@BartekBanachewicz That depends on the CPU. With an x86/x64 CPU it isn't a whole lot different at all. Most RISC CPUs simply don't support misaligned access, so the compiler has to fix things up. If (for example) you wrote it in assembly language so you really forced it to attempt a misaligned access, most would throw a hardware exception.
A cargo cult is a millenarian movement first described in Melanesia which encompasses a diverse range of practices and occurring in the wake of contact with the commercial networks of colonizing societies. The name derives from the belief which began among Melanesians in the late 19th and early 20th century that various ritualistic acts such as the building of an airplane runway will manifest in the appearance of material wealth, particularly highly desirable Western goods (i.e., "cargo"), via Western airplanes, though the meaning of the behavior is more complex than a simple misunderstanding of...
Cargo cult programming is a style of computer programming characterized by the ritual inclusion of code or program structures that serve no real purpose. Cargo cult programming is typically symptomatic of a programmer not understanding either a bug they were attempting to solve or the apparent solution (compare shotgun debugging, deep magic). The term cargo cult programmer may apply when an unskilled or novice computer programmer (or one inexperienced with the problem at hand) copies some program code from one place to another with little or no understanding of how it works or whether it is required...
> Good advice comes with a rationale so you can tell when it becomes bad advice. If you don't understanding why something should be done, then you've fallen into the trap of cargo cult programming, and you'll keep doing it even when it's no longer necessary or even becomes deleterious.
@BartekBanachewicz Then you'd have to look at the output for a particular compiler to say anything intelligent. At one time I could have told you pretty easily, at least for a few specific compilers, but I haven't had much reason to keep track of such stuff recently enough to comment meaningfully.
I have a file with labeled data such as:
Label1,0.002546,0.054126,...
...
...
LabelN,0.025413,0.985412,...
What I want is to store labels to std::vector<std::string> and data to std::vector<std::vector<double>> So, this is what I tried:
input.open(files.at(0));
while (std::getline(input, lin...
Write a function, findElement that takes three parameters: an array of integers, the number of elements in the array, and an integer ‘toFind’. The function should find all occurrences of the integer ‘toFind’ in the array and print their locations to the user. If the value does not exist or the ar...
Is there a commonly used online C editor and compiler that is, or can be, linked to in SO answers and SO Documentation?
I understand that coliru works well for C++, however it does not allow for --std to be set equal to any C only setting (i.e. not C++). This makes it less than ideal for use in ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought you cannot write a valid boot sector except with assembler because nothing else supports the "put 2 magic bytes at location 510"-instruction
In computing, PEEK is a BASIC programming language extension used for reading the contents of a memory cell at a specified address. The corresponding command to set the contents of a memory cell is POKE.
== Statement syntax ==
The PEEK function and POKE command are usually invoked as follows, either in direct mode (entered and executed at the BASIC prompt) or in indirect mode (as part of a program):
The address and value parameters may contain complex expressions, as long as the evaluated expressions correspond to valid memory addresses or values, respectively. A valid address in this context...
@nwp Also, C++ supports that with reinterpret_cast.
And you can also do the same with just the linker.
And you're assuming everything needs the "put 2 magic bytes at location 510"-instruction.
> The concept behind the PXE originated in the early days of protocols like BOOTP/DHCP/TFTP, and as of 2015 it forms part of the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) standard.
Hmm, it did.
> Version 2.5 of the UEFI specification adds support for accessing boot images over the HTTP protocol.
Yeah, but the problem isn't that it shows as a ?, the problem is it outputs at all :P
I have a feeling, based on some of the commands, it was supposed to output "Hello, FOS-X!" or something, but idk. Has a hardcoded string of that encoded within the file.
Looks like OVMF actually boots in bochs (well, at least from bochs' console logs - I don't really have an x-forwarding setup ready to see what it shows on the screen...). That's good news.