@ScottW Also, it's frustrating how easy some are (pizza) compared to others (bubbles)
@ScottW Also most animations are now unskippable :(
@ScottW yes. troll pizza throwing and such used to be skippable
I wished even more was, but now nothing is
@ScottW Yeah, once they finish talking, you click anywhere and the pizza teleports to it's destination and you could immediately spit out the next pizza.
Spent so much time here about this little shenanigan that it got its own function. I am not sure about its name, though. Point left_top = *find_last_that(helper, v.end(), [&left_bottom](It helper){return helper.x == left_bottom.x;});
@Prismatic I haven't filed one yet. When I had things not compiling with clang++ but g++ was fine, it appeared that clang++ was the right one everytime :/
The member shall still be defined in a namespace scope if it is odr-used (3.2) in the program and the namespace scope definition shall not contain an initializer.
And of course the definition of odr-used is confusing mess I can't parse
@Prismatic They'll probably call it a feature and tell you they can't realistically get rid of it without breaking plenty of existing code (if you try to submit a bug report that is).
@Prismatic GCC doesn't like to break compatibility when it doesn't really hurt either. Some library features are tweaked to support extreme cases of hackery and they try to maintain that.
I always wonder how that guy manages to pull out dance moves that look so awesome while the original moves obviously come from swing, shuffle and Tektonik.
==1661== Invalid read of size 8
==1661== at 0x4EAA680: std::_Rb_tree_increment(std::_Rb_tree_node_base*) (in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6.0.20)
==1661== by 0x409D5E: std::_Rb_tree_iterator<std::pair<confx::object* const, std::unique_ptr<confx::object, confx::gc::operator_delete_de
lete> > >::operator++() (in /vagrant/_build/a.out)
==1661== by 0x409315: confx::gc::collect() (in /vagrant/_build/a.out)
auto objects_begin = objects.begin();
auto objects_end = objects.end();
for (auto it = objects_begin; it != objects_end; ++it) {
if (!reachable_objects.count(it->first)) {
objects.erase(it);
}
}
auto objects_begin = objects.begin();
auto objects_end = objects.end();
for (auto it = objects_begin; it != objects_end;) {
if (!reachable_objects.count(it->first)) {
it = objects.erase(it);
} else {
++it;
}
}
You guys ever work on one thing, but then you have to do something else to continue working on your original problem, but then when you finish that something else you forget what you were working on in the first place
@Prismatic my colleague refers to this as "stack unwinding", so he sometimes writes down his call-stack :) (dunno if he has implemented exception handling yet :p)
@melak47 lol nice. I used to do this, called it my 'train of thought'. Each train compartment was like the different stuff I was working on and how I had gotten there