@CaptainGiraffe I had this one question that worked really well for finding students who thought outside the box. "How do you calculate the average of more numbers than you can possibly read into ram or otherwise access".
actually most of the questions with the tag sorting get downvoted to death, so it's hard to find interesting unaswered questions that I can actually answer ^^'
I found it funny when more 6 million pounds have been used in prince william's wedding when tax payer could have used it for, say better cladding for the burned down apartments in which 79 people were killed. Apparently royal wedding is a bigger news in the US than the unrest in Jerusalem.
@Morwenn I'm fairly sure that the const is only relevant to make compilers create bad code due to optimizations. It should be equally UB without the const.
@Morwenn I'm not sure. Taking the buffer and putting your objects in there is no problem, but eventually the function will return and destruct the array which is UB because it accesses dead objects. I don't know if there is some exception for char arrays or something where it is fine.
Propose std::leak(object); that prevents the compiler from destructing a stack object :P
I guess you could make the array, trivially destruct each element, pass the array of dead objects to be used by the algorithm and then placement new a bunch of new objects before going out of scope. But that is super silly.
Actually I'm not sure you that would even be valid. Not sure if it is a problem that the objects that were automatically created and will be automatically destroyed are not the same, they just happen to be at the same place.
Implicit lifetimes would still allow to replaced std::uninitialized_move by std::memcpy for types that are trivially movable and trivially destructible
@nwp that does sound too silly to implement anyway :p
Wait, you don't need to trivially destruct the elements, you can just clobber them. But I guess you do need to make the objects valid again for destruction.
a few broke, some are ultralight for multi-day hikes, some are big and bulky for car camping, some for easy setup at night because late arrival and only stay for 1-2 nights
I have homeless fantasies, nobody has called it a psychological illness yet ~_~
also places with best sceneries usually either does not have any permanent accommodations or in rare cases, do, but cost at least $250-$1000+ a night
tents can be more hygienic in certain ways - because I am the only one using my sleeping bags and only people who are already close to me and I use those tents
while as even 5 star hotels are shared by many many people, so ...
they can't clean every single inch, and blanket inside is not cleaned after each guest
I wash my sleep bag and hose my tents and dry them before or after each use ... I shouldn't but I do. I am a hygiene freak.
most diseases on humans are transmitted by humans
I am not saying hotels are unclean, because most good hotels are, just that if you share stuff, by going to restaurants or bar for example, you are more likely to catch a flu I find.
I doubt they do, they put pictures of streets, highway and obscure places and ask people to click on all the pictures with cars ... twice. Then not remembering your IP and do it all over again next time you trying to start a session even though you have not restarted your browser. Is this what you can intelligent detection?
server provider does it with their login page and I reckon it's one of the dumbest robot detectors I have ever seen