I have a C++ program that is going to take forever and a half to run -- is there any way I can parallelize it or run all the subfunctions all at once or something
@Collin real programmers take the easiest approach (and only do something else when it turns out to be slow or too memory-consuming), and that's without C-strings.
I'm having a little trouble here with class names. I got A and ns::A. I want to declare B as derived from ns::A and having a A variable. But when I declare the A type variable on the B header file, a ns::A type is assumed. How can I solve this?
I mean, my point was that if you can get a C++ compiler for that thingy (obviously limited by the platform), you should be able to get one for a real platform where there's money involved and all that.
@Collin As I've spent the last 20 minutes discussing, the language that will compile to the DCPU-16 is almost certainly a massive distance from anything I might recognize as C++.
@Collin True. But the number of people who play Minecraft is so ridiculously large, that it's not really an accurate sample of what would happen for a game with a normal number of users.
@EtiennedeMartel A valid point, but not all finance is boring. Working as a quant is quite fun -- it's like doing software development and risk management for financial firms and the pay is great (and you don't have to work retarded hours doing mundane work like ibankers)
@RMartinhoFernandes There's nothing specific about Boost. All I'm saying is that since the entire modern paradigm is set up to deal with devices with something like 30bits of useful memory or more, it's not going to scale well at all to just 64k
> I mean, the odds against you being right are staggering. You have a great advantage: you know the outcome. You WILL be wrong. Don't fear it, embrace your wrongness!
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah, and (not like there's a lot of game design we've seen) it seems to have enough geek porn in it to at least garner a cult following
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh. Well, it depends on the keyboard. Mine ("canadian multilingual standard") actually has keys for é, è, à, ç and ù. There are dead keys for ^ and ¨.
so your program could be doing many more different things, your old single-threaded code is junk (and you have to understand every single part of it well to know if it's useful)
that means that method and data dependencies and a whole bunch of stuff which used to be implementation details are now public interface details, which makes writing to interfaces and abstraction much more difficult
so if it were ever possible to write any function f that performed as described, it would be solving the Halting Problem
the only way to get the actual output would be to understand Chinese
in fact, it's directly equivalent to, say, a processor
an ARM CPU doesn't understand x86 and the only way to get out any data about an x86 program would be to install an emulator, so that it could "understand" x86
insert, push_back and emplace(_back) can cause a reallocation of a std::vector. I was baffled to see that the following code copies the elements instead of moving them while reallocating the container.
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
struct foo {
int value;
explicit f...
@EtiennedeMartel I don't see the armoured foot. There are aiming aids now, like optional target laser lighting and perhaps a tripod. But those aren't applicable in all field conditions
For the last time, throw() is not noexcept. noexcept has only compile-time semantics. throw() has the runtime semantics of std::unexpecteding your program if violated.
I want to call MessageBox() function in such way:
1). load needed library
2). get the function address
3). call it
So, for such aim as I understand, I should define new type with all types of arguments in MessageBox function.
It returnes INT and acccepts: HWND, LPCSTR, LPCSTR, UNIT.
So I regi...