Metaprogramming is the writing of computer programs that write or manipulate other programs (or themselves) as their data, or that do part of the work at compile time that would otherwise be done at runtime. In some cases, this allows programmers to minimize the number of lines of code to express a solution (hence reducing development time), or it gives programs greater flexibility to efficiently handle new situations without recompilation.
The language in which the metaprogram is written is called the metalanguage. The language of the programs that are manipulated is called the object...
Preprocessor metaprogramming relies on "enumerated recursion," such as only being able to count to ten. But who really needs to do anything more times than that?
Sorry to interrupt your discussion, but I'm having trouble figuring out what this error might mean. i.imgur.com/zOlb3.jpg Could it be a linking problem?
having now been awake for 23 hours, I've decided that attempting to watch the MLG finals at like, 1am tomorrow morning, is somewhat futile and I'm gonna go sleepsies now
I just tested GCC (versions 4.4 thru 4.7) and MSVC 10, which all exhibit this problem.
I also tested the raw Win32 API to see if nothing else was causing the failure, and this works:
#include <windows.h>
int main()
{
HANDLE stdout = GetStdHandle(STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE);
DWORD n;
W...
@rubenvb Note that wcout's job is to translate wide character text to narrow (single byte oriented) text. By default it translates to the configured ANSI codepage.
@JohannesSchaublitb I do not know. I think they used to work in menus in Windows XP. As it is now, in Windows 7, the bright user can learn about them in menus, and then use them outside menus (just remembering the keypresses).
@CollinHockey yes, they're pie menus. can also be fairly square like, just diagonals out. that's one thing from 1970's smalltalk project, and other thing is switching between workspaces (the Windows API for it has been there since Windows 2000 I think it was, maybe NT 4.0).
i think it's about time that Windows and Mac caught up with the 1970's.
@JohannesSchaublitb he wrote about that in a blog posting. essentially, too many people had the Wrong Idea that SO is about helping people (as opposed to building an encyclopaedic collection of tech answers/questions), and too many people were asking homework questions or fix-my-bug-for-me questions.
More than infrequently, opening posts on SO are not questions at all, in the very grammatical sense: They're just statements or vague musings (for instance this recent one), and it's not clear what exactly is being asked (since nothing is technically being asked).
I always feel that it shouldn't...
I would like to add to the useful answer @Vaughn provided.
In the template definition of test, you have a non-defining member function declaration and also a defining member function declaration. But that function definition and declaration is associated with the surrounding template test<T&g...
@JohannesSchaublitb I don't know, but I've seen and raged about it on other, lesser websites. I was really hoping that SO would be above that sort of mistake.
@rubenvb yes. i was pretty disappointed when i discovered that. i think it was in 1997 or something. pj plauger wrote an article about it in ddj. as i recall
in short, since wcout can also handle char const*, there is no legitimate role for plain cout, and wcout should not have the longest name. the design simply sucks. there is cout which has no purpose, and there is not a proper wide stream with wide output...
i think they did it to accomodate the wide/narrow mode of C FILE streams
but those modes are not supported (or even much known!) in Windows, in particular not supported by Visual C++
@rubenvb no, i don't think so. but the modern templated iostreams do. in my humble opinion. like, nowhere else do you find two-phase construction. all the names are cryptic and often nonsense shortenings. the responsibilities are unclear. the entanglement with locale handling is such that it's all very inefficient. and so on. bad.
^ How your screenshot should look (or possibly with shadow)
Of course, now Firefox shows image on black background, possibly to make the Microsoft snipper result less unpalatable. One design bug to cover another. Argh.
By the way, the screen shot above shows how Microsoft's MSDN lib doc viewer is unable to find WM_CANCELMODE (an API constant) in its index. But it does find MFC OnCancelMode, which links further to the WM_CANCELMODE page. Which the viewer is then unable to find in its contents. :-) It is like that all the time for me. However, other people seldom if ever stumble over removed-documentation. Case in point: when Microsoft removed the whole HTML+time API, I was apparently the only one who noticed.
why make your site entirely in flash? * you can prevent illegal copying, twarthing the PIRATES * you can ensure that people don't use tools that hide revenue-bringing ads ( :-) ) * you can have fancy animations and other graphical effects ( yes! )
I don't mind that they serve pictures. It's probably the easiest way to get all the mathy things to look right everywhere. But I don't want to have yet another password just to use a frakking calculator.
@KonradRudolph example implementation - something in pseudo code maybe? I'm trying to wrap my head around this automata stuff but so far I have only been able to implement an FSM using a "Node" class connected to other nodes, as if it were just a diagram.
Ah. To be honest, I’ve never seen an implementation of a direct pushdown automaton (although Yacc/Bison probably uses one) … but recursive-descent parsers emulate one, the stack is just implicit in the recursion.
But several syntax highlighters implement pushdown automata
And of course the clisp style recommends you never leave a closing parenthesis alone on a line, so you're expected to bundle like 50 of them on the end of the last expression
Can anyone explain: \delta is a finite subset of Q \times (\Sigma \cup\{\varepsilon\}) \times \Gamma \times Q \times \Gamma^* , the transition relation, where \Gamma^{*} denote the set of strings over \Gamma and \varepsilon denotes the empty string.
I have a class of encryption that was developed in Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0, and it is working properly. I migrated the code to Microsoft Visual Studio 2008, this class is working, but with a different behavior.
When I pass a specific string for encryption, the encryption result generated in the...