I'm trying to refactor my code, and everywhere people say that using virtual functions is a huuuuge nono performance-wise, why? and is there another way that I can inherit a class and redefine functions that are defined in the base class?
> It's sort of hard but only because it's weird. Think of it like you go to a new country and they love wearing pants as jackets. You first land and you are walking around saying, "What the hell are these idiots doing? Pants go on your legs morons!" Then you realize that everything about this country is designed so that putting your pants on your arms and head is just easier.
> So, if you want to survive in PantHeadistan you've got to get used to it. Once you wear your pants like this for a few months you just stop thinking it's stupid and begin to realize how "easy" it is (but really only in PantHeadistan).
Typically if a bare URL for a SE question is pasted into a post, it will automatically use the title of said post and hide the URL, e.g.
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/9134/jon-skeet-facts =>
Jon Skeet Facts?
But after 10 in a list this seems to stop working.
My wife is stuck in a w...
I just noticed a dwarven caravan brought about a dozen barrels of blood from various sources, and a few barrels of ichor too.
What's the use of this? If there's any, how can I "collect" the blood from my victims?
@jalf they didn't publish my comment. maybe technical problem but i do believe it's the old thing about not liking to have error pointed out. namely, that no matter what the compiler depends on, be it a Cray IV thing or whatever, it is no problem to make it produce code that can run on Windows XP (contrary to the dumb statement in the blog)
I really want to try and embed V8 in my engine, but every single time I try to start working on that, I get bored by the utter lack of documentation, close Xcode and start playing Minecraft.
@CheersandhthAlf nah, it's a bug in the MSDN blog software (which has been known ever since they "upgraded" it. If you take too long to post, something times out, and when you submit, your post is just thrown away
you get a green confirmation box just above the first comment when it goes through. If it doesn't, the page looks exactly like it did before
@rubenvb no, I'd rather not. :) But like you say, Boost does it, and I'm pretty sure that the VC++ team knows more about their own CRT than Boost does, so they should be able to do it too. Or, of course, they could just say std::thread is unavailable on XP, if it's such an insurmountable obstacle for them. That'd be better than nothing
although honestly, std::thread should be fairly straightforward to implement on XP. It's the TLS stuff that's a pain, and they haven't implemented that in VC11 anyway
I heard a recent talk by Herb Sutter who suggested that the reasons to pass std::vector and std::string by const & are largely gone. He suggested that writing a function such as:
std::string do_something ( std::string inval )
{
std::string return_val;
// ... do stuff ...
return ret...
I just had a nightmare where my computer had infinite memory, but every time an object was allocated the compiler asked for the maximum amount of memory "just in case", and then tried to fill it with zeroes. So my programs never ran because the compiler could never complete zeroing out infinite buffers. I was sad.
@Mysticial thanks btw. I haven't tried your solution yet, but I think it'll be faster than what I had, even with the latest, messy less-than implementation :)
hmm, I just had a crazy idea. I could make do with 62-bit integers, which would allow me to zero out the msb of each 32-bit component. Then they'd look positive even when treated as signed values
I just would like to know if such a functionality is implemented in any debugger...
I actually need this for the in-browser debuggers when stepping through JavaScript... but the JavaScript folks couldn't help me, so I thought I'll ask here... :)
I mean, if the debugger implements hot swap, one could just insert a return; statement after the paused statement....
And that's how I can do it in Chrome, but IE does not provide hot swap... :(
@DeadMG Well, I thought that C++ programmers surely have much more experience in debugging than web developers... and I'm not even sure if the functionality I want exists... (I haven't heard of it)
@DeadMG You have to write debuggers yourself, basically.
Be able to record and trace everything, so you can play it back while tweaking things.
If you have a code-level bug and need to step through it, you need to have a setup where you can run minimally, to avoid the slowness of things you know aren't the problem.
The standard says r[i] must work on random access iterators (where r is such), it doesn't say how though. (Though it must be exactly equivalent to *(r + i).)
The emulator is still supposed to have the advantage that you can test with various resolution and hardware setups, but I've been trying to automate that and it keeps failing on me.