@CheersandhthAlf oh, I get it. That sentance should have been outside the note (or in it's own note), since it has nothing to do with the note. I think that's an error.
@MooingDuck And you could have at least pasted the whole sentence: "When it was first shown on BBC Two it was nearly cancelled due to low ratings, but has since become one of the most successful British comedy exports of all time."
long longFrom( char const spec[], int const radix = 0 )
{
char* pEndOfScan = 0; // The unsafe type is required by `strtol`.
stdErrnoRef() = 0;
long const result = strtol( spec, &pEndOfScan, radix );
string const failureDescription = [pEndOfScan, spec]() -> string {
if( pEndOfScan == spec ) return
"longFrom failed: the number spec was not accepted by strtol().";
if( stdErrno() == ERANGE ) return
"longFrom failed: the specified number value is too large for strtol().";
I am not sure if that is better.
How would you guys write it?
Assuming that strtol has to be used (e.g. because compiler does not support C++11 rules for iostream input conversion)
One natural variant I guess would be a sequence of ifthrow
But that would be a special case solution, not applicable to e.g.
wstring stringFrom( NegatableInteger const x, Radix const r = Radix( 10 ) )
{
return 0?0
: x == 0? L"0"
: x < 0? L'-' + digitsOf( StrictlyPositiveInteger( -x ), r )
: digitsOf( StrictlyPositiveInteger( x ), r );
}
@ManofOneWay @sbi beats me in number of years, but I also can't understand why people willingly subject themselves to a chatter-box in the center of their home, like a sort of god on a pinnacle, serving distracting mumbo-jumbo to the worshippers all the time
@Abyx yes, that's the ifthrow sequence I meant. But I would never throw logic_error. It is intended for those situations where you'd better assert. The standard actually (for once) explains the intentions. The intentions are not good...
edit: this is now implemented.
We do a simple reverse chronological walk of the latest "action" by any user with a valid displayname in the post -- where "action" is defined by any sort of edit or comment.
So you can now @reply to editors of a post even if they haven't commented.
(and just as ...
@thecoshman Actually, I don't. I sometimes watch football, but even that is rare. The mother of one of the kids in one of my daughter's kindergarten group is an actress, and after she told me she has become the detective in a rather important German detective story series, I have watched two of those. But otherwise? Nah.
We picked up my father from the airport today, and right now he sits opposite of me and watches TV (using his laptop). From what I hear, nothing appeals to me.
Whoo! This is the first use of an (experimental) new Stack Exchange feature in which you can answer your own question http://serverfault.com/questions/390493
Since Stack Overflow began, spontaneously sharing what you've learned by posting a question and immediately answering it has been allowed and even encouraged:
if you have a question that you already know the answer to
if you’d like to document it in public so others (including yourself) ...
Now there's a checkbox reminding people that this is a perfectly reasonable way to put up notes of problems you've solved
@ManofOneWay Cosmetics, jewelry, a book, a movie (DVD or cinema), a visit to some wellness temple, a play at the theater, a self-written poem, a night out (dinner?), a night in (bed?), a book about pregnancy, a pair of baby shoes, the long-awaited repair of the dripping tap, a bunch of loving words (for a change), you drop all the other lovers you have... There, that was my brain storming about this.
@johnathon You fail to see the point. He always shows up here with such twisted pieces of code, and pretends he doesn't understand it. It's somehow satisfying to him to see you guys struggle to catch up with his analysis.
@sbi i really could care less what his intentions are right, and i don't struggle with his analysis, the whole point of his loop was to make an endless loop. It was ill formed. End of story.
@JohannesSchaublitb first glance says (1) in the middle of the for loop, creating a variable always evaluates to true, resulting in an infinite loop, and (2) in the increment part of the for loop j is out of scope, it shouldn't compile. Second glance wonders if that's valid syntax, and if variable creation actually always evaluates to true, even when it's a bool assigned false.
@AnthonyWilliams: No. On i=++i I think it's your answer that is wrong. 5.17.1(N3126=10-0116) says that the value computation of the assignment expression itself is sequenced after the assignment. ++i is equivalent to (i+=1) (5.3.2) and therefore its value computation is sequenced after the increment. The main assignment in i=++i is therefore sequenced by transitivity after the increment assignment and the expression is valid. The very fact that someone claiming your C++ experience can get this wrong also confirms (albeit anecdotally) that my rant on complexity is not totally foolish. — 6502Mar 7 at 20:30
@Xeo sure it does, lessthan/equalto/greater than all at once
@sehe returns a bool
@Xeo a map of std::string is slower than could be, because when when it finds a match, it first checks less than, and then checks not less than. This compare function would allow both at once, giving a (tiny) performance boost
@MooingDuck Remember to do the iterator checking for strings of different lengths/end of input conditions. You can know what to expect (could be more efficient with nullterminated strings, but you'd probably want to expand std::mismatch)
@MooingDuck Two lines is a myth. You can't have it if you consider all (edge) cases ^
I am in the middle of writing some code to retrieve the amount of lines in a file and then to take each line and store it into a vector, the function written to do this works fine however when I call the function the vector does not get returned to the new vector that I am trying to pass the returned vector to
Is there something wrong with this? vector<string> vectors = ReadIn(fille,lines);