@Fred: if you change it from unsigned char a[8] to unsigned char a[sizeof(double)], you're pretty much home free -- as of C99, there's a special case made for unsigned char so you don't get UB when you use it to look at the bytes in other types.
@FredOverflow As Jerry mentions for C, there are special rules for the case of signed/unsigned char in the language, also in C++. §3.10/15 determines that you are ok (behavior is defined) when accessing through: — a char or unsigned char type.
It was online, which is actually worse because in person they'd note it and i'd say "oh fuck you're right" and fix it. but online it's sent and gone. :-S
and you'd really shoot me if you were near me. it was that stupid.
define int median3(int a, int b, int c);
such that it returns the second largest value.
it was the first question and it's fucking stupid for kindergarten and breezed it through and i did it stupidly and i want to bury myself right now.
on the bright side the questions were easy and i got the others alright. and i'm proud i got all of solutions coded in loc comparable with ruby solutions. in C++. fuck yeah.
i had one meal today, after the exam, at 18h30. that may explain something.
I bet using c++0x interviewing tests would really be helpful in narrowing the field (but also fail to distinguish plenty of good talent); perhaps making it optional
I'm thinking the programmers that understand 03's pitfalls and how 0x helps are likely to write better 03 code, rather than finding someone to write production 0x code
@wilhelmtell no, can't really think of something; but I know those that really care about their craft are much more likely to be watching 0x and I'd rather work with those that really care
@FredNurk yes, and this is something to talk about and look for enthusiasm and what you know. but i think that programming in c++0x is tricky. where do you practice? it's still evolving and so what you learn from your compiler might be wrong in a couple of months.
I just checked: nope. There are still only two overloads of std::swap: one for scalar objects and one for arrays, and the scalar object one is still the three-liner.
That's the implementation from Visual C++ 2010. I can't see how you could do any better than that... you have to have two lvalue references as parameters and then inside of the function you can try and take advantage of move semantics, which just doesn't have any effect if the type is not moveable.
I have a users table with latitude and longitude I want to sore a select query by location closest to the user I need to write a mathematical function for a circle or something but I've never seen a query like that
First you move the contents of left to a temporary object then you move the contents of right into left then you move the contents of the temporary object into right.
@Neo Pretend the Earth is flat, query for points on the flat earth, then cull the list once you get the results from MySQL.
@Neo Sure thing. If you're trying to find points within a certain distance of another point, you can assume that one degree == 60 nautical miles; that is true at all points for latitude and is true at the equator for longitude, so it's a usable worst-case number.
@wilhelmtell You can write code in C++03 that is as efficient as any C++0x code, it's just ugly as sin and a bitch to write, read, and debug.
@wilhelmtell I suppose it's fair to say rvalue references are just syntactic sugar if you're willing to say things like classes and templates are just syntactic sugar.
@wilhelmtell Why not? You could define swap such that any type that has a member function named "move" with a certain prototype would have that member function used.
swap(T t, T u)
{
T v;
v.move(t);
t.move(u);
u.move(v);
}
Or something like that. That requires T to be default constructible, but you could write it otherwise, and you can use SFINAE to detect the presence of the move function. It's fugly and messy.
@wilhelmtell You can write a C++ compiler in C, ergo, any C++ features not in C are just syntactic sugar. That was my intended point: if your definition of syntactic sugar is broad enough, then everything can be considered syntactic sugar.
@wilhelmtell The same way you'd define a move assignment operator; it'd basically be the same. It would take the resources owned by the argument and set the this object to own them. Just like, for example, the std::auto_ptr copy assignment operator works.
@wilhelmtell I was just trying to make the point that rvalue references are only syntactic sugar if your definition of syntactic sugar is really broad.
I like syntactic sugar, when it makes big difference. It does here.
I was just listening to Scott Meyers on a podcast from November, talking about rvalue refs. and that got me thinking that it actually just sugar, shifting the need for an extra parameter to work around the copy for return value. then i thought about swapping, which have three redundant copies and thought it's actually necessary.
I don't consider rvalue references just to be syntactic sugar. They are a critical language feature. I think the most important facet is that they allow you to write your application code and most of your library code without thinking about them: the only real place you have to worry about them, for the most part, is in core libraries, RAII containers, etc., and you get the (totally awesome) performance benefit everywhere.
My STL-heavy code performs far better when compiled under VC10 than it did under VC9, and I didn't have to change any of it.
The implicit generation of move constructors and assignment operators has been contentious and there have been major revisions in recent drafts of the C++ Standard, so currently available compilers will likely behave differently with respect to implicit generation.
For more about the history of ...
@sbi is going to be angry when he comes back and finds we've been talking about C++.
@JamesMcNellis the wikipedia article of 0x says that if you didn't write a move ctor you don't get one. and if you don't get one move semantics will default to const& which is the old performance characteristic.
@wilhelmtell Wikipedia is wrong then. They've changed the specified behavior at least twice now. The answer to which I linked above gives the current specification. It's also likely to be the final specification, since it was discussed in great detail at Batavia in November.
@JamesMcNellis isn't it what we do in this room? oh wait, i didn't forget to switch from the Guys Who Love Pink Underwear room by mistake again now did i?
@wilhelmtell Sometimes. During the day it's mostly off-topic. I can't think about C++ during the day, though: it makes me make dumb syntactic mistakes in my C# code.
@JamesMcNellis It's all Scott Meyer's fault. :-) Or 88%, with 2% on me, 2% on some other and so on (those who participated in the original discussion after Scott's post).
@AlfPSteinbach I'm just glad they came to a solution before they ran out of groan-inducing names for their papers. I mean really, "Moving Right Along" was stretching it.
@wilhelmtell See N3225 12.8/12 for the list of conditions under which the copy and/or move ops would be implicitly declared as deleted (implicitly declared like T(const T&) = delete;)
@wilhelmtell I'm not 100% sure that I can explain it accurately. I am not very familiar with C++0x features not available in Visual C++ 2010, since I don't really use any other compilers on a regular basis.
@JamesMcNellis & @wilhelmtell From Scott Meyers's "Overview of the New C++ (C++0x) "=delete" functions can't bu used in any way: they can't be called, can't have their adress taken, can't be used in a sizeof expression, etc. Template functions may be delete4d. A virtual function may be deleted, but if it is, all base and derived versions of that virtual mush also be deleted
@Mahesh The length could be stored as a member variable of std::string or it might store pointers to the beginning and end of the sequence, so it could just subtract the pointers.
Yeah but as @JamesMcNellis said private undefined member functions give the same result.
Maybe its the idea that you communicate to the compiler that you have no intention of defining the function. So the compiler can complain about using the function rather than the linker. so it's all about the error message.
@Nils It depends on the type of a[3]. If that is a raw pointer, or an array that decays to pointer type, then it's just *(*(a+3)+4). Indexing notation more clear.
@Nils A raw pointer type is a type formed using the * syntax, like T*. A raw pointer value a value of such a type. A raw pointer variable a variable of such a type. As opposed to a smart pointer type, which is a type that defines operator* and/or operator-> in order to give the same usage notation as a raw pointer. Iterators are usually not considered smart pointers, though; one extra feature of smart pointer is that it typically manages the life-time of some underlying raw pointer.
@Nils: by the way, it seems you're off-topic: you're talking C++ here!
@Nils Well, this is off-topic, but in C++ it's opposite: you ask, what is a good use case for raw pointers? One good use case for raw pointer is as actual argument to a C function. Also, main arguments are raw pointers.
@AlfPSteinbach Too ordinary. Just take a good, close look at my pic. Do I really look like I'm impressed by a Thal boasting of his ability to swallow Tabasco? Now if you said arm-wrestling, I'd offered you to have a go at my left index finger. Nut Tabasco? That's insulting, no matter which way I look at it.
@Nils That's better than plain pointers (it will save a few kitten), though it's really not the best smart pointer around.
Have a look at boost::shared_ptr, which became std::tr1::shared_ptr in 2003 and hopefully will be std::shared_ptr sometimes next year. The same goes for unique_ptr. They are likely already shipped with your compiler.
@FredOverflow not sure that i would regard implicit conversion as polymorhism. my idea of polymorphism is to be able to do the conceptually same things with objects of different types, with textually the same code.
@AlfPSteinbach But that is exactly what coercion does. You can write a function int min(int a, int b) and it works just as well for char and short, for example :)
@FredOverflow on the other hand, you can write a+b*c and works nicely for any arithmetic type of variables.
@FredOverflow Cardelli and Wagner sound like academics. Unable to master normal English (have to invent silly new terms), and with fetish for Enumerating The Ways. And lacking understanding of what it's all for. :-)
@DeadMG Well, it might be a case of bad translation. In German, "concurrency" is pretty much a synonym for "rivalry", and most people like at least the other to be monogamous, so they tend to not to like rivals.
tut tut, how could you possibly make a pun when there's a very remote chance that it might not make sense in a language which is not your mother tongue?
I think it's interesting. I just read Hofstadter presenting Lewis Carroll's nonsense poem in English, German and French. How do you translate nonsense between those languages? He goes into depth on that. Heh.
@DeadMG I've found that a foreign language is, in general, much better for making puns, because you tend to see all the strange quirks that you overlook in your own language. For example, when I learned that English uses the name of a country to refer to a kind of pottery, that opened a host of possible puns, while most natives never thought about it.
@DeadMG In fact, it does for me, too. I'm just seeing how funny it is, while you're not.
And it works the same the other way, too. An American friend of mine who speaks German once pointed out that one German word for "to realize"/"to understand" ("begreifen") essentially means to touch something with your hands and how that always makes him think of "understanding women" ("Frauen begreifen"), which works pretty well in German, too, because nobody remembers that word literally means "to touch", but made him laugh a lot.
@DeadMG See, another American friend knowing German, when pointed out that the sentence "Frauen begreifen" has another meaning, immediately had to laugh. When I tell this among Germans, I have to hint really hard until they coolly say "sh, yeah, that's right, I never noticed that" and they don't think it's funny.
@DeadMG An American woman once tried to explain to me the difference between Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton and said that Mrs. Bush would be very concerned which china to put on the table if an ambassador was due to visit, while Mrs. Clinton...
...and the woman was at a loss what to say, so I finished...
...would be more concerned with the facts on the table when the ambassador from China was visiting. That got a loud round of applause from the Americans at the table and a mild laugh from the Germans, who considered this too obvious a joke to be really amused by it.
user379888
Can anyone help me out by telling me what happens if you dont declare a destructor?Does the program still runs smoothly?
@DeadMG Well, to at least get back into the vicinity of my joke which backfired, women are generally better at multi-tasking, and men are generally admiring women, so...
user379888
3:47 PM
@DeadMG: When you declare it yourself.I have seen that people leave its definition empty.I dont get the point
@sbi Actually Laura Bush has done some good things, like keeping attention on the Nobel Peace Prize winner (female) Aung San Suu Kyi in Burma. George Dubja may have been mostly like a sock puppet. But I think Laura perhaps deserves some respect.
@fahad Uh oh. I've never heard of Robert Lafore, which, believe it or not, is a bad sign. The problem with C++ books is that most of them aren't worth the paper they are printed on. And I'm not talking writing style here, but plain facts.
Yes, that's right, most of the C++ books out there are plain wrong on many facts.
And don't get me started at whether they use proper C++ idioms...
Provide QUALITY books and an approximate skill level. Add a short blurb/description about each book that you have personally read/benefited from. Feel free to debate quality, headings, etc. Books that meet the criteria will be added to the list. Books that have reviews by the Association of C an...
@fahad That is a good book, but covers a lot of ground and assumes quite some existing knowledge. Are you a beginner in C++ or a beginner in programming?
If TC++PL is to steep for you, I could recommend Lippman's book from that list. They also say that Stroustrup's newest book is quite a good one to start to program with, but I haven't seen it yet.