So I bought this canvas tent, and the seller sent me a few messages because colour is slightly different to the one on the advertisement - asked me about the outer layer, then about the inner layer. I have already told the seller to ship the goods over if it's only the colour that is slightly different
It's so awesome to get to see values of variables in the debugger when hitting an assertion fail instead of "optimized out". I forgot what that was like.
C# changes its mind after 20 years: "we think that the default meaning of unannotated reference types should be non-nullable". https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/dotnet/2017/11/15/nullable-reference-types-in-csharp/
@nwp Yeah, that's not supported. Sometimes it does print a graceful notice, sometimes it just barfs
@nwp I'm never that motivated to look at the inner bits of implementation - mainly because they're not the bits that run in real life scenarios. But yeah, that incantation happens for me on last-ditch debug efforts. About once a year.
@Morwenn In fact the first overloadable new operator was part of ISO C++...
@Columbo precisely, that sounds like exactly the sort of scenario to employ a tool that let's you express such a kind of tree grammar directly
Oh. I didn't see this before, but *&io_service_1 is definitely wrong. It's a tautology. You may have (uselessly) meant &*io_service_. But boost::bind supports shared_ptr<> just fine, directly — making it a hell of a lot more safe too) — sehe2 mins ago
This guy post annoys me. He posts a code literally riddled with big problems and blatant bugs, proceeds to not-read my answer (at all?) and repeat false assumptions to defend his code. Wtf.