C++ code can never be truly good unless they implement modules and remove the preprocessor. Then they can focus on discouraging pointers in favour of references.
@MPelletier In text-mode you get '\n' as a line delimiter, in binary-mode what you put is what you get. If you want to alternate between a literal '\n' and '\n' as a line delimiter for the same stream object then yes, you're screwed.
hello guys, i'm trying to compile my code (c++11) on a server. unfortunately, the compiler version doesn't support it (gcc version 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-50)), any simple suggestions how could I handle that issue?
@CheersandhthAlf Only Boost lib remotely related to the problem domain I think is Boost.Locale. Not familiar enough with it to answer you, and the documentation looks massive.
No idea what's the status on those candidate libs for Boost.Unicode either.
I've been to the darkest corners of the Web. Nothing surprises me anymore.
user1182183
07:24
Hey all, I have a bit of frustrating problem (like people sometimes have ;P) and would like also your input on my problem. It's just because it seems that it's really hard to find a bit of C/C++ code which can actually just check if a file exists in a zip file and then extract it into a given directory. With many 'solutions' I just get compilation errors. If anyone wants to help: stackoverflow.com/questions/9373246/… Thanks in advance!
Do I owe you all an apology? I was trying to reciprocate to @Hoxiebo, returning all those unnecessary plinks that he had so unselfishly been extending on my account.
I may have failed. I was assuming that ↰replies will plinkthe respective user. If not...
dat is is echt geen grap zo vlak na de wekker
@ScottW For an American, your dutch is amazing
@ScottW I suppose for more than a few days. (Btw. let's not freak the others out and talk English here. I'd suggest another room just for fun, but I'm at work)
@hochl Now, if the source is immutable and is the only way to create instances of the class, I'd say it is the Prototype Factory pattern. In all other cases, it is just a clone() method, or a cloneable type, at most
@hochl Oh you discuss about Emacs. Nothing to loose then. Consider this: at my place wethey discuss about Visual Studio or Rational Software Modeler. [sic]
MyClass::MyClass(std::string myString)
: m_myString(myString)
{
}
Note that you have two copies here: one to initialize the parameter myString, and one to initialize the member m_myString. You don't want that. In C++03, you would take the parameter by const reference:
MyClass::MyClass(const s...
@KillianDS I almost added that. But I'm not officially decided on a C++11 reference. My bet is n3242.pdf and gcc, msvc status pages (etc). Bjarne page is nice too
Since we're at it, if I have a function that takes a pointer to an object as argument and takes over ownership, then you can write foobar(std::auto_ptr< T > arg) or foobar(T* arg). I know the first version is better from an exception safety viewpoint and shows intentional programming, but is it worth the extra object that is constructed if the body of the function actually just inserts the argument into a std::vector< T* >? (Yes, pointers in vectors are dangerous ...)
Fear, uncertainty and doubt, frequently abbreviated as FUD, is a tactic used in sales, marketing, public relations, politics and propaganda.
FUD is generally a strategic attempt to influence perception by disseminating negative and dubious or false information. An individual firm, for example, might use FUD to invite unfavorable opinions and speculation about a competitor's product; to increase the general estimation of switching costs among current customers; or to maintain leverage over a current business partner who could potentially become a rival.
The term originated to describe di...
@hochl Writing your own shared_ptr is definitely possible, but there are so many correctness and performance pitfalls, I wouldn't recommend using your own solution in production code.
@sehe You can download new stuff and replace the old stuff with that.
@hochl I really do not get those rules (they have them here in some departments too). You could try to extract shared_ptr or find another library that implements it but I'd actually have a good talk with legal/your boss as why you may not use productivity-enhancing libraries...
@FreOverflow: Well that was my original question -- can you avoid the auto_ptr in this case, or is it nice to signal the intention that I take over ownership with the function.
@KillianDS: Agreed ... it's a legal thing, the reasoning goes like this system has proven to work and we would have to clear [legally] the whole stuff again if you upgrade anything to reasonably recent software
@KillianDS: I'd love to convert stuff to C++11, esp. since I've not had the chance to try out all the new features (and throw away legacy code like this auto_ptr stuff).
@hochl In this case std::auto_ptr does work as documentation (since there's no implicit conversion from the raw pointer type), but you have to consider that whatever exception safety guarantees you gain from doing this can be thwarted if there's more than one parameter to that function.
@hochl I did post something that we used in production before: stackoverflow.com/questions/6593770/… (that doesn't mean it is as well tested as say, boost, of course). We used it with IBM's XlC++ compiler/MSVC 8(?) which where rather challenged in the boost department
@hochl Which copyright stuff? Have you read the boost license? You could copy their implementation and discard the license completely. They're pretty generous like that :)
@jalf Yeah their license is one of the most allowing in the industry. Legal departments still consider it a license, though, and as such it must be evaluated. (I'm just glad I always worked in companies where the legal approving consisted of the boss having a quick glance at stuff and then deciding using common sense.)
Somehow I hate the whole patent situation, you have to think about every sh** you do if it's legal or whatever. Write 5 lines of code and someone claims he's written the same code in his toilet 5 years ago and now owns all rights.
@hochl afaik you cannot patent code, and even for copyright you need to make several clear statements that something was yours originally and that it is original, unique and a bunch of other subjective matters (so for example it's impossible to copyright "hello world", even if you were the first ever to code it). In europe that is :p
I answered a question and the OP commented it doesn't work, although I have included a demo program and the output of it. I'm rather sure that sscanf hasn't changed in the past 20 years much.
@KillianDS: Yes you'r right [note to myself -- patent "Hello world"]
@LucDanton Yes, i do not say it isn't, it's the point of proving your claim for copyright and that goes a lot further than actually proving: I was first
@LucDanton No that's my point, that's not enough :). For most works it's not simply enough that you wrote it first, there needs to be some "originality" and other not-objective unclear things to give lawyers a job. At least here in Belgium it is like that but I think it extends to most other european countries.
luckily, we don't use threading that much. So far I've gotten away with using Boost.Thread without anyone noticing, and soon enough, I can use std::thread :)
@jalf: the advantage of Qt is that if everyone in your team uses it you can be sure that a certain feature set is approved and does not generate legal trouble afterwards.
@KillianDS Oh right, not being a derivative work. I don't think 'originality' is the right way to put it, that make it sound like writing a program that does the same thing as another, preexisting program wouldn't be covered by copyright. Given that's it's unlikely two independent programs will look like the one is a derivative from the other, I wouldn't fret over that. Not that the legal process wouldn't be painful, but I wouldn't worry about the outcome.
@hochl kind of. At the moment, we're all over the place. MSVC10 on Windows, but our Linux build uses semi-random GCC versions. But we're going to upgrade soon enough. Everyone here is itching to use C++11 stuff
@LucDanton I think "originality" is actually the term described in the law here but it's been a few years since I checked that, but I agree with you ;).
@jalf: The C++11 stuff reads like what I always hated about C++ and needs a change. Honestly the move constructor seems like a great way to improve speed of some code here.
@LucDanton I code in TCL for my job, I was actually glad a few months back when I was allowed to do a small C++ project, no matter how old the compiler was :p (pre-gcc4 in any way)
@LucDanton Yeah. The only downside is that we have to be cross platform, so have to targest the lowest common denominator. At the moment, it's just Linux and Windows, but we're eyeing doing some iOS stuff as well, which means Clang, which means no lambdas just yet, most likely
I don't think it's the point of C++ that all compilers should be completely interchangable, taking the same command line arguments and all, but it's pretty neat that Clang is a drop-in replacement for gcc
I now think easier to have a sigle common convention about const, if that's what you're asking. I have not always thought that. Actually only last year or so.
@Luc: (... +3) & ~0x3 adds 4 if ... is not divisible by 4 ... and yes, it's kind of unreadable. Maybe worth a comment or macro or whatever to clarify it. Feels like struct { int: -!!(x); }.
@hochl Oh my bad, I was strictly referring to the use of &, I didn't consider the operation as a whole. I glanced over the expression as soon as I noticed the bitwise operator in lieu of an arithmetic operator.
@LucDanton Actually I consider & ~0x3 much more readable. But that's probably because I started out twiddling bits with a soldering iron, and & ~0x3 is just like disconnecting the lowest three wires. I can imagine, though, that, if you approach this from a math background, fiddling with modulo operations might seem easier.
@CheersandhthAlf I love that attitude, +1! I do it myself all the time. In fact, that's how I write an algorithm: I just call functions that don't exist, and when I think this is the way the algorithm should work, I start implementing those functions.
@sbi I really reserve my dislike when & is abused for e.g. modulo in contexts which have nothing to do with binary, which means that the denominator(?) will have to be restricted to a power of two minus one for no good reason.
In an assignment operator, do you call the base implementation first, or after local assignments at the end? I get confused every class here is doing it differently.