@RMartinhoFernandes Actually, I agree with the sentiment. But I only apply to drive-by linking. If a user actively engages in a discussion on the topic his question is about (rather than just hoping for someone to find his question and answer it), I am not offended. Also, I have to be really offended to bother to actually go there and downvote the question.
@EthanSteinberg Mmm. Ok. Implementations should be able to optimize. I'd simply shun the added complexity. I mean you're gonna use bits, let's not act like we can slap a container abstraction on it, since we can't. It's gonna be a leaky abstraction, and leaky abstractions are a net loss. Most of the time
OK, shoot:
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B2oiI2reHOh4elRtTHVnNFc5am8
Tools:
Microsoft Word 2010 for the text & ->PDF conversion.
Inkscape for the figures.
Experience for the contents.
It's a work in progress, I think about three quarters into first chapter now, but I think it's quite...
Are you coming to Writers with a specific question about a specific text you have written? Great. Writers is a community of professional and aspiring writers, editors, agents, and others in the business of writing, and we would love to answer your question.
In order for us to be able to succes...
> Asking for a critique without telling us your goals isn't helpful, and we will follow up with asking for an edit and likely closing the question if you don't edit.
I just realized that since I'm storing my objects in std::shared_ptr that I can remove all virtual destructors in my class hierarchy. Then I replaced a few virtual methods with std::functions and now my class hierarchy is fully non-polymorphic. I wonder if this is a good or a bad thing :D
That said, packing away virtual calls into the only utility where they are needed (generic function objects) may be faster due to optimization the implementation of std::function, giving you no worse performance, but possibly better.
> Then there is the option with function pointers to templated functions, while holding the actual object in a void* pointer, like Boost.Function does to hide the real type of the functor.
Granted, it doesn't say it's not implemented with virtual methods.
That's a specific optimization of boost::function: if you're only calling a naked function pointer, it can store it directly into it's internal buffer memory. Otherwise, that buffer memory instead holds a pointer to the type-erased implementation.
And that's what I meant earlier: no worse, but in special cases your implementation can make some shortcuts.
boost::any is not applicable to your problem. It performs the most basic form of type erasure: storage and (type-safe) retrieval, and that's it. As you've seen, no other operations can be performed. As jhasse points out, you could just test every type you want to support, but this is a maintenanc...
You might also read that to see how to implement it for another problem.
The thing is, I'm currently experimenting with a class design based on policies and type traits etc. I worry that if one of my base components is polymorphic then it will "spread" to the derived components. Which undermines the whole idea of static polymorphism.
While using std::function may use vtables internally, it won't spread in the class hierarchy.
but seriously, they're a waste of time. One day they'll give like a million hints, you'll buy them lunch, they'll take your number etc. and the next day they're like "Who were you again?" .
in the writings, i was bit by the -INT_MIN = INT_MIN animal -- again. happily, so i could write it up. i wonder if anyone else has ever had that animal's attention?
i think, today i will have my hair cut, buy some accessories for the guitar i'm expecting on tuesday, and have some Norwegian "svele" with brown cheese :-)
^ How to change the font in Microsoft Word, demo video.
Note: that's real, not irony/comic!
I think, what sites such as SO fail big-time on is to differentiate between lack of knowledge and lack of intelligence. It's a misguided idea that detailed cookbook recipes are both necessary and sufficient to deal with the world in general. When they're actually neither necessary nor sufficient.
Anyone knows if its possible to print a range of values with a register as centre in gdb? I would like to print the value of $rbp +- some values, so that I can see how the callers and callee stack frames look like.
@GManNickG No. @jalf That syntax is giving me some strange value, I should be having the value 8 at rbp+8 but (gdb) print *((char*)$rbp+8) $8 = -31 '\341'
@jalf When I do print $rbp I believe I actually get the VALUE of rbp
@jalf print $rsi gives me 5, print $rsi+5 gives me 10
So it seems to get the value and then add to that number
@ManofOneWay what else did you expect? It's a register, and that register stores a value. If you add 5 to that value, you get a number that is 5 higher than whatever was in the register
It's only an address if you tell gdb to treat it as an address
Yes, my bad. @CatPlusPlus Yes that seems to give me the value, great! BUT the value seems strange, does have something to do with Signed number representations?
But am I thinking wrong here.. My $rbp is containing the old base pointer, so $rbp + 8, is that even the correct place where the stack frame should add the extra arguments?
Well no, that should be correct, $rbp is pointing to the address where the old rbp is stored
Let's say you go back in time to fix some mistake and succeed. Now you're in a paradoxical situation because you just removed the reason for your arrival in the past. In other news, I should be working.
If x /w $rbp + 0x18 prints the address and a value for that address, is there some way I can print an interval of addresses and values from the $rbp?
Something like x /w $rbp +- 0x18, i.e. the range from $rbp - 0x18 to $rbp + 0x18?
@jalf Well I'm far more productive in Java than in C++, mainly because I haven't used C++ that much. Since I want to learn the basic structure of a compiler and the possible optimizations to be made, I don't see the language I'm writing it in as the fun part. The fun part is to write a compiler.
@ManofOneWay The thing is, Belgium also is extremely expensive, certainly when you live in the northern part (our national figures are lowered by the southern part0.
@jalf Yeah, I know that it is always more than raw numbers, but this was really a huge difference I was suprised about :)
Probably the costs in denmark will still be higher, I won't deny that, but not so much to explain that difference. But in general we're just fucked by a government/society that doesn't really invest in modern technology (the same goes for finding investors for an it company here).
@jalf Yeah, I'd like to move to a more northern country but my gf doesn't agree :)