Let me be more comprehensive: std::function to store callbacks (e.g. being asynchronous). Otherwise (synchronous callbacks like in std::transform), nothing is needed.
so my class that wants to make the callback has std::function onPressCallThis and presumably a function void setOnPress(std::function functionToCall) and lets say I have another class with the function myClass.iWantThisCalled()
Also you're probably already familiar with that but things like std::bind and std::mem_fn are nice when it comes to callbacks, but that's on the client side of things (i.e. things a client may use when passing in a callback). Or the Boost versions (Using bind from Boost.Phoenix though).
First and foremost I apologize if any of my questions come off as "Foolish" I've been into computers and VIDEO GAMES for as long as I could remember, I am now 21 and working at a datacenter as a System administrator for Linux based servers (I also do network configurations and a variety of other ...
This might help you
#include<type_info>
template <typename T>
inline std::string typestr(T const&)
{ return typestr<T>(); }
you can capture the return type and concatenate with your error message. And i think you'd be good to go. when you try please comment if it worked ...
well, X11 is the linux windowing system, and you can ssh into a server, forward the X11 to your machine you are connecting from and then start an application. It runs on the server, but the GUI is forwarded to you
I'm not sure if you can let many people see the same instance of the application though
Ok, I'll look into it. Thanks for the hint. Anyhow, I'm still wondering if I'll have to roll out my own rdp stuff to move the images from individual windows, rather than the full desktop?
@thecoshman "It feels great to clean out that inbox" might be a reasonable explanation for your inbox getting out of hand in the first place. It psychology 101, basically
Note Apps that you design to target Windows 8 Consumer Preview and later can no longer query or set display modes that are less than 32 bits per pixel (bpp); these operations will fail. These apps have a compatibility manifest that targets Windows 8. Windows 8 still supports 8-bit and 16-bit color modes for desktop apps that were built without a Windows 8 manifest; Windows 8 emulates these modes but still runs in 32-bit color mode.
By the by, I'd leave the get member to behave the same as for other smart pointers and instead overload dynamic_pointer_cast to match other smart pointers as well.
I suppose dynamic_pointer_cast<Derived>(std::move(p)) was too 'weird' or something.
More seriously though typical/idiomatic usages are more likely to simply go with if(auto q = dynamic_cast<derived>(p.get())), ownerships rarely comes into play for this kind of code, does it?
The only place I think one would need dynamic_pointer_cast for unique_ptr would be when storing it in a container with the derived type. And then you'd want to move anyway.
I don't know what's the typical use for dynamic_pointer_cast and the docs give no indication. static_pointer_cast does make sense to me as the converse to e.g. conversion to pointer to void though.
> The seemingly equivalent expression shared_ptr<T>(dynamic_cast<T*>(r.get())) will eventually result in undefined behavior, attempting to delete the same object twice.
@RMartinhoFernandes dynamic_cast gracefully fails whereas static_cast assumes you're correct in downcasting (like other situations like casting from void*).
@classdaknok_t And that's why it should be clone_ptr: the pointer that clones.
@classdaknok_t Since you have an std::unique_ptr member, the copy assignment operator was deleted. If in turn you introduce one yourself, this gets rid of the move assignment operator.
@thecoshman No, but if a sinlge 'empire' (say, a company) manages to adapt to times and wildly changing challenges, that kind-a proves that the company strategy is sound and flexible.
The main difference is that 'slaves' are 'consumed' (abused), whereas a good Framework constitutes a self-supporting eco-system.