In general you should always use std::string, since it is less bug prone. Be aware, that memory overhead of std::string is significant. Recently I've performed some experiments about std::string overhead. In general it is about 48 bytes! The article is here: http://jovislab.com/blog/?p=76.
So I have this setup with half a dozen processes collaborating. I attach to one while it's initializing, and a global object (this is C# and not my code) retrieves some int value from another process and stores it in a data field. Later, yet another process invokes a member function on that global object, and then the value of that variable is wiped out. WTF? I've been trying for hours to hunt this one down.
@GManNickG Does std::string have a ctor taking a char? Not in C++03, I think.
Hi. I just have a design question I'd like to here a few opinions about. So, given you have a server class. This class basically needs a method which starts an endless loop. Would you implement that directly into the constructor, or would you put it in a run() method or something? Same question for a client class.
@unNaturhal No, it's not. string tag defines an object and calls its constructor. While that is called, there is no tag object yet. Either you mean string foo = bar + c; or string foo = c;.
@DeadMG Well, my latest analyzes turns out the value is that of a newly constructed object. Only the object has the same ID in the debugger as the old one, none of my breakpoints in the ctor fires, and the other values are fine. This must be something stupidly silly, and I am just too deep into that shit now to realize the obvious. I guess I should call it a day week, go home, and check on it on Monday.
@unNaturhal: In general, T x = y is equivalent to T x(T(y));, so when you write std::string tag = tag + c, that's the same as std::string tag(std::string(tag + c)). Note that in calling the constructor for the temporary string, you read tag...which isn't yet constructed, leading to UB. Basically, it's dumb that objects can be used before they are constructed but that's how it is.
@DeadMG: You can probably do that anyway even if the name isn't in scope until after the initializer, just have to use two lines instead of one: T x = track(x); => T x; track(x);.
Well, I gonna go home. It's unlikely that I should log back in tonight, and with the weather announced I'll probably spend most of the weekend digging through my garden. Have a nice weekend everybody!
multiline messages appear to grow your avatar ursus minor to ursus major
(yep, worked)
@KonradR woot, someone spotted a limitation in that other expression grammar of mine:
@SergejAndrejev nice observation. I fixed it by providing right recursion for the binary operators (and_, or_, xor_) and added your testcase. Thanks for the heads up — sehe6 mins ago
I am using MSVC11 beta.
When i have both whole program optimization and o2 on my app will crash. I have no idea what is wrong. The only warning i have is the below and unused variable. Gcc wall gives me NO warnings. Gcc runs in release mode just fine. How do i figure out what the problem is? I ...
Here is your resource to read up on. This refutes the argument that C is fastest, unless you use the C99 restrict feature. If anything C++ is faster than C. It really comes down to the compiler understanding when two separate but sequential operations 'read' reference the same memory location....
I fail to see how that's relevant to the question.