Okay I need C++ design advice. I got a program that links against like 20 dlls for different hardware configurations, but only 3 at once. I used to control the hardware configuration with #includes and rebuild, but I'm considering switching to an xml configuration file. Not 100% sure if this is worth doing...
@nwp There's a fundamental problem right now: although the compilers support modules, they haven't (as far as I know) produced module-based versions of the standard library and such. I suspect a lot more users are likely to jump on board after 1) there's more agreement on how they'll work, and 2) they can see the benefit in existing use.
Thousands of teenagers perk up at what they initially thought might have been "plug and get laid", but leave in anger and frustration when they realize the truth.
Im very new to programming (i dont think i can call what i know programming) and just started to learn c++ alone on the internet. in the beginning i told myself "wow, this is not so hard like many people say" but now I feel like my head cant hold all of this information at once. I am learning now...
@ADG Why do you want to? Most cases of trying to check the type are mistakes. Either you want to specialize, or you want to check characteristics of the type (and, really, specializing should usually be on characteristics of the type as well, but...)
@nwp How dare you say such a thing in a place that's oriented (even slightly) toward programming. A great deal of programming is about finding effective ways to cheat.
@JerryCoffin I don't know. You can cheat at benchmarks where you just divide the time your version took by 10, but that is not useful. And finding ways to solve a problem with minimum effort, for example by using a lib that just solves it isn't considered cheating.
what would be an example of a good cheating for you?
@fredoverflow Bjarne's line about that: "When I was inventing C++, my goal was to make programming as easy as using a phone." [holds up his smart phone] "I guess I've succeeded. I don't know how to use my phone any more."
@Mikhail Because its lack would be much more annoying with the preprocessor, where we can't put the next if right next to the else. Worse, older preprocessors often didn't allow indentation (at all) so nested conditions became problematic very quickly.
@EtiennedeMartel No, not off the top of my head. Sorry.
For most stuff, it wouldn't apply: a different version is written as a separate interface, so somebody asking for IFoo0 will only ever get an IFoo0, and even if you have IFoo1, IFoo2, and IFoo3, their being a version mismatch won't matter (i.e., they won't get the later interface unless they ask for it).
It's just that we felt that using HRESULTs for return values was convenient.
Basically it's a plugin loader and the one error that might realistically happen is a version mismatch between the loader and the plugin.
So we want to report that with a proper value instead of just going "sorry something went wrong" which is definitely a pain when it happens on the PC of an artist, who doesn't have any kind of debugger installed.
If we could just tell them "run an update yo", it'll save time
@EtiennedeMartel Hmmm...well, if the plugin doesn't have the interface you're going to use, the obvious return would be E_NOINTERFACE. If the interface is present, but they try to use it in a way that's not supported, that would probably be E_INVALIDARG. For what you're describing, it probably makes the most sense as E_NOINTERFACE; any time you receive that, telling them to update is a pretty reasonable reaction.
I just spent the whole day at work working around the fact that operator new doesn't sufficiently align for the datatype. Is there a reason why (as far as the standard goes) operator new doesn't align? It knows the type. Therefore it knows the alignment. I don't see any obvious technical barriers.
it delegates to ::operator new which does not receive the alignment as an argument.
the alignment is supposed to be handled by simply always aligning for the maximum possible required alignment for any data type, but that does not include extended alignments like SSE types, if memory serves.
@Puppy Sounds right to me. C (and C++) in general used to prohibit the basic notion of a type that had an alignment requirement that was larger than the type itself.
I've been using Howard Hinnant's stack allocator and it works
like a charm, but some details of the implementation are a little
unclear to me.
Glad it's been working for you.
1. Why are global operators new and delete used? The allocate() and deallocate() member functions use ::opera...
I want my program to be able to remember where it left off in a .txt file in order to proceed to the next input upon reiteration through a loop.
For instance, a text file containing:
Apples
Bananas
Oranges
would be accessed through a function GetItem() that appends the next file input into a v...
@Rapptz Its also dangerous, because pointers are typically not compatible between MSVC RTs. Some guys at the HDL group told me the correct solution is to return numbers similar to OGL contexts.
@Mikhail The way I solved that problem was to implement my own unique_ptr. On construction, it basically stores a function pointer to a local deleter. That way it can be passed around through APIs no problem.
@Mysticial But I don't think Windows has this mechanism? You need to mirror both sides and match the exception codes? Or maybe I'm wrong about Windows...
Basically, you catch the exception when you're about cross a DLL boundary. Serialize it and send it as a raw byte stream. Once you're across the DLL boundary, deseralize it. Hash table lookup the exception type, rebuild, and rethrow.
For user-made exceptions that the DLL doesn't know about, you don't rebuild it. You can't do anything with it anyway. So just wrap it and rethrow until it goes back to the user-side.
user406009
Seems like too much of a pain.
user406009
Probably better to just pass around error integers and strings.
@Mikhail Java-style serialize. Make it a requirement that all exceptions inherit from it and implement a serialize() method as well as an exception-code key/deserialize-function-pointer value.