oh, so the concept is, if there is a pointer it would be memory leak but if it is stack memory, it will be deleted automatically, am I getting it right?
There is a concept of automatic memory management and RAII. All C++ STL containers manage memory automatically.
The only way you can break automatic memory management is to use pointers and references or use any 3rd party library which breaks automatic memory management.
It's not related to where the data is stored. What's important is having automatic memory management support at every level of type hierarchy.
Memory being heap or stack is orthogonal to automatic memory management.
Regarding const int& foo, more or less you can split the variable declaration at the & or * symbol. Everything to the left can be in any order at all, anything to the right has a strict order.
@Borgleader They got killed in the AVX512 single-threaded tests.
Now there's two AVX512 benchmarks floating around that review sites are starting to pick up. (y-cruncher and 3DPMv2) The new chips got killed in both of them vs. Skylake X.
@Borgleader Yeah, I agree. And no I'm not getting one. Still putting off my next laptop for one with AVX512.
I bought my last laptop this time 3 years ago thinking I'd be wasting money because I'd be replacing it a year later with a Cannon Lake one. Nope, definitely got my money's worth.
Though the lack of memory capacity and lack of cores does make it painful to do any on-the-road coding.
Question for USA citizens: Does an alien have to pass some sort of knowledge test to become USA citizen? Are the questions available anywhere? I just want to compare to the test we have here for the same purpose.
@Mysticial Ever had this problem, x370 + Ryzen 1600 isn't posting. Not showing any boot error lights. Any idea how to do a BIOS update when the machine doesn't post?
@Mysticial Does seem like it wouldn't be that tough to have a "safe mode" in the chip to let it boot up in some minimally usable form, even with an ancient BIOS. Big problem I can see is people getting it that way, failing to install the update, and then complaining that their brand new machine is stupidly slow...