@Mysticial If you decide to go with letsencrypt, I recommend to look at dehydrated as an alternative to their python-client. It doesn't require you to install some python thingy on your webserver.
@BartekBanachewicz They are for control flow, just not routine control flow.
meh, I don't find anything inherently objectionable about using exceptions for success-path control flow, I mostly object on a surprising-behaviour basis rather than a "that's totally broken" basis
@Morwenn I'm like 12 answers away from c++ gold badge but at this rate it'll take me like 3-4 years to get. 99% of C++ questions these days fall into the following buckets: above my pay grade, garbage.
if something that hands you out iterators is an iterable, what do you call something that produces a range? cc @user703016 you’d think I would have started on this bikeshed earlier
@Shubham # is the stringizing operator, so from the looks of things, it's printing out the names, then the values of some arguments. For example, if you had a = 1, b=2, c=3, and did trace(a, b, c), that would turn into __f("a, b, c", 1, 2, 3). Presumably __f would then print those out. (Side warning: I've never used the stringizing operator on a variadic macro parameter pack. Offhand I'm not sure whether that's really "a, b, c" or `"a", "b", "c".
i.e., whether it turns the whole argument pack into one string, or turns each argument into a separate string. More likely that latter, now that I think about it. In any case, it's taking parameters, and producing both their names in string form, and their values.
@LucDanton Okay, let me rephrase: I'd guess gcc just doesn't fully understand decomposition declarations (or structured bindings or whatever the official name is this week) yet.
i'm a self teaching c++ programmer and I would like to know how/if its even possible to do this. I want to speed up my program by passing data into my graphic card instead of my normal ram. for example:
int main(){
for(unsigned int ddr3; ddr3 < maxNum; ddr3++){
;;;
}
//cloc...
Using Turbo C++ to teach these days is not just stupid. It is neglegence and/or incompetence. Those teachers are actively harming the students by teaching them that outdated crap. — Jesper Juhl13 mins ago
@Mgetz Could be. Could also be MicroFocus. I believe a few specific things were sold to other people, then MicroFocus bought up the remaining assets. Hard to be sure which bucket the "Turbo" trademark (assuming there was one) fell into.
@Mgetz You've been able to get the Microsoft compiler for free since long before VS Community came along--for years it (the compiler, but not an IDE) was in the Windows SDK.
@Mgetz it's an Indian thing, the administrators cover their ass and technical incompetence by providing their students with what reassembles a C++ education.
I would suggest you to not use Visual Studio as it is an absolutely waste if you want to start programming in C. For writing code in C all you need is a compiler and a text file. All you need is quick introduction to GCC, how to debug your program with GDB and the first pages of the GNU make manual. The moment you build your program manually instead of the "magic" that happens in visual studio you will feel much better. — малин чекуров9 mins ago