@QPaysTaxes Oracle added some new byte codes at the same time as they added lambdas. I'm not sure the two are actually linked, but there's still no compiler that accepts lambdas and produces Java 7-compatible byte codes.
@QPaysTaxes Start from (close to) the end: use of deleted function ‘std::unique_ptr<_Tp, _Dp>::unique_ptr(const std::unique_ptr<_Tp, _Dp>&) [with _Tp = ctn_struct; _Dp = std::default_delete<ctn_struct>]
@QPaysTaxes Correct (a unique_ptr can be moved but not copied).
@Mysticial Bwahaha, while this is hilarious, I'm disconcerted to see an official school document stating "a Matlab code", code is like sand, you dont have a sand or many sand you have sand.
@Borgleader "A Matlab code" makes perfect sense. Somebody's try to pirate Matlab, and they want one (and only one) installation code so they can install their stolen download.
So as a general question, depending on the outcome of the upcoming US presidential election, what are my chances of being able to claim refugee status and move elsewhere? :-)
@Puppy Bernie somehow manages to win, even though it doesn't currently look like he'll even be on the ticket?
@QPaysTaxes A std::array is (very carefully) specified as being an aggregate, so what looks like an initializer_list is really C-style aggregate initialization.
@QPaysTaxes It's not initializer list because it's used for initialization of std::array which has no constructors, as opposed to std::vector and std::map which have std::initializer_list
@QPaysTaxes there was a great effort to make it possible to declare a function that when called with f(whatever) calls another function as if it was g(whatever)
@QPaysTaxes By being preferred over essentially any other form of initialization if at all possible, and other forms are only considered when/if it's completely impossible to interpret the code as using an initializer_list.
@QPaysTaxes there was a great effort to make it possible to declare a function that when called with f(whatever) calls another function as if it was g(whatever)
@QPaysTaxes Just in case it wasn't clear here: the emphasis is on "the same". Not a copy of the arguments, nor a reference to a temporary created from the arguments, but exactly the arguments themselves.
@QPaysTaxes How many weeks ago you started learning C++? 5? Then don't be discouraged. I'm in this chatroom since 2013, and some of the things still confuse me.
@sehe I'll take your word for that. I'm pretty sure I read the first Usenet post to mention the concept at all, but I'm still not entirely certain I fully understand it--I usually think I do, but then every once in a while something trips me up.
@QPaysTaxes If you have E = (A + B) * C then you have some expressions which are temporary, and some of them which aren't
If you can distinguish between temporary and non-temporary expressions, then, if the values manage some expensive to create resource (imagine a large 10000x10000 matrix), you don't need to create it every time, you can move it from one to another
because you can't access the temporaries
with value categories, you can distinguish which expressions are temporary, and which aren't
@QPaysTaxes Because the compiler breathes life into all values. This is how it knows the intimate details of it. It's basically Psalm 139 but for programming language design
@QPaysTaxes The compiler works more or less the reverse of that: it can eliminate the common sub-expression if and only if it can prove that doing so produces the same result as not doing so. Its default is to treat the two calls as being complete separate, so it can't collapse them. In this case, it could very likely generate that code inline (using link-time code generation), in which case it'll have a direct view of the fact that they can't be collapsed into a single call.