I once used a stupid API which functionality is meant to be extended, with a get function that is private .. someone was stuck on SO on it, I told him to just go to the file & change it to public
>>> random.sample(x, 1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
TypeError: Population must be a sequence or set. For dicts, use list(d).
>>> random.sample(x.keys(), 1) # wtf
['a']
>>> random.sample(x.values(), 1)
TypeError: Population must be a sequence or set. For dicts, use list(d).
@AngryLettuce ftr and to elaborate on my joke the closest thing to 'mocking' (or really, type checking) when templates are involved is concept coverage. which isn’t something concepts-lite is providing or is in the eye of anyone involved with the Standard as far as I know. it’s all from scratch and requires programmer discipline, so nobody does it
Proper indentation matters. Also you tagged your question compiler-errors but your description mentions that the compiler does not give any errors and the program runs. Please fix that. (P.S: cin values aren't read by compiler the compiler does not ready any values, it's your program that reads the values. All the compiler does is turn your source code into an executable) — Borgleader2 mins ago
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper guess what else, the pizza resturant offer to deliver your order in 10 minutes, if it exceed 10 minutes, you get a free pizza, I go during busy times, I pay 2$ and end up with 2 pizzas :D
here is a url on same problem that is not solved how is it not solved? it has an accepted answer... Please provide a minimal example of the problematic code. — Borgleader4 mins ago
the only other related things off the top of my head I can think of is get<N> (but that’s compile-time checked) and *it (but that’s another interface altogether). plus even things like Boost.Fusion use at<N> so it’s all muddled
@LucDanton for a polymorphic base type you're going to be referring to it with pointers at least some of the time, and for that time if it's got a contract as a container of sorts that doesn't throw on out-of-bounds, you need some way of indexing into it. The syntactic sugar there is somewhat broken with operator[]: the best you can do is three additional characters for (*bleh)[3]
Help me with code design. I parse 30 different messages from network. Currently I have a struct for each message and a boost::signal for each message so that any code can easily listen to what they need. But this is freaking redundant. How to fix?
@jaggedSpire okay; I think rvalue binding is a red herring. FWIW I think a lot of people are okay in that situation to have a wrapper with its own operator[] that forwards on
@jaggedSpire well I’m really all out now, but if you do find a name (whether your own or an existing convention we overlooked) I’m interested
@noob This is where templated code can take care of the internals of raising the exception by using common functions to handle the internal busywork. Have fun!
@thecoshman Not sure I understand the meaning of the question.
@ThePhD A few things are not clear enough: the definitions are simple but not descriptive enough. I could use some math, but GitHub doesn't want no MathJax/Katex :/