@RMartinhoFernandes hmm this formulation in the spec looks interesting "1 The delete-expression operator destroys a most derived object (1.8) or array created by a new-expression."
@stdOrgnlDave std::random_shuffle works fine, and does not dereference pointers, so what any of them point at is irrelevant, especially if it's not even in the range. Your problem is elsewhere. Again.
@GManNickG it says that "The new-expression attempts to create an object of the type-id (8.1) or new-type-id to which it is applied. The type of that object is the allocated type."
could it be a namespace thing? the class I want to declare friendship in and the one I want to friend to are both in the same namespace? would I have to add this name space to the friend deceleration?
@RMartinhoFernandes I remember reading a "bug" report about std::vector when allocating arrays of 0 length at one point for GCC. They changed it to not allocate anything at all in that case.
Again? "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 Google Chrome cannot guarantee that you are communicating with ideone.com and not an attacker. You should not proceed."
@classdaknok_t return null; They can't dereference the pointer anyway.
@thecoshman you have to implement the standard. If the standard guarantees that new T[0] either returns a valid pointer or throws std::bad_alloc, you shouldn't throw std::invalid_argument.
> The malloc() function allocates size bytes and returns a pointer to the allocated memory. The memory is not initialized. If size is 0, then malloc() returns either NULL, or a unique pointer value that can later be successfully passed to free().
> § 15.3 ad 9: If no matching handler is found, the function std::terminate() is called; whether or not the stack is unwound before this call to std::terminate() is implementation-defined (15.5.1).
@sehe Ah, see that's why I thought it didn't work in chat, then I see you guys do it once in a while and get confused. Just can't reply at the same time!
ok, so if look down at line 35 of this I get a compile error that I can't call the constructor as it is protected. However, the super super class (not a typo) defines a friend class, which is where I am calling the constructor from. What silly thing am I overlooking?
unrequited friendship - socially isolated, lonely, perverted classes trying to touch childrens' privates of their only friends...it's not intrinsic to the language to make these jokes. it is we who are the perverted