure... it's a very odd platform. it has an emulator for the platform. It only saw the one mario game, and it has strange mechanics
This article is a list of games where the Nintendo character Mario has appeared.
Mario, who serves as Nintendo's mascot, is a fictional character created by game designer Shigeru Miyamoto and voiced by Charles Martinet. He has appeared in hundreds of games, both with starring and less significant roles.
The year indicated is the year the game was first released, most commonly in Japan. It was sometimes released years later in other regions of the world. The list indicates the game's primary platform, although some of the games have also been ported on a large number of consoles.
List
{...
> By Miyamoto's own account, Mario's profession was chosen to fit with the game design. Since Donkey Kong was set on a construction site, Mario was made into a carpenter.
@Xeo It should. Have been having a headache all morning long.
I'm a bit disappointed the mailing doesn't have numbers for the whole build, to see how those numbers relate to the complete build process (linking and what not). Although I guess those are not as statistically meaningful.
> pavanto Says: Bartosz, why don’t you write more often? I am always longing to read something new from you. I know it’s off topic but just wanted to mention it here.
@FredOverflow how about 'undefined behaviour', prvalue, sequence point, whole-expression, temporary lifetime :) That template I would associate slightly more with Xeo
I usually write my classes in C++ and check if they leak memory using valgrind on Linux platform. I'm not satisfied until all the heap memory is freed.
Starting to write in Qt, I found how many leaks valgrind detects, also on a simple project. They are so many that it's difficult to detect my sa...
I'm trying to build DHCP packet in then send it via UDP ( "0xff.0xff.0xff.0xff", 67 port ).
I have sucessfully connected to my DHCP server, but I have problems with first packet structure ( DHCPDISCOVER ) as I see, but I have built it from RFC && Wiki, and have checked all fields/size in...
@Xeo I know that? I'm just saying, you seem to be more focused on them than others. Litb has always struck me as the compiler-writer guy 'obsessed' with the exact semantics of the language, less than the 'front-end' facilities so to speak. It is a gut feeling
How do I go about overloading a template class like below?
template <class T>
const_iterator& List<T>::const_iterator::operator++()
{
current = current->next;
return *this;
}
template <class T>
const_iterator List<T>::const_iterator::operator++(int)
{
const_...
I have some template code that I would prefer to have stored in a CPP file instead of inline in the header. I know this can be done as long as you know which template types will be used. For example:
.h file
class foo
{
public:
template <typename T>
void do(const T& t);
};
...
Quote from The C++ standard library: a tutorial and handbook:
The only portable way of using templates at the moment is to implement them in header files by using inline functions.
Why is this?
ok I have another question about my ptr_vector. The template itself takes a typename T and the iterator has a vector<T*>, so when I do ptr_vector<myclass>, the type of myclass is T*. my push_back takes a T*, is this correct?
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm no interwebs magician but perhaps there's a discrepancy in the actual encoding used and some of the content tags. Or whatever it is they call it these days.