I want to know how to change the order of execution when chaining constructors in C#.
You don't. There is no such feature in C#.
There already is a mechanism for calling arbitrary code in an arbitrary order: make a bunch of methods and call them in the order you like.
Here's my article on ...
@CaptainGiraffe Sharks :) lol Also see http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/7011/An-Intro-to-Constructors-in-C (dated 2004, .Net 1.0)
To set the scene:
In the recent Great Question Deletion Audit of 2012, this answer of mine — explaining why it's not in SO's inetrest to delete The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List question —, despite only referring to a single item on that list, became the top-voted answer. As some helpful com...
@sbi I tried that, with the comment link, and it didn't work. I'm quite sure there is a level of client-side caching involved here. Full - Refreshing the chat window might have done the trick as well
Closed questions are editable and publicly visible, and can be unclosed by people with the close privilege. Deleted questions can only be undeleted by people with the delete privilege.
Well, now that we have the book question back, could you all please go through the remaining answers, read the comments, maybe add your own opinion if you have one, vote on the answers, and if a bad one is low enough, delete it? That's why what been given it back for, after all.
@sbi Did we ever ask Will♦why he unprotected + locked in the first place? I bet it is precisely because he didn't like the amount of voting/flagging arising from those 'late' answers.
@sehe I suppose he just saw all the flags, that it is an old answer. and wanted to stop flags pouring in and bad answers being given. So he locked the damn thing and moved on. Allegedly there's always tons of flags for the mods to deal with, so I wouldn't really blame him.
I'm starting in c++ and I need to read a binary file.
I know the structure of file, i.e, each file line is composed by:
'double';'int8';'float32';'float32';'float32';'float32';'float32';'float32';'int8';'float32';'float32';'float32';'float32';'int8';'float32'
or in byte numbers:
8 1 4 4 4 4 ...
I have a C++ OOP question: I have a class which is composed by other classes which derive from common base classes. The composed object only knows the common base classes. Depending on the users input it is composed with different classes, derived from their respective base classes. Now I have another class/Method which constructs these composed objects. Now I have to tell this Method of which exact classes the composed object should consists.
This would be something for some kind of reflection mechanism, which I don't have in C++. I thought about std::type_info but I don't think I can construct classes from there. Maybe I could use templates, but I would rather have things done at runtime..
The only way I see is a factory function (or lambda) for each class. You can then choose the right factory function at runtime. It should return an std::shared_ptr<BaseClass> (or unique_ptr if that works?).
@Nils Yep, that's the way it goes. Polymorphism is great for information hiding, but someone, somewhere simply has to know all the types to instantiate them. There's numerous, often quite elaborated, patterns to do this, but what with linkers being allowed to eliminated unreferenced objects, those featuring an automatic registering to simulate reflection are usually non-portable.
@Nils In Objective-C 1) Every object is on the heap. 2) Every single method call is resolved at runtime, no stuff like inlining. 3) Every single method is virtual.
Objective-C doesn't require linking for method calls. You can send any message to any object, and when an object doesn't respond to it, it simply throws an exception.
The only way I see is a factory function (or lambda) for each class. You can then choose the right factory function at runtime. It should return an std::shared_ptr<BaseClass> (or unique_ptr if that works?).
I woke up at 03:00, drove 70 km to airport, dropped off my uncle, drove 70 km back to my parents's house, slept until 13:00, drove my mom 30 km to the hospital, drove back, and then drove 30 km here (home). I haven't seen a line of code today yet.
> telephony log information like your phone number, calling-party number, forwarding numbers, time and date of calls, duration of calls, SMS routing information and types of calls.
What kind of "legitmate-ish" goal could Google have to collect this kind of information?
Let's say I have these template aliases:
enum class enabler {};
template <typename T>
using EnableIf = typename std::enable_if<T::value, enabler>::type;
template <typename T>
using DisableIf = typename std::enable_if<!T::value, enabler>::type;
I can do the following in...