@RMartinhoFernandes it causes it to actually produce a variable with that type and set it. the compiler shouldn't make any assumptions about the side-effects that might have.
@Atif those are fine, there must be an element in the second array with the qID set to mqID. Does QuestionStickyLog have: default constructor, copy constructor,move constructor, assignment operator, move assignment operator, and (possibly virtual) destructor?
@stdOrgnlDave C++11 Feb11 draft: § 1.9\1 "conforming implementations are required to emulate (only) the observable behavior of the abstract machine as explained below."
Although in the written English language there is no standard way to denote irony or sarcasm, several forms of punctuation have been proposed. Among the oldest and frequently attested are the percontation point invented by English printer Henry Denham in the 1580s, and the irony mark, furthered by French poet Alcanter de Brahm in the 19th century. Both of these marks were represented visually by a backwards question mark (in Unicode: ). Using LaTeX, one can display it by including the graphicx package, and then using \reflectbox?.
These punctuation marks are primarily used to indicate ...
@TonyTheLion Nope. Just an observation I make as the years pass. I have a knack of missing jokes like that, by just looking at the presented info, not the intent of the presenter.
Besides that, I obviously love to take things literally, or the wrong way
I call it laterally thinking, but in reality it's probably just an excuse for dealing with the fact that my brain comes up with different logical 'first responses' than most people
here's the thing I don't get: a compiler should detect template recursions pretty quickly. it should have a counter that starts at 0 when a "base" template starts compiling, and increments each time it instantiates another template. then it can hit its internal limit even if you "trick" it
@MooingDuck Sure. Because the compiler vendors didn't build their template systems for arbitrary instantiations. Those instantiations take up actual memory, for example.
you don't want the compiler to ICE because it hit the virtual memory limit
@RMartinhoFernandes the point is that all of the tested compilers have al imit and don't use a specific easy method to check it that would stop them from doing this
@MooingDuck "copy constructor,move constructor, assignment operator, move assignment operator, virtual destructor " seem to be more diffucult then i imagined ... but m learning them one by one through google
you can re-use the copy/move constructors to implement the assignment operator, and most classes which require value types don't need a virtual destructor
if every website has unique IP address, why when I type my website's IP address, it just redirects to my hosting's webpage? It's shared hosting how it knows to show my website then?
The Domain Name System (DNS) is a hierarchical distributed naming system for computers, services, or any resource connected to the Internet or a private network. It associates various information with domain names assigned to each of the participating entities.
A Domain Name Service translates queries for domain names (which are easier to understand and utilize when accessing the internet) into IP addresses for the purpose of locating computer services and devices worldwide.
An often-used analogy to explain the Domain Name System is that it serves as the phone book for the Internet by tr...
what i am doing is .. there is a master document with all the questions .. i put them in a vector and pick one question at a time ... compare it with the user questions in the stickylog and if the question is present, give it appropriate score ... otherwise give it zero
@Atif put print statements all over that function, print the elements in the array all over the place. We can't see the data, nor the calling function.
this 2nd for loop always finds the same tuple in the QuestionStickylog ... for every process .... (1,2) then (2,3) then (3,2) and then (4,1) .. same answer sequence for all the questions
ohh i ahve print statement all over in the program ...
You may say that man with a dream that hasn't come true is a looser, but it's not true, a man without any dream is a looser for not having something to thrive for.
There is FileStorage class. I can write to files: ` FileStorage fs; fs << "key" << "value";` How to do the same, if I have `fsp` variable that is pointer to `FileStorage` ?
@Collin, @MooingDuck: Sorry. It worked... I've tried again with just *fsp and it works!. Now I've tried with simpler example, but then when didn't work, it maybe was an error with passed type of value
@SethCarnegie I believe -static makes it pick static libraries for any lib specified after it in the command-line. I really recommend reading what the manual says, as GCC likes to be crazy with the flags.
Regarding algorithms such as sort, just define wrappers as you like them.
And if you don't like to define individual wrappers, then define a macro
#define ALL_OF( container ) startOf( container ), endOf( container )
With suitable startOf and endOf function templates this works nicely for both...
Your last example, ...
Food* food1 = dynamic_cast<Food*>(apple1);
Apple* clone2 = f1->clone();
... won't work, even with the speling eror corrected. You need the cast the other way:
Food* food1 = apple1;
Apple* clone2 = dynamic_cast<Apple*>( f1->clone() );
Apart from that,...
I'm beginning to wonder if it doesn't work like the C pre-processor.... process template and write it out. ok, there's another template? process that and write it out. repeat ad infinatum
I wish people would stop using things like "Animal: Person: Man" or "Food: Fruit: Apple" or whatever to show simple inheritance hierarchies. the fact is that sometimes what is intuitive for some is counterintuitive for others
@Abyx I know of that, I love it, and I advise to use it whenever I can, but I explicitly said "that exact same purpose" of wrapping the calls to startOf and endOf
@stdOrgnlDave i think, saying something is "trivial" when you have not understood it at all and can't offer a solution, that's the mark of incompetence
@stdOrgnlDave you can, but it involves C++11 argument forwarding, or non-trivial techniques in C++03. too involved for an SO answer two years ago. and not something to recommend as a general technique for SO readers.
I wouldn't want std::sort(vec) to work. Conceptually, sorting a vector doesn't make sense. Sorting a vector's data does. So something like std::sort(vec.all()), where all() returns a range delimiting all of it's data.
not really an improvement if you're looking to just be able to pass one argument. but it's not like there's that many standard algorithms if you want to overload them the first way
@MooingDuck well it was a GOOD answer, because it was correct, and novel. Now no more fresh SO readers, and in particular googlers, will see that answer. That's sabotage. Also the whole discussion following was interesting. Nobody will see that either, and that's plain sabotage. Fucking morons. I'm so angry.
@MooingDuck silly, but you can make one for an array really easily just by doing that. etc. etc. once you have that template, you use the original function overload template I suggested and bam-wham, ya-got a std::sort that'll take just about anything. and how hard is it to replace std::sort with other algorithm names and glom em into a .h file? I'm beginning to think I should do this, I never thought it was this big of a deal that people wrote papers and had flamewars over it