if-else-if statements on lines 82-89 are redundant a) We dont have line numbers, b) that snippet is 49 lines long c) i dont see any nested if/else — Borgleader32 secs ago
@Borgleader Think of how it would look if you used braces everywhere: if (...) then {...} else {if (...) then {...} else {if ... and indented accordingly.
if (foo) {
}
else {
if (bar) {
}
else {
if (baz) {
}
}
}
Of course, even the people who otherwise insist on using braces on all controlled statements don't (at least normally) in this case, but logically that's how it works out--each if is nested inside the else clause of the preceding if.
@JerryCoffin I know how it can be structured, because (and heres where I get shamed...) I'm pretty sure actual nested if/else's cant always be represented as a chain/ladder (unless you resort to gotos or overly complicated boolean expressions)
Also, as I mentioned in the comments, considering the snippet was shorter than advertised it was possible the if/else in question was accidentally left out of the question.
Indeed, all the conditions are redundant: use an algorithm :)
Live On Coliru
#include <iomanip>
#include <map>
#include <iostream>
namespace {
using Threshold = unsigned;
using Rate = double;
static Rate constexpr BASE_COST = 10.0;
std::map<Threshold, Rate, std::greater<> >
So, it's official. Christopher Pisz is what we call "East Indian Deaf" - he only hears what he wants to hear:
Sigh. It's ok. I'm glad the problem was solved, and your question is much better without the code I reviewed. Did you catch my message the other day? I'll delete my answer soon since it interests no one. — seheOct 30 at 15:46
I'm going to delete the answer now. I reckon Q&A processes will filter out the problems.
Sorry, I meant hook up the local repository to a UI (something like GitLab's UI). So say if I commit something in my repository, I should be able to see it in that UI.
I'm honestly not sure what you're asking. Instead of putting stuff up on GitHub, I decided to keep the code local. But at the same time, I wanted to make use of git to version control my changes. I'd just like to be able to have an interface to my repository, kinda like the one github.com gives.
@DemCodeLines The "But at the same time, I wanted to make use of git to version control my changes" is ridiculous. Git IS that interface. apt install git, done
That's what I am asking about, I was looking for a specific one: GitLab. But it looks like that's a complete suite in itself and requires me to push changes to its server (instead of just picking up changes from git directory and displaying them).
Nice competitor to GitLab. I was looking for something that didn't require its own server/database and could just read off the ".git" inside the repository folder, but I guess no GitHub/GitLab/gogs - like thing exists for it
@DemCodeLines GitKraken is supposed to be okay. I understand the aversion to the terminal interface especially with really long diffs. But the patching and rebasing mechanisms are really quite good with the command line
As I said, it's not really about the git commands. I'd be using the terminal to commit, push, branch etc. anyways, just felt a UI would be quicker and easier when trying to quickly view file history, commits, logs etc.
another day, another news about amazon will conquer australia ... same news for 5 years ... ffs, pregnancy only takes 9 months, building a house usually takes a year
Glasses, also known as eyeglasses or spectacles, are devices consisting of glass or hard plastic lenses mounted in a frame that holds them in front of a person's eyes, typically using a bridge over the nose and arms which rest over the ears. Glasses are typically used for vision correction, such as with reading glasses and glasses used for nearsightedness. Safety glasses provide eye protection against flying debris for construction workers or lab technicians; these glasses may have protection for the sides of the eyes as well as in the lenses. Some types of safety glasses are used to protect against...
I'm back to the living! Or virtually living. Or whatever you call it when you finally got a replacement power adapter after stupidly leaving it in some bus.
I am currently working on a program that requires a function to figure out array values and then stores those values in arr1[], which has an unknown size and is calculated within the function. It then passes back the entire array along with the size of the array back to the main function. Using...
Yesterday I tried to make an etchant with vinegar + salt + peroxyde. Not sure yet how effective it is but the reaction is pretty fast. Yet it still didn't eat a 30cm copper wire of AWG10 in 24 hours
One thing that would be cool is to use conductive paint to copper coat a PCB instead of etching it
>>Static builds of Qt with Microsoft Visual Studio 2017 (through Update 2) do not work and will likely crash at runtime. This is believed to be a compiler bug and therefore an update from Microsoft is required. See
@Mikhail That's not a long time. They do a fucking update like every other day.
Every since VS 15.3, Intel hasn't had a working compiler since they have a longer release cycle than VS and the primary goal of VS is to make sure ICC doesn't work with it.
@Mikhail Even ICC 17.5, which they've advertised as working with VS 15.3 does not actually work with VS 15.3.
@Mikhail It's probably gonna be a while before ICC will ever "work" again. It's clear that MS and Intel don't talk at all. And now that MS has sped up their release cycle so much, Intel's game of catch-up which they've played for years isn't going to work anymore.
They will need to find a way to integrate with MSVC without being broken on every single update. And it's clear that MS is not going to help them at all.
@Mikhail Both. There is definitely nothing to lose by getting rid of potentially competing products that rely on MSVC anyway. Secondly, the state of their compiler is so bad that they arguably want to fix their own shit first before they care about others.
For the past 5+ years, I've had relatively little issues upgrading GCC and ICC. But MSVC seems to have significant breaks and performance regressions on every other release. And now these breaks are happening between updates as well.
IOW, they probably don't test their compiler anymore. They just push out every change and an update and wait for the users to tell them what's wrong with it.
This also means that there will never be a stable version of VS on this new release cycle.
@Mikhail They advertise having a code generator that generates hundreds of millions of test code samples to test against. Clearly the test coverage of it wasn't very good.
Since I manage to break it with an existing 500 LOC program. And broke it in about 7 different places with my 400k LOC pi program.
Speaking of ram, I think there's somebody (or group of people) out there just scalping all ram. Sure, there's a ram shortage, but there can't be that many people after the $2000 high-end enthusiast ram...
@milleniumbug With MSVC, long double was 80 bits on the 16-bit versions of Windows, but they switched to long double being 64 bits as soon as they went to 32-bit versions of Windows.