@sehe stackoverflow.com/questions/11483976/… it's original content isn't that good, but it's a valid question - I was just about to update the question with the full definition and use of thread_guard in the book he was referring to
the "going through hell" was that it was a pain in the arse to find that book at my "public library".
@rubenvb I didn't go to the public library, I went to the "public library"
is that hard to read in-between the lines? where did you think I turned when I didn't have access to a book I would be interested in (to see what OP was talking about)? Do you really think I sat up from my chair and went outside?
How much do using smart pointers, particularly boost::shared_ptr cost more compared to bare pointers in terms of time and memory? Is using bare pointers better for performance intensive parts of gaming/embedded systems? Would you recommend using bare pointers or smart pointers for performance int...
sounded too much like misguided existential angst about threading. Unless that is your authentic shared fear, I don't see the value in raising questions because someone else was fretting it
Possible Duplicate:
Is it possible to write a C++ template to check for a member-function's existence?
I need a way to decide if a template class has some member function, so that I can call different specializations for a functions. For example, I have the following classes:
clas...
@sehe I just thought that it might be a question that will appear in the future
@JohannesSchaublitb the other question wasn't explicitly stated to contain only c++03 answers, even though it was asked during a time when c++03 was the assumed language the question now have many c++11 answers - therefor I do think it's a duplicate
Is there any hack I could use?
If your only goal is to not having to "explicitly" specify the type twice you could use decltype to provide some aid in your quest:
class Obj {
std::vector<int> v1 = decltype(v1) (2,3);
};
Also remember that typedef/using is a great way of not having to ...
even you should be satisfied with that answer, right?
@JohannesSchaublitb if it's not a duplicate all answers with c++11 in mind should be deleted from the question I consider to be the original, is that what you are saying? :-/
I vote for a middle way, let the question be written the way it is (it is/and was about a problem in c++) and let the answers regarding the new standard find their way up
what does it take to make my program accept command-line arguments with spaces?
Yet-another EDIT: I have just recognized that the program is started from a shell-script that sets up the environment for the execution of the program. As there are some external libraries, LD_LIBRARY_PATH is set to...
@refp i doubt it, unless the OP was right. I don't suppose he is (why would a thread suddenly become unjoinable? I can only think of: if it has been detached in the mean time. In that case, there is a clear violation of separation of concerns, I feel)
state() ios::fail/bad/eof flags. None is is.good(). You can set streams to throw exceptions instead, though: is.execption(flag_mask) IIRC
So I read a (text-) file line by line, where each line contains two int values. What I currently do is using an fstream then calling std::readline until eof. For each line I also need to split the string at the space pos and then put these two strings through an istream to convert them to ints.
@sehe it's a matter of preventing an exception from being thrown, something the author of the book the original OP was talking about wasn't thinking about
@refp wow. I was amazed that you get a system_error when pthreads are not available/linked, but this tops it. I'm starting to dislike std threading support
@Mysticial In that sense, many accepts require many answers. And yes, that would require you to answer to every odd question, which tend to get accepted quickly, not on the best merit
@sehe I'm usually not the fastest answerer, even though I'm fast typist.. or well, I probably would have been first most of the time if I only gave one sentence answers.. that isn't the case (or at least I try not to)
When I give sizeof(a), where a=13.33, a float variable, the size is 4 bytes.
But if i give sizeof(13.33) directly, the size is 8 bytes.
I do not understand what is happening. Can someone help?
Thanks.
Those are the rules of the language.
13.33 is a numeric literal. It is treated as a double because it is a double. If you want 13.33 to be treated as a float literal, then you state 13.33f.
13.33 is a double literal. If sizeof(float) == 4, sizeof(13.33f) == 4 should also hold because 13.33f is ...
Does this code always evaluate to false? Both variables are two's complement signed ints.
~x + ~y == ~(x + y)
I feel like there should be some number that satisfies the conditions. I tried testing the numbers between -5000 and 5000 but never achieved equality. Is there a way to set up an equat...
@refp That's the good kind, I guess. At any given point in time the site will have an average number of say 20-40 active repwhores (number skewed by my imagination only including tags I monitor...), with an extended groupd of 'near-rep-whores' (would-be, or just-not-very-active-now). They all burn out in 6 months to a year.
that was the longest answer I've read stating.. well, what could be written as; "floating points without any extra notation is considered to be of type double"
and yes, I will probably "burn out" the minute I start modeling abroad again, start going to too many parties and forgetting the geek on the inside.. it happens from time to time
Yeah. I'd be surprised if you kept up a 7 accepts a-day stride, though. I think that becomes more feasible ones you already have a considerable rep (which makes askers just a little more likely to accept an answer early)
@refp Get a job in the business. Hard to forget about jobs
@sehe during my first week I had roughly that kinda strike (which could be explained by "low rep user writing long answers, reward that mother fucker")
@sehe I do work as a software developer as well, but that doesn't make me spend time on SO