@daknøk throw is like return and required the type to be copyable with C++03. I'm assuming that just like return it's now possible to throw move-only types but the exceptions types aren't going to suddenly change their requirement. So stick with copyable exceptions.
> Each standard library class T that derives from class exception shall have a publicly accessible copy constructor and a publicly accessible copy assignment operator that do not exit with an exception.
> Data structures that allocate from the heap access, by design, a global resource that is often highly contended in a multi-threaded program. Therefore, avoiding heap allocations is usually advantageous for performance. Allocating such data from the stack is much more efficient, because the stack is local to each thread and bytes on the stack are often cached locally.
int a[2] = {1, 2, 3}; // Is this really undefined behavior in C++? Wow.
> What happens when the runtime size of an array is smaller than the number of elements in its initializer list? The current wording (see below) specifies "undefined behavior"
> [ Note: Undefined behavior may be expected when this International Standard omits any explicit definition of behavior or when a program uses an erroneous construct or erroneous data.
I could see this kind of 'ill-formed' falling under the 'erroneous construct' situation, yes.
@FredOverflow if *this doesn't overload operator& which returns this, where the latter this == the former this (not sure if that's required by the standard).
The set of diagnosable rules consists of all syntactic and semantic rules in this International Standard except for those rules containing an explicit notation that “no diagnostic is required” or which are described as resulting in “undefined behavior.”
The error message is trying to tell you that _pctype was already defined somewhere else.
It appears that _pctype is an identifier used by Visual Studio since at least version 2005.
_pctype, _pwctype, _wctype, _mbctype, _mbcasemap
These global variables contain information used by the ch...
poor guy
I first wrote "fucked" and then remembered that I'm not in the Lounge :)
After the recent reputation recalc I noticed my reputation had dropped about 1K and the vast majority of that came from the deletion of really old questions. And by really old I mean questions that had survived for over 2 years.
I hate to use the word unfair but I'm struggling to find a bette...
I'm just happy I'm not struck - yet. I have postponed my active SO rep hunting but sure 'd like to rep cap a few more times to get the Legendary badge, just for kicks. If Like Jared, you could be 'shot down' any day - that will take a bit longer.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, but that's just amusing/bizarre. Not a real problem. If like Jared you were looking to rep-cap, but you are stuck at -24 for the day...
> The only people who believe rep mean anything different today than it did yesterday are those who spend too much time on meta. To everyone else it means the same today as yesterday. — JaredPar
> I'm not looking forward to the day when What's the difference between JavaScript and Java? is deemed unworthy. I'm not proud of that answer, but I seem to get a vote for it pretty much every day. Having over -5k on my daily rep graph would make the positive contributions disappear in the noise. — Greg Hewgill
@DeadMG I lost nothing, because I regularly triggered the rep recalc anyway. But I still think those guys do have a point.
@sehe Which makes me wonder though. There has been one day where I repcapped, but a -50 deletion put it under 200. Is that going to delay my Legendary badge by a day?