One of the boring, recurring problems in the C and C++ (c and c++) tags is the questions that get tagged with both languages when only one is appropriate. This is annoying to the cognoscenti who frequent the tags; it is one of the routine tasks to castigate people (mildly) for dual-tagging and t...
> When we go about using technology every single day, we don't realize that these programs were built by people who learned how to code. And if they can learn, so can anyone.
What a bold statement.
Does that work for all jobs?
> Okay so there are heart surgeons in the world, and they learnt how to heart surgeon, right... And if they can learn, so can anyone!
@fredoverflow Well, not all people can learn all things. Some people are just dumb and cannot possibly learn tasks more complex than some degree of complexity.
I am trying to create a function that tests whether a given system string is an (integer) number.
I have:
bool is_digits(String^ a)
{
int b=a->System::String::Length;
int c = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < b; i++)
{
if (a[i].IsDigit(a[i])==1) //LINE 7
{
...
A THING of beauty is a joy forever: Its loveliness increases; it will never Pass into nothingness; but still will keep A bower quiet for us, and a sleep Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
@milleniumbug But C (and C++) encourage this misunderstanding. The entire if/then/else should really be treated as a single expression, so there should be no semicolon before the else. if x then y else z;.
Of course, to go with that, if/then/else should also truly be an expression, basically like a clean, readable version of the ternary operator, so you could do things like a = if x then y else z;.
@milleniumbug Yes, it does--but sometimes I enjoy advocating for long- (and well-) lost causes... :-)
It's silly of course, but what else can I do to comfort myself after I'm foolish enough to read the news?
So, I've always preferred inheritance over composition for metadata style structures. The reasoning is that the your function doesn't have to have a ton of arguments, and its easier to address them inside the function body. I think I'm a minority in this opinion.
channel.scope_settings.condenser.na_min vs channel.na_min (the inheritance approach I like)
Another weird thought is that it should be possibly to implement inheritance from an incomplete type
@nwp At least in my experience, using Qt Creator at all is rather unfortunate. It's right at the point that it's almost good--but every time I try to use it, I run into something or other that pretty much forces me to use something else.
@nwp No, but at times I've given serious consideration to writing something new. At least from my viewpoint, it's less about doing things that are great than it is avoiding doing things that are utterly bone-headed. Unfortunately, none of the existing IDEs seems to have avoided (what look to me like) obvious mistakes.
@Mikhail I tried Clion early on, and wasn't impressed, but I'll admit I haven't tried again recently. At the same time, the speed and responsiveness of other IDEs written in Java don't leave me so impressed that I'm immediately convinced that it's going to improve drastically any time soon either.
@JerryCoffin Frankly, what the heck do you want :-) . For example, MSVC+ReShaper provides effective code hinting and rudimentary static analysis (like spell checking, not using auto enough). All of which improve code, and doesn't cost anything.
@Mikhail What I'd like (or at least wouldn't complain about): editing/debugging/etc. much like VS, but with support for g++ and Clang for the compilation, and (supported) native execution under Linux.
@Mikhail I've used Windows for years. If Microsoft could be convinced to do even a little less to ruin it, I'd be happy to stay basically permanently. Unfortunately, they seem intent on driving me away.
Its true they are scum bags, and will lead to a dystopian future when individuality is replaced with social submission. Where mankind will form an amalgamated super organism working for the interests of online advertisers and the Chinese and NSA. But, dude, 2017 ain't going to be the Year of the Linux Desktop.