it's also not immediately obvious what bit a specific hex literal sets. you first need to think about it and translate it to binary if you aren't working with bits all day long
i can understand his concern with inheriting ctors though
half the reason that you don't see UDLs in the Standard library is because the new initializer lists cover that aspect pretty solidly for most STL types
that doesn't, however, make them useless for other aspects
i intentionally misinterpreted you. I perceive it as a weird thing that some see something evil in the term "C/C++", instead of just reading it as "C or C++".
@Johannes: Because the difference is more than significant enough to warrant completely different answers
if you said, "I'm starting off in C, how do I allocate memory dynamically?" and "I'm starting off in C++, how do I allocate memory dynamically?", you would see completely different answers
you may as well say
I'm starting off in Prolog or Assembly, how do I allocate memory dynamically?
> The fundamental storage unit in the C++ memory model is the byte. A byte is at least large enough to contain any member of the basic execution character set (2.3) and the eight-bit code units of the Unicode UTF-8 encoding form and is composed of a contiguous sequence of bits, the number of which is implementation-defined.
> The least significant bit is called the low-order bit; the most significant bit is called the high-order bit. The memory available to a C++ program consists of one or more sequences of contiguous bytes. Every byte has a unique address.
If you say "I've been programming in C/C++ for a long time. What do you recommend I learn next?", then the statement containing "C/C++" is relevant and not redundant
@DeadMG no C++ does not completely supersede. Programming for example a linux driver is much easier with C than with C++. And providing a C header is impossible with using C++
@DeadMG not true at all. you don't know designated initializers, compound literals, tentative definitions, don't know that you can assign to non-void* from a void*, don't know about so many other things
@DeadMG Not necessarily. You can write perfectly idiomatic C++ without ever touching function pointers and void pointers, whereas they are essential in C.
void** ppv; struct* ps; ppv = ps; // error in c & c++ ppv = &ps; // error in c++, correct in c ppv = (void**)ps; // the forced cast how hides the level of indirection error
Oh c'mon! Give me a break. COM is a C way to hack OO onto C. What does it feel like using this from VB? ObjectPascal? Bad! But it's C++' fault that it's bad from C++, too?!
@ChrisBecke I have already explained why this argument is bullshit. After I did so, you came with COM. Then I explained why I think that argument is just as bad. And now you're going back to square #1?!
I have said it before: I'm pretty much grown up. I have a job to do. I have kids to attend to. My tests just finished. My time is too precious to argue with people who argue for the sake of argument and ignore counter-arguments. Have A Nice Day.
@FredOverflow Unit tests. NUnit just finished. Of about 300 tests, 3 failed. And I considered all of them far removed from the changes I made. :( I will now have to look at the issue. I need to check this in tonight.
You are arguing redundantly. void* is meant to be unsafe when used from c++, because it is a C construct. What is pointless is C++ making it more unsafe than it needs to be, when it is needed for interop via C style interfaces.
@FredOverflow Didn't you know? I failed the Turing test, utterly. Several times. I'm a bot. I'm here to patiently answer the same arguments over and over. Except I fail at that, too.
"I'm the fume that fires the engines of failure."
(Now who knows where that one's from? Hush! Don't you google!)
@FredOverflow Close enough. OMG, it's "fuel", not "fume"! I have mis-quoted MG! He's going to haunt me for the rest of my life! (Now there's a scary thought...)
@PiotrLegnica Yeah, that's what falls under "learning": which questions will yield lots of rep for a simple answer. However, I feel like I have yet to learn a lot about that...
anyway, if you get downvoted, try to learn from it. It may be that your answer was wrong, or misleading, or it's possible that it was badly presented, or with a bad attitude. Of course, it's also possible that it was completely undeserved. That happens too
That reminds me of a quote I once read... "Sex is like air, you don't notice its importance unless you are not getting any" Well, reading from someone with 50k+ rep that rep is not important...
@TimLutherLewis Well, here's a suggestion: Post a link to that crappy answer here, so we can all find it and downvote you. That will make sure that you never forget what#s wrong about that answer.