Weren't we just helping some idiot who couldn't manage to install VS Express despite knowing it was the right solution, and ended up concluding Dev C++ was the way to go on Windows?
@CatPlusPlus I searched for gcc and installed it, but not successfully. I don't remember the exact circumstances, but I think it was an issue of dependencies.
> I’m cranky. I complain about a lot of things. There’s a lot in the world of technology I don’t like, and that’s really to be expected—programming is a hilariously young discipline, and none of us have the slightest clue what we’re doing. Combine with Sturgeon’s Law, and I have a lifetime’s worth of stuff to gripe about.
@Potatoswatter Yes. The same guy who said that none of the bignum libraries on the internet worked. I eventually walked him through the process of comping more than one file with DevCPP, because he couldn't do that on his own.
> PHP’s parser refers to e.g. :: internally as T_PAAMAYIM_NEKUDOTAYIM, and the << operator as T_SL. I say “internally”, but as above, this is what’s shown to the programmer when :: or << appears in the wrong place.
> === compares values and type… except with objects, where === is only true if both operands are actually the same object! For objects, == compares both value (of every attribute) and type, which is what === does for every other type. What.
The foo()[0] was my favourite thing to point out and they had to go and fix it. :<
I like how the devs reject feature requests because they "make for messier code".
Like, this is PHP we're talking about.
> If an exception is thrown while evaluating a constructor’s arguments (e.g., new Foo(bar()) and bar() throws), the constructor won’t be called, but the destructor will be.
@CheersandhthAlf Sure, but I wasn't designing a regular expression engine for use in a very popular programming language and coming up with the craziest thing possible.
One interesting effect with a pre-moderated group is that many people can answer the same question without seeing each others' answers. Then one discovers that the answers differ in surprising (define: surprising) ways... Case in point, half an hour ago or so, [groups.google.com/group/comp.lang.c++.moderated/browse_frm/….
However, with Wil Evers, the new moderator, my latest two postings were approved and propagated within minutes!
@CheersandhthAlf I'm surprised more people aren't mentioning that passing an object by reference and by value are very very different concepts, and one is not simply an "optimization" of the other, as he suggests.
@thecoshman I'm still not through it all. I need to take breaks every once in a while. I always thought the cat's aversion was a bit exaggerated, but now I don't think so anymore.
"In 2007 the interpreter had an integer overflow vulnerability. The fix started with if (size > INT_MAX) return NULL; and went downhill from there. (For those not down with the C: INT_MAX is the biggest integer that will fit in a variable, ever. I hope you can figure out the rest from there.)"
@daknok_t where does it cuttoff in the string? Right after something? In the middle of one of your string literals? Or always at the 1004th byte no matter what's there?
also the item.binary and item.function things, as R.Martinho says
You could add a stream.exceptions(/* I forgot about the magic value */); to have a quick-and-dirty way to check if the insertions fail. (But please remove it once the issue is solved.)
I did stream.exceptions(std::ios_base::failbit | std::ios_base::badbit | std::ios_base::eofbit); before streaming and caught the exception and std::cerr'ed it, but there's no output in stderr.
Godammit! While the robot was away, I was able to sneak in a few highly starred messages on the starboard. Just this morning, I had 14 stars there! Now that he's back again, he's taken over the starboard in no time and has 14 stars, too. He needed almost thrice as many messages for it, though, and that's where his positronic brain shows: lots of mediocre stuff, rather than two or three real gems. (Yeah, that meant to say "Welcome back, @RMartinho!")
@LucDanton Doesn't matter. Can an std::string hold '\0's? If it doesn't, I need to use something else. It must be possible to emit null bytes using my framework.
@thecoshman You're the cosh man, and you always log on when you come to work, and log off when you go home, because your being at work is boring, and your being home must be a lot more interesting, since it, usually, doesn't leave you time to hang out here.
What happened? You angered your girlfriend and she dumped you, and now you don't want to sit at home all by yourself and be gloomy?
Mmmh, if I time my EDSL vs Boost.Phoenix a simple program gets compiled faster using mine. If I time my variant using my EDSL vs my variant using Phoenix using the same expression, then suddenly the compile time explodes with my stuff. Fun times.
When looking at some existing code for a web server, I see that there's a main.cc file and another server.h and server.cc pair for the server class.
// main.cc
#include "server.h"
int main() {
foo::server = new foo::Server();
server->Serve(); // runs forever
}
// server.cc
namespace foo...
from my understanding, gnome 2 shouldn't used any more, because you are missing out on 'features' that Gnome 3 has. But Gnome 3 looks like unity, aka sucks
@CheersandhthAlf I had a similar problem with skype for a couple years. All links would open in firefox. Never did figure out why, I've never had firefox as the default browser..