I was always told "A byte was and still is defined as the smallest addressable unit." But the comments in stackoverflow.com/questions/5516044/system-where-1-byte-8-bit observe that a compiler could (and do) emulate that where the smallest addressable unit is much larger than that. I'm looking into that and the spec
when my friends and I did a succession game, we named a dwarf after each of us (replaced upon death, usually with a Jr. suffix). One roomie's dwarf we put in his own little corner with a pump for him to turn, and his own food and ale stockpile and bed, all right there.
@RMartinhoFernandes IIRC at the time best practices was rings of pumps over rings of pumps, and you ended up either with a column going down or a cone (well, pyramid).
Eeeek. What language is this?! elementals, dorfs, smashing, burning, cave-in, woorden pumps that are 'turned on' -- no kidding the room has gone mental
That's why I don't mind I overshot by some margin on my browser: it'll be clear that it will be 'somewhere at the end'. Anyway, it was obvious what word
gone
@MooingDuck Hah. I'm not a native speaker. Besides, you didn't know winemaker? More useful than berserk. But you can alias berserk=winemaker if you prefer
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.
@Cat It was showing me a bunch of duplicated messages and gazillions of removed messages in between. I had to refresh for it to get slightly saner (i.e., it still double-plinks).
@jalf it's not so bad to understand how to use it, having read the doc. But when I get it wrong in code, the template errors make me want to poke my eyes with a shovel.
that is not by pointing the null pointer to the one who is containing some data, because whenever I change one of the pointers, the other one is changed, as known
@shookees well, they don't. Pointers contain the address of another object, no more, no less. So either you want to copy the address, so that both pointers point to the same object, or you want to copy the object pointed to by the first pointer, so that the second pointer points to a copy of that object
@shookees To copy an object, simply use the copy constructor (Foo x = y) or assignment operator (x = y). To go from a pointer to the object it points to, you use *. So combine the two tricks, and you get *x = *y. In other words, "take the object pointed to by y, and assign it to the object pointed to by x"