@Griwes That still dismisses the very important point that defining the behaviour in the "platform" (Windows, x86, whatever) is not enough for making UB defined.
> If the initializer expression is a prvalue and the cv-unqualified version of the source type is the same class as the class of the destination, the initializer expression is used to initialize the destination object. [ Example: T x = T(T(T())); calls the T default constructor to initialize x. ]
namely that bit, I get the intent but I don’t get the wording: how does the initialization take place, exactly?
MSVC: "This file has unsaved changes. Lose your changes or lose the other changes?". Why is there no option to see both? Why is that a modal dialog so I cannot copy my changes before applying the other changes so I can easily paste over it if I don't like it?
I always imagined that a c++ compiler doesn't actually copy/paste headers, when it encounters an #include it just opens that file and continues parsing that.
@TobySpeight: chroot works well against this type of attack. For example, attempting to compile @Ville's file on Coliru simply gives an error of: main.cpp:1:50: fatal error: ../../../../../../../../../../dev/zero: No such file or directory (and similar for the file he links in the comment to Colin Cassidy's answer). — Jerry Coffin20 hours ago
@Ville-ValtteriTiittanen Are you trying to demonstrate that this is a problem or is not a problem? Doesn't seem to have caused any harm to ideone. — jpmc2613 hours ago
Indeed, there was another question... I'd like to set "Implicitly Link Objective-C Runtime Support" to No directly by modifying files, instead of doing it with XCode's GUI
Why the hell you want to use PHP as C preprocessor. Are you serious? There are a lot of C preprocessors and you use the fucking PHP? — alem0lars11 mins ago
all of them listed as the answers in this question...
I have a recursive function with three different arguments, and each call is split into three different subproblems. I can't really figure out how to set the base case because its depending on three different variables. any thoughts on what I could do?
@Basj The X-name is offensive to many software engineers (specifically, all those who've had to use it, and have even the slightest hint of competence).
f a b c = sum [a, b, c] + max [fa, fb, fc]
where
fa = if a > 1 then f (a-1) b c else 0
fb = if b > 1 then f a (b-1) c else 0
fc = if c > 1 then f a b (c-1) else 0
> Energy storage capacity increases with increase in weight but limitation seems to be the speed driving the flywheel. And performance of system is directly linked with the energy stored. Thus a graph can be plotted between performance and weight. Optimum value lies between 5 and 8 kg.
I've seen this pattern used a lot in C & C++.
unsigned int flags = -1; // all bits are true
Is this a good portable way to accomplish this? Or is using 0xffffffff or ~0 better?
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, I wasn't sure about that. I just wanted to set all the bits and thought that std::memset(ptr, -1, length) would work because I wrongly remembered that memset used unsigned char.
I do think the fancy-pants choices of vertex/edge container selectors mostly makes no sense :) Stick with the simple until you know you needed the iterator stability or ... lookup optimization (pessimization?)
(The hash_setS almost makes sense in that it automatically de-duplicates adjecent edges)
Note I removed the value initialization of the default color map (standard library maps already value-initialize new values)
Note I made things const, removed excess scopes, use of temporaries in favour of direct construction of nodes w/bundled properties