So how should I pass a string to a function and call std::string::replace on it and then return the string again without copying it on the stack completely or reconstructing it using the std::string constructor?
@MadaraUchiha I actually replaced the quarter-size battery on my Pokemon Red version... by cutting out the screw holding it together with a pocketknife.
The damn thing is literally held together by superglue, a napkin, and tape
What do you do with old inkjet printers? Once you have bought one, unpacked it in your car and taken out the cartridges to put into your printer at home, what to you do with all the rest of it?
The code below looks okay, but when I tried to execute the code, at the k = *p1/*p2; line, the /* is taken as the start of a comment. How can I avoid this?
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int n1=10,n2=2,k,*p1,*p2;
p1=&n1,p2=&n2;
k=*p1/*p2;
cout<<k; return 0;
}
I tr...
Fuck you too, Unreal developers. :| We're wondering why the fuck our slider handles are clipped when at the ends of the slider bar, which didn't happen with 4.9. Turns out they forwarded an option from the underlying Slate widget that wasn't there before ("Indent Handle") and had the wrong default ("don't"), while 4.9 defaulted to the right one. Grml grml.