@BartekBanachewicz Reminds me of Vulkan's API. A lot of them need to be called twice (first time to get the count, then I resize a vector and call it again). With ThePhD's help I ended up with this neat helper.
My current approach is to have std::basic_string<native_char> strongly typedef'd in the interface, so the functions aren't accidentally passed a string, and
I am able to use the 2D position of the fragment to sample a texture representing a heightmap that gives me a 3D position of the fragment. Thinking about it, getting the 2D perpendicular distance of the fragment to the line that creates it would be enough to derive the 3D distance from it. — user502442511 mins ago
There are a few functions that only exist in narrow versions, and a few whose W versions are wrappers around the A versions, but for the vast majority, using the A versions is bad.
@BartekBanachewicz If you want an abstract class without functions then you can just declare pure virtual dtor. (Do not forget to actually implement it though.)
Yes, they are, because I can (to a degree) accept people deciding they want to do the wrong thing, while in your case, only your world view is correct :P
I like to think that my world view is correct and that in 20 years when I finally develop Vapor it'll be the best language ever, but I admit that I might be wrong.
@Morwenn That's not a default, because there's no choice! inline is a choice. C++11 added that. Could not have been screwed up because there was no such behavior before.
To clarify the issue and the solution: Microsoft acknowledged that std::codecvt is not built against the char32_t in std library provided with Microsoft Visual Studio 2015 RC. The workaround is to use the unsigned int or the __int32 types:
std::wstring_convert< std::codecvt_utf8<unsigned int>...
warning C4566: character represented by universal-character-name '\u1F02' cannot be represented in the current code page (1250)
1> OGLWindow.vcxproj -> C:\projects\OGLWindow\x64\Debug\OGLWindow.exe
Boost Log is a really bad logging library, but I'm sure it is not the main reason of crashing your application. To find out where the problem is you have to get memory crash dump and look at it in a debugger.
it's the last 2FA I didn't reset after changing my phone I think
and of course I idiotically logged out of my PC here
I am still logged in on my laptop though
> Caution: The two-factor authentication can not be deactivated by TeamViewer. If you lose your recovery key, you will also lose access to all TeamViewer features where your account is needed. Therefore, it must be kept in a secure place.
@Rapptz btw it looks like with the RTD theme table cells grow to the right without ever introducing a line break inside. doesn’t happen with e.g. the default theme and if you have a CSS hack to fix that or something I’d be happy.
If we use multiple inheritance, slicing will make the addresses to parent objects differ from the address to leaf objects:
struct X {int x};
struct Y {int y};
struct Z : X, Y {int z};
So if we have a Z object z, its address &z will not coincide with the address of its Y parent: static_cast<Y*>(&...
It looks to me like most of the danger in being a policeman basically comes down to the fact that it involves quite a bit of driving, so it's about the same level of danger as other driving jobs (truck driver, taxi cab driver, etc.) Both those jobs show up as more dangerous, but I'd guess it comes down to the fact that policemen don't drive quite a much as they do.
I pass in a reference of derived type. The function takes a reference to the parent type. Whenever I try to access a member in the function, it null-checks the reference first.
IOW, ICC doesn't distinguish between pointers and references. So it doesn't use the fact that it's a reference to know that it can never be null.
The implicit upcast upon calling the function adds the null-check which the compiler fails to remove later. (there is multiple inheritance involved)
@BartekBanachewicz In other words, the number killed by police is basically lost in the rounding when dealing with the number killed in traffic accidents.
@milleniumbug Exactly... I intentionally use references to indicate that they can never be null. I would've expected every compiler to be able to use that info to remove null checks. I guess not.
Granted, ICC also does a branch on every virtual call where the base is pure. It branches and explicitly calls __purecall rather than adding __purecall to the vtable. So it's definitely not unheard of for ICC to so stupid things for stuff that isn't a tight numerical loop.
@BartekBanachewicz There is none (or very little anyway). People generally do a lousy job of evaluating risk, and spend huge amounts of time and effort on entirely the wrong things. My wife still worries about carefully scrubbing every fruit the kids eat because of insecticides, even though the total deaths ever from insecticides on fruit is something like 5 or 6 (and if memory serves, not even all of those are really certain).