@melak47 Indeed. That sounds familiar. Thanks. (It did work enough so I didn't fret it. Yet)
@JerryCoffin I used to use anti-nausea medicin (Promethazine might be the one IIRC) - but these days my eye sight is sufficiently bad the goggles are enough (I mean, if I put them aside)
@sehe If you have to do it again, go for the Dronabinol instead ("These drugs may be used to treat nausea and vomiting from chemo when the usual anti-emetic drugs do not work.")
I managed to find the C++ change concerning return and move semantics: it appears that I mistook DR 1579 for a C++14 change the other day and also thought that it changed more things than it actually does.
@AndyProwl The parens aren't really the point here. The point is that it first tries to look up the ctor and do overload resolution as if the object being returned were an rvalue, then if and only if that fails, it does it all again, but treating the object to be returned as an lvalue.
@AndyProwl That's certainly not how I read it. "...when the expression in a return statement is a (possibly parenthesized) id-expression...". The "possibly parenthesized" certainly sounds to me like it applies when parens are used.
Xeo's only asked for the red pandas, and Borgleader, Elim and Tony are the only one's I'm fine with assuming are okay with getting repeatedly pinged with cute animals in a short time span
I'm trying to figure out a good way to deal with a large number of items. You need to know the size of each item to have the right dimensions (for correct scrolling) but loading all the items is prohibitive. There's no problem when the size of all the elements are the same, but once they start to vary ...
@JerryCoffin I might do something like that later... wanna stick to the simple case first
@Prismatic Each "object" stored really is an object, complete with a member function to tell its size (or you can go the Windows route, and send (your equivalent of) LB_GETITEMHEIGHT messages to the list's owner.
@Lalaland That part is fine if you work your way down from the top because then you instantiate all the objects you need (for size information) up until the point you are 'viewing'
@Prismatic Not really, no. You just draw items starting from the Nth item, and keep drawing until you reach the end, or just run out of items (in which case you probably re-draw, starting from the end, and going up until you reach the top). You can run into a little bit of a difficulty with drawing the thumb in the right position, but there it would make sense to draw it based on item count rather than position based on item heights.
user406009
@JerryCoffin One difficultly is if someone drags that thumb bar through thousands of items.
Mostly though, if somebody's putting thousands of items in a list control, they get pretty much what they deserve. They usually just shouldn't do that in the first place.
...why not run an accumulator function across all the elements, storing their initial position relative to the start of the list, and then doing a search for the start of the window on that list when it moves?
That's the naive brute force approach. It forces you to instantiate each element before the one you want to draw to figure out where you need to draw the current one.
@jaggedSpire Largely because it makes it slow to create (for example) a list with thousands of elements, and may waste quite a bit of time calculating data that's never used.
Hey guys! Sorry for asking so often, but I ran into another error that I can't google effectively. Here's the code if anyone's down to read about 10 lines (Sorry about the numbers on the side, I'm using vim with a plugin): pastebin.com/SkG2dczm
It's giving me an error of: 'BinarySearchTree' is not a class, namespace, or enumeration
I searched online for possible causes of this error, and I found most to be enums problems, and some with not completely closed braces. Some say there's duplicates(but I checked multiple times that I didn't make 2 classes called BinarySearchTree)
@Ell At least as I see things, the majority of "not for profit" organizations are really businesses (and the Linux Foundation seems to fit that model quite well). If the Linux Foundation differs, it's primarily by being (essentially) an appendage to other businesses rather than being quite as much of a business in itself.
Stop psychic reading error messages then. Instead, read a constructive book on the language features you're learning. Many good books are available. Some probably for free
This question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year.
Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...
@sehe Ah, thanks for this! Unfortunately I feel like my time for reading books is a bit limited at this moment - a little caught up on Cracking the Code Interview and Effective Java, on top of a lot of stupid college classes that take up 80% of my time
@CatPlusPlus Non-profit doesn't even mean it's not profit oriented. It just means that if it turns a profit, that money can't be distributed (directly) to the owner(s). On the other hand, many (especially smaller) businesses run at nearly 0 profit in any case, and what would otherwise be profits are paid to owner in the form of salary and bonuses (those are taxed less than directly distributed profits).
I would still call it corrupt as the company claims to want to foster the growth of Linux who's freedom relies on the integrity of the GPL license while simultaneously preventing someone actively trying to keep the integrity of the GPL becoming a director
@Borgleader I'm alright. Tomorrow should hopefully be the last day of academic administrative work (getting that summer course approved). Then the last Trench Fight will be getting the insurance to stop trying to charge me.
@ScarletAmaranth I mean. I'm in the area, it's a state school so its (comparatively) cheaper, and it makes my senior year easy AF. Can't... argue with it.
@sehe Dunno, but the ad says: "Come be a part of the team responsible for delivering the power and performance behind .NET Native. This small, focused group is leading the cutting edge by bringing the world of native compiler technology to managed languages by delivering code generation and optimization technology to .NET Native. "
> I am using OpenCL to parallel Computational Fluid Dynamics codes. Using same piece of codes I compiled using visual studio with same settings to create executable on Windows 7 professional.
When most people ask us for C++ help, the room responds with vitriol, on the other hand when this guy is writing a computer virus everybody is helping him out. Good work.
@Mikhail Based on my experience with existing installers...well, let's just say I'm pretty sure anything I wrote would just about have to be an improvement.