@RMartinhoFernandes IIRC my intent was to test if my (very poor) emulation of alignas was working. Because 'unit' test means testing several things at once, of course.
seriously nobody gets my fluffy bunny loop? because bunnies multiply like rabbits...i.e. they have sex a lot and have lots of babies exponentially..come on, it's not rocket science
@Mysticial lol, advanced. tl;dr version: grab memory, point an arena to it, use a standard container with an arena_allocator associated to that arena, enjoy high-level C++ (exception-safety and so on) with tight control of the memory. I even throw in support for not initializing where it makes sense (int and so on). Although of course that's more of a proof-of-concept more than anything, I have no idea if the generated code would stand up to your standards.
The time horizon on @greatdismal's words coming true has shrunk to one day: http://twitter.com/#!/GreatDismal/status/196982191295696898 and then: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2012/05/01/bc-tsunami-motorcycle-owner.html
@EtiennedeMartel My professor did not specify. He want application that search recipes according ingredients, recipe name, ect. and should be accessed on mobiles, tablets or PDAs. am new to this, wat do u recommend?
Why does commenting out the first two lines of this for loop and uncommenting the third result in a 42% speedup?
int count = 0;
for (uint i = 0; i < 1000000000; ++i) {
var isMultipleOf16 = i % 16 == 0;
count += isMultipleOf16 ? 1 : 0;
//count += i % 16 == 0 ? 1 : 0;
}
Behind the...
@Mysticial Out of curiosity, is there a particular bit that prompted you to call my code 'advanced C++'? Now I feel like I have unnecessary complexity I need to extirpate.
Damn it. I just spent 10 minutes confused as hell. Turns out when you debug this in Visual Studio: int i; { /* stuff */ int i; /* more stuff */}, once you reach the inner scope the debugger reports the value of i as the value of the second i, even if it doesn't yet exist in the scope. Sitting here wondering how the hell the first i is changing randomly.
@Mysticial The arena gets a hold of the memory but doesn't own it. In one instance the memory is from alignas(int) unsigned char storage[500]; (i.e. it's aligned), in another it's alloca(500 + alignment) (i.e. it's not).
@stdOrgnlDave Let me clarify: the debugger is in no way conforming to the C++ standard w.r.t. scope (which is fine, better than nothing, but confusing). Sequence points have nothing to do with it.
@LucDanton From what I can tell, you're incrementing a counter on allocate and decrementing on deallocate. All memory allocators need some sort of data-structure to keep track of what's been allocated - since memory can be freed in a different order from when it was allocated. Or perhaps I'm missing something?
@Mysticial Yeah, there's no expensive bookkeeping. This isn't meant to compete with the free-store. If you remember the discussion we had, the basic usage that was mentioned was resize-ing to some size and then using the sequence.
@GManNickG that's odd. variables still need to be allocated onto the stack. you're referring to a location on the stack that hasn't been initialized. it should pop a warning saying garbage uninitialized variable
Although the interesting bit so far is what usage looks like, not arena which is almost but not quite throw-away code. This is the unit test for arena_allocator, not arena.
@GManNickG it is entirely correct, anonymous::i exists on the stack, it was created when the function entered. it hasn't been initialized, but the debugger still sees that there's a variable anonymous::i.
@stdOrgnlDave I'm not sure what you're arguing about. What's correct and what's wrong? I'm merely stating that at the line float j = ..., the second i does not yet exist, so the debugger ought to report the value of the first i. It doesn't, probably out of simplicity of implementation.
@GManNickG the second i does exist, when the function was entered, stack space was allocated for it. the debugger shows the value of the i in the scope you're using. anonymous::i, which is on the stack but not initialized
@RMartinhoFernandes Tsk, you've made me check to just to see if it weren't implementation-specified so that I could bust you on that, but it is unspecified results. Ah well.
@stdOrgnlDave Sure, and all I said was that when I ask the debugger for the value of i in the statement int j = i;, it reported the value of anonymous_i instead, incorrectly.
@RMartinhoFernandes lol, on what grounds? That it's non-standard?
The article you cited is clueless.
The advice against using fseek is predicated on the idea that even for a binary file (opened with fopen(..., "..b") the call fseek(f, SEEK_END, 0) is "undefined behavior". Strictly speaking this is true because the standard says:
A binary stream need no me...
> You attempted to reach ideone.com, but the server presented an expired certificate. No information is available to indicate whether that certificate has been compromised since its expiration. This means Chromium cannot guarantee that you are communicating with ideone.com and not an attacker.
@GManNickG you're right, the debugger can't tell that it "doesn't exist in the scope yet," and is showing you the i in the scope, even if the program is using the i outside of the scope.
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
int i = 5;
{
for (int e = 0; e < 10; e++)
{
int j = i;
std::cout << j << std::endl; // prints five *every time*
int i = 10;
}
}
}
@stdOrgnlDave I think it could tell, in principle, but for practicality sake it's not worth the effort to do so.
@GManNickG from the debugger's point of view, though, at that point in time, it thinks it should show you the scoped i. it isn't a syntax parser, it doesn't know that the program isn't using the i that it is.
@GManNickG if you look at it from the point of view of the debugger, it makes sense. remember it has to match up symbol names to source lines and such, and make decisions about scoped name collisions. the simplest solution is to display the symbol from the current scope
I'm not sure it's possible without deep code inspection to do better, though. I mean, for the debugger - which doesn't see the source code, it sees things happen in a completely different order - for the debugger to be able to tell that j is actually assigned the first i, that is a complex task. look at the assembly of that function
> @CatPlusPlus Your conclusion is correct. Few C programs are "correct" according to ISO C (where the term "undefined behavior" comes from). Therefore, pedants who cry about "undefined behavior" are mostly useless windbags. Like the author of the article which this question is about. Of course vendor headers and libraries have defined behavior, just not ISO-C-defined behavior. – Kaz just now
Quick question: I can't find it in the documentation for CreateProcess, but do I need to ensure the string/buffer I pass as the command line lives as long as the process?
Reading about British Summer time: "This proposal is referred to as "Single/Double Summer Time" (SDST), and would effectively mean the UK adopting the same time zone as central European countries". It's like they're avoiding using the same name for the same scheme as continental countries on purpose, lol.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah. That's what I was thinking, but then it notes that for Unicode "CreateProcessW can modify the contents of this string"; is that just the call to CreateProcessW that can modify it, or the resulting process? Bleh. I'm going with "it copies it, and it can modify it during the initial copy in Unicode."
Anyway, we won't change anytime soon. Our timezone seems well tuned.
> Portugal moved to Central European Time and Central European Summer Time in 1992, but reverted to Western European Time in 1996 after concluding that energy savings were small, it had a disturbing effect on children's sleeping habits as it would not get dark until 22:00 or 22:30 in summer evenings with repercussions on standards of learning and school performance, and insurance companies reported a rise in the number of accidents.
There's some complaining, but mostly in the order of complaining that in Winter, kids go to school at night and come back at night.
Which is stupid because no timezone adjustment will make daylight hours last longer.
Oh, and the usual "but we sleep one hour less some night in March" thing.
Look, you invite all your teenage friends to downvote this; I'm not deleting this perfectly good, knowledgeable answer based on 23 years of C experience, N-re-readings of the 1990 standard (lost appetite when C99 hit) and numerous technical documents in this area. — Kaz11 mins ago
@GManNickG it's copied to the the new process image. in that process GetCommandLine just retrieves pointer to the copy. you can change it if you want (within the original size), and since that's the only copy of it tools will report new value as command line.
if you want to investigate the process image you can start with GetModuleHandle(0) which retrieves pointer to the start (start of the DOS header). then just follow the layout in winnt.h or whatever that header was named.
i did that once just to get efficient access to the version info... :-)
Having my cockatoo chase my mouse pointer was all fun and games until he decided the best way to get to it was to chew the edge of my new monitor. Lucky it didn't break.
There have been many "Do __ without __" challenges before, but I hope that this is one of the most challenging.
The Challenge
You are to write a program that takes two natural numbers (whole numbers > 0) from STDIN, and prints the sum of the two numbers to STDOUT. The challenge is that you must...
So the puzzle is to write a hello world program in your language of choice, where the program's source file as a string has to be a palindrome.
To be clear, the output has to be exactly "Hello, World".
Edit:
Well, with comments it seems trivial (not that I thought of it myself of course [sig...
You are just using your code from here:
I came across this on http://www.planet-source-code.com/vb/default.asp?lngWId=3
If you are using someone elses code then please acknowledge the source.
But the website has the answer to this question so check it out.
When the mods wake up, they're gonna be like WTF?!?! when they see these...
I already spam-flagged all 3 of them. Only one has been deleted so far.
Recently a user had completely lost it after getting question banned and he posted 3 spam answers:
10k only - No mods were on at the time to process our flags, but we mob-deleted them from the Lounge<C++> chatroom.
What is corresponding c++ data type to SQL numeric(18,0) data type?
How t...