For the project I am currently working on, I need to start VS with admin rights (in order to allow COM registration, which is part of the build process). If I couldn't do this, I couldn't work on the project. What could be more convincing to a manager than this?
@Damian I don't know which environment you're working in but as soon it's even a bit about networking: you can't use wireshark decently without admin rights :p
Do you want admin rights because you actually need them for your work? Then explain that and be done.
Do you want admin rights because it's humiliating for someone whose job it is to writes software not to be trusted to use software without breaking something? Then go and look for a less humiliating work environment.
@sbi You'd be actually surprised how many stupid small applications fail to install without admin rights (I'm on XP still for work, dnno if it's better on vista/7)
Really if "what you are proposing would prevent me from doing my job" doesn't convince your boss, then there's nothing you can do, short of finding a different job.
If a company doesn't trust its developers with admin rights, then either the company has the wrong developers, or the developers are at the wrong company.
admin rights are to shield of certain parts of your system and yes, it can block an installer if it needs to access those parts, but that's a side effect and should not be the main reason
you can list programs that you'll be unable to use until the cows come home, but they either trust you, or they don't. if they don't trust you, then saying "wireshark" won't change anything. If they do trust you, then it should be enough to say "I can't work without admin rights"
@KillianDS "should" doesn't really come into it.
it should not be necessary to prevent your developers from having admin rights on their own machine either
> Auf Administratorenrechte kann bei der Installation eines Programms nur verzichtet werden, wenn das Programm ausschließlich für das Benutzer-Profil des angemeldeten Benutzers installiert wird.
Windows XP (der interne Codename in der Entwicklungsphase war Whistler) ist ein Betriebssystem von Microsoft. XP steht dabei für „eXPerience“ ( für Erfahrung, Erlebnis).
Markteinführung
Windows XP (Windows NT Version 5.1) kam am 25. Oktober 2001 auf den Markt und ist der technische Nachfolger von Windows 2000 (Windows NT Version 5.0) mit Windows-NT-Betriebssystemkern. Zusätzlich löste es Windows ME der MS-DOS-Linie in der Version „Home Edition“ als Produkt für Heimanwender und Privatnutzer ab. Die MS-DOS-Linie wurde daraufhin von Microsoft eingestellt.
Editionen
Windows XP Home Edi...
@IntermediateHacker But probably not in the hospital of the father of the guy whose real name I know from Twitter. I hope you flagged for a moderator? Do not flag for us, as this will just generate more interest across the chat.
my KeyPass database password is 27 characters of goodness, but I sincerely doubt that I could memorize another password of similar length that wasn't dictionary or valid C++
@Damian What's the point of taking away your admin rights, but then giving them back to you should you need them? Is this to watch over what you do with them? Make you feel guilty?
My Theory: The robot was abducted my aliens who taught him secrets of the universe and space-time. He later built a time machine to go back to the past, when he went to the past something went wrong and now he's stuck in a time-loop. He existed till a week ago, then he was warped back in time to when he joined SO to begin again.
@Damian I doubt you can be prosecuted unless they can prove beyond doubt that you did it intentionally or in a serious violation of your obligations. — Just as it is with introducing malware to the company.
@IntermediateHacker That would also explain why he could answer faster than we could — he already knew the answer from the last round in the time-loop!
@user1131997 As always, the best is the one that's easiest to read and maintain. Should there be a performance issue, then profiling will uncover it, which gives you a chance to uglify your code for the sake of performance by testing which one is faster on a specific platform. Never do that prematurely.
@casperOne, Currently 34 of your 31k+ rep (that's about 0.11%) comes from answers in the c++ tag (and it's only 28 when we disregard questions that are also tagged c#). So what's so fascinating about us that you keep coming back? :)
@IntermediateHacker Now it struck me! Trafalmadorians! OMG. So it goes...
@RMartinhoFernandes? Is it really you? Can you speak? Nothing broken?
@user1131997 No. I meant hat I said: It's better to write the code the way that's easiest to read and maintain.
If you have performance problems later, you profile. And only if profiling shows that this code is a hot spot, you even consider uglifying it for performance's sake.
It's much easier to optimize well-maintainable code than to maintain optimized code.
If there is a function template<class T> void foo(T arg) {}, is there a way to find out at compile-time if T was found through template parameter deduction?
The actual parameter is deduced in both cases, but in the one overload that catches the deduced request you can do the conversion that would otherwise have taken place.
Wait, that should be in the other overload. Oh well. Make it work!
It's very frequent in my code to have templates where the template parameter list takes more vertical space than the actual body (which is not uncommonly a one-liner anyway).
@LucDanton Yeah, that's awesome. I have been struggling with a way to distinguish "normal" enable_if from aliased enable_if and I didn't consider different casing. I stuck with wheels::some_type<blah> for aliases and wheels::some_type_<blah> for the actual types (desirable if you want "lazy" evaluation).
Regarding the boolean traits, I originally used constexpr functions, but I'm not too happy with that. Nowadays I'm back to sticking ::value on them. Still not happy though.
@IntermediateHacker You might want to learn to question what the industry and the government tell you. Yes, it's confusing to do so. But it's better in the long run.
@EtiennedeMartel Ah, the technology that's been just around the corner since the 1950s!
@RMartinhoFernandes It looks cheap. Once you can send a huge starship across the galaxy, beaming is no considerable drain on your power, I can believe that.
Well, I gotta go and pick up some of my kids. See you folks later!
I swear I remember that Stroustrup said he thinks containers are supposed to support inheritance, and that inheriting constructors solve the only real problem in doing so.
But looking at the FAQs on his site, I don't see anything like that.
I swear I remember that Stroustrup said he thinks containers are supposed to support inheritance, and that inheriting constructors solve the only real problem in doing so.
99% of the attempts to do so are by misguided newbies, to be sure. Most people still approach C++ as the OO version of C. But there's no particular reason the language should thwart them.
So I recall reading somewhere that Bjarne said it was a failure of the core language, not an attempt at guiding n00bs, and that inheriting constructors fixed the problem. But maybe I just totally dreamed it or something.
@EtiennedeMartel Sort of, but you can't disable ::new.
Or don't document that it's inherited (why should you), and put a comment in the code next to the actual inheritance that it's only an internal detail. The best solution is to only work with people who understand the slicing issue, which should be quite doable.
Or, make it private inheritance and use using declarations for the entire container interface. Inheriting constructors help with that approach too, by providing the means to apply using to the constructor.