First of all, get to know the features that make life easier for stuff like this in vim:
Visual block mode
blockwise-visual
blockwise operators
virtualedit; You can move the cursor to positions where there isn't any text. This is called "virtual space". The user guide has extensive samples ...
Once again I spent oodles of time on the wrong questions. I might even repcap today, but I wasted a lot of time on that shady vim question (and of course, the Spirit user list).
@sehe I bow down before you, oh God of implementing from incomprehensible documentation and implementation. well, that's assuming Spirit is like the rest of Boost, except 10x more complicated.
@stdOrgnlDave It is becoming quite a turn off to me too. But I still like the concept and with some 'critical mass' of experience you can really be agile with it.
I feel bad for the Boost guys, now that C++11 is rolling out, half the library is going to be obsolete and the other half is going to need extensive rewrites. by 2018 when we get a compiler that implements C++11 properly they may have it done, though.
you know the #1 thing I would've liked in the C++11 standards? mandatory sensical template errors for STL-type built-ins. like, they copyright "C++11" and then give free licenses when a simple std::vector instantiation error doesn't give 500 lines of useless errors
test.c++: In copy constructor 'Blah::Blah(const Blah&)': test.c++:22:5: error: base class 'class std::enable_shared_from_this<Blah>' should be explicitly initialized in the copy constructor [-Werror=extra]
Well as far as pointers go I'm clued up a tad more now, however going back to the previously discussed source, I don't understand how getActiveInstance() should return Obj2& - Obj1 obj = class.getActiveInstance() will just return an address in memory? Or have I got that all wrong?
Jesus I read up on pointers, thought it makes sense, then when I try to apply them it all goes to crap.