@DeadMG No exception safety. No, it's not supposed to simply call new, it's supposed to recursively divide by 2 on bad_alloc and return the largest block the system can provide.
user784668
@Potatoswatter "derive"? On what planet a blob of bytes is a resizeable array?
Hmm, the Standard doesn't specify that it must divide by 2 and retry, but that's the intent. Simply calling malloc or operator new(nothrow) is legal, though.
@DeadMG i have read msdn link's article .But,I can not understand argument which is passed in Pair and also which is assigned . pair<int *, ptrdiff_t> resultPair
void f(int **m, int w, int h )
{
int i,j;
for(i=0;i < w ; i++)
{
for(j=0;j<h;j++)
{
printf("%5d", m[i][j]); // *( *(m + i) + j ) ??
}
printf("\n");
}
return;
}
this code is trying to print a 2d matrix
but I've a seg fault.
This has to do with the fact that you cannot compare strings with == as well as compiler optimizations.
== in Java only compares if the two sides refer to the exact same instance of the same object. It does not compare the content. To compare the actual content of the strings, you need to use s1...
It is mandated. Let me give you a reference. Under 3.10.5 you will find:
> Moreover, a string literal always refers to the same instance of class String. This is because string literals - or, more generally, strings that are the values of constant expressions (§15.28) - are "interned" so as to share unique instances, using the method String.intern.
One thing I (and probably everyone) should probably do is to go back and edit the titles of everything they've answers to something that's actually Googleable.
I've done that a few times already. I might do it here too.
@FredOverflow Yes, I've seen Jon Skeet pull that card every once in a while.
Indeed, I only browse C++ questions on stack overflow. I have just made "gimmeh-teh-code" my favorite tag, and the orange is gone. Thank you! — FredOverflowDec 17 '10 at 19:08
I do not understand what delete really does when I want to free memory allocated with new. In C++ Premiere book is written:
This removes the memory to which pointer points; it doesn’t remove the
pointer itself.
So as I understand delete must delete the value in the memory to which pinter ...
Well, I'm working on a project, in which I'm handling potentially big files, that I can't load into ram all at once, so I'm going to treat them like a CHS hard drive, and grab the data one 0x800 byte chunk at a time.
My problem is, I cannot find any functions in the WINAPI that allow me to read ...
Good evening, sorry to interrupt, I'm kind of new on Stackoverflow, could I possibly ask one of you for help? (regarding a problem I have installing Eclipse in Ubuntu)
@FredOverflow I've got Eclipse installed, just having an issue once it starts running I have an exception I don't understand, is it ok for me to link my question here?
@TonyTheLion I have the ARM for its historic value, but I think the ARM is also included in the 2nd edition of TC++PL which I've thought about buying for its historic value.
@FredOverflow A type of kind * -> * -> *, where s is a state and a is the result of computation. It has one data constructor, which is a function from state to tuple of result and new state.
I remember when you knew more about Haskell than me. You lazy slob.
Normally, when I see code for the first time, I have some intuition about what it roughly does. Not so with most monads, even the trivial stuff. It's simply beyond me at this point of my Haskell "career".
Ah, so it's available for later use. So the state monad just threads the state through a chain of computations? Sounds simple conceptionally, but the syntax looks so confusing!
I would love to take a break from the real world and learn Haskell in depth for at least one year. Maybe I'll do that when my contract at the University ends :)