@LucDanton I mean; If you are talking to me now using the public key to encrypt the content of the messages. Then since you have not gotten the public key by let say VeriSign ( I may be wrong about this) you can't know if the public key is from a pirate...that was the authentication problem wasn't it? So know you encrypt the messages to me with the pirates public key what do that matter? Doesn't the pirate also need to hijack the location where you sends the encrypted message?
@Bob The whole point of encryption is that once a message is encrypted (with the intended key) then it doesn't matter if it falls into the wrong hands.
If you have a reliable way to send a message that will not be seen by anyone else other than the intended party, then why do you even need encryption?
Luc Danton 9510 @Bob Then someone else than who you intended answers and gives you their key. Then any message you encrypt with that key only they can decrypt.
It's true the message has to be fall into the hands of the attacker but that doesn't mean a) it has to be intercepted (what if the message is public?) b) at the end of the route.
A nosy postal worker can tamper with mail well before final delivery, too.
> The bandwidth available to mobile phones, digital television and other communication technologies could be expanded enormously by exploiting the twistedness as well as wavelength of radio waves. That is the claim being made by a group of scientists in Italy and Sweden, who have shown how a radio beam can be twisted, and the resulting vortex detected with distant antennas.
Are there any ways of creating windows/buttons in c++ that doesn't require me to use something like QT or type up a page of code to create an empty window? I have looked on google and EVERYTHING is about QT creator. Any help would be great.
For an easier way into Windows API level GUI progra...
soon it will warn if you're using C++ or C languages. "C++ has been deprecated. For better safety, use C# alternative provided with this Visual Studio installation".
Does Windows (XP or later) have a built-in way to create persitent drive mappings, like the ones SUBST creates? I found a 3rd party tool psubst. Is there a way to do it without 3rd party tools?
@rubenvb oh, you meant to map a directory to an existing drive letter? I don't think that can be done. I think you have to remove that drive letter first. But you can place a link to the directory within the existing drive. Except that mklink does not cut it here, because it will be a cross-drive link.
The good news: There will be a new version of Nicolai Josuttis's std lib book. The bad news: he isn't using C++ anymore, hadn't followed the C++11 standardization process, and started to learn about the changes only a few years ago in order to meet the demand to update his book. :(Read for yourself..
@IntermediateHacker Any ctor that can be invoked with only one argument (note: that includes ctors with more arguments where default arguments allow invoking them with only one) should be explicit. I understand that it would be very annoying if std::string::string(const char) would be explicit. I don't think I have seen any other convincing example for an exception to that rule.
@rubenvb Maybe. Or maybe not. His book used to be a great book. Now I am not sure the next edition will be. That uncertainty alone is bad enough to be moaned about.
Hi. I've been trying to optimize a function, kind of as an exercise. I was constructing subvectors of a vector, and passing them to a subfunction (slices of the vector, if you will). I thought that passing the entire vector to the subfunction as a reference and letting it take the bits it needed would be faster, but in fact it seems slightly slower. And after passing the whole function down as a reference the call graph is dominated by memmove, which apparently does copying.
you know, I've just realized..... I've spent the entire day writing complex combinations of words & characters to create a specific sequence of coloured pixels on a screen. I feel so useless. -_-
What's the best way to work with file systems in C?
There is of course dirent.h , but from what I've heard it isn't completely guaranteed to be available on all platforms and compilers, for example the Microsoft Visual C++ compiler, for one, doesn't support it.
For now, the best thing I've se...
@DeadMG well my benchmarking didn't look like anything, it was just the comparison of std::for_each(...) vs parallel_for_each(...) and wondering why the latter took way longer to calculate
you should never ask that question, because I'm sure that I could create some rather amazingly creative and belittling descriptions of an imaginary person
I want to see a complete reproduction of the entire benchmark code, timing, output of the results, implementation of the computation function, everything
@DeadMG Fuck C fan-boys who deliberately name their variables class etc. in their libraries to make using them with C++ impossible. That answer your question ?
@daknøk All you have to do is show an example of non-trivial error handling, and it becomes instantaneously obvious that C is problematically overcomplicated