@StackedCrooked You probably need to read the rest of the thread, and take some context into account. As originally stated, it was mostly about the solutions he came up with for problems. As I pointed out, however, when the problems are pointed out, he's actually quite good at not only admitting that he was wrong, but really pushing the right answers too.
@JerryCoffin GC for type-safety seems odd to me as well. I think the point in favor of GC is that it avoid the slowdowns that are sometimes caused by RAII cleanup.
@JerryCoffin the rest of the thread, you mean the transcript? I can't find much context there.
extra item: at least originally microsoft went to absurdities to prevent people from publishing measurements of .NET performance (it's GC thing). they even included lawyer speak about it in Windows Media Player EULA. Install update of media player, or just new Windows, and suddenly no longer legally allowed to say anything about GC, effect on speed, in .NET
i' not sure why GC (apparently) does work well at server side
i think that question is like, "is there something inherent about iostreams that make them slow"? the answer is obviously yes since nearly all implementations (here excepting Dietmar Kuhl's) are dead slow. but what it is, apart from "complexity", is hard to say!
in theory they should instead be faster than e.g. C stream io
I could actually write C++ code without ever cleaning up up my allocations and just rely on the OS to free it after process exit. In a way it can be considered GC. And it would probably not cause my program to run slower. (Assuming the app doesn't greedilly consume gigabytes RAM.)
then I advanced to a Pascal version from Robelle consulting (Canadian), where dispose worked. Or was it opposite. Anyway, didn't notice any difference.
:-)
i still have a big tape with a screen editor i made, for HP terminals
Objective-C resource cleanup occurs on each message loop cycle. (Could be a Cocoa feature though, since I don't think that message loops are a language feature.)
oh, in-practice Pascal was a very good language. the de-facto standard was set by UCSD Pascal (University of California San Diego). which, incidentally, introduced the concept of a virtual machine -- Pascal "p-code" -- to the masses.
I'm starting to wonder when reinterpret_cast is ever necessary. Since static_cast can be used to cast from/to void*, and therefore also from char* to void* to T* using two cast.
@StackedCrooked for binary interop - serialization, over-the-wire protocols and stuff like that
@nightcracker never too late too join the party!
@JerryCoffin wow! starred for the analogy
@JerryCoffin what it basically comes down to is that it removes the issue of having the wrong destructor run on deletion, by making all destructors virtual by definition. That's the only 'benefit' remotely related to typesafety I can thnk of
@sehe No, this was about the fact that after you delete the object, the pointer isn't pointing at an object of the right type any more (nor at anything else, of course).
@JerryCoffin well, I can't dispute that without a source link. Though, I stand by my statement, which covers my thoughts on the matter :) "That's the only 'benefit' remotely related to typesafety I can think of"
@sehe Fair enough. I'd love to give a reference, but Google Groups is so fouled up it won't show any results at all -- in fact, it seems convinced that neither Herb nor I has ever posted a single article to Usenet.
I have a struct, let's say: struct MyStruct { bool someBoolVar; Thing myThing; etc.. } Now I need to be able to place these structs or pointer to structs into a data structure, therefore I need a common data type for both which either holds a pointer to the struct or the struct itself.
I am not sure how to properly do this..
Of course I could just add a pointer member and if it is set to 0 the contents of the struct are valid otherwise the pointer points to a valid struct, but this may be not the best sln.
@JerryCoffin used to not do twitter. Very slowly picking up on it. It work fine for informational channels (like, the local library, swimming pool and utility company) and beats reading web comics for variation
Snakes on a Plane is a 2006 action thriller film directed by David R. Ellis and starring Samuel L. Jackson. It was released by New Line Cinema on August 18, 2006, in North America. The film was written by David Dalessandro, John Heffernan, and Sheldon Turner and follows the events of hundreds of snakes being released on a passenger plane in an attempt to kill a trial witness.
The film gained a considerable amount of attention before its release, forming large fanbases online and becoming an Internet phenomenon, due to the film's title, casting, and premise. In response to the Internet fa...
@thecoshman why? objects are great for things that have cheap copy semantics. Somethings are just plain and simple not copyable - pointers (unique_ptr) come in handy there
@sehe just saying that in general, I would try to keep the data structure simpler by sticking to either just pointers or just objects. Sure there might be a case where you do need to mix them
something like std::vector<boost::variant<foo, foo*>> should do what you want, but you will also need to consider how to handle that you have no direct way of knowing if you are retrieving a foo or a foo*
if it is your own class... you could always overload operator* such you can always use the dereference operator, even on the object. an odd thing, but it could work rather nicely ... maybe
@Neil it's not that complex, the only tricky part is handling that fact you don't know if an item in the vector is a foo or a foo*, but that is easy enough to solve using a visitor pattern
but like I said, if you can just store objects or just store pointers I think it would be better, as it is a lot easier to understand what is going on
you have to use a visitor, which is basically a struct with an overloaded operator() that will take each data type you want, so you make one that takes foo and one that takes foo*
you have to use a visitor, which is basically a struct with an overloaded operator() that will take each data type you want, so you make one that takes foo and one that takes foo*
:P
depending one what you want to do with your 'foo/foo*' it can get a bit a messy
though, you basically just want to know if you have a foo* that need dereferencing, or if you already have an object right?
@Nils so... you want to store a struct of data, lets call it 'fooData' and then also some meta data, such as 'isFirstIntoStore' and 'initialLocation'. So, why not combine the two together? have a std::vector<metaData> where struct metaData{ shared_ptr<fooData> data; bool isFirst, int index };
this way you are only storing objects in your vector, so it is easy to handle. You are not copying the raw data, as you have a shared_ptr to it. And you have the meta data for where in the data store it was placed, and if it was the first copy of the raw data to be placed into the data structure
admittedly, how to work out the meta data could be a bit tricky, but I should do the job.
omg, I just refactored some C++ code with bare regular expressions:
struct WS2C_Battle_GameInfo : public PacketBase_S2C
{
+ static const ui16 ID = MSGINDEX_WS2C_Battle_GameInfo;
+
WS2C_Battle_GameInfo()
{
- wHeader = MSGINDEX_WS2C_Battle_GameInfo;
+ wHeader = ID;
so, all tales about hard-to-parse C++ syntax were a lie!
I have to say, I probably shouldn't be proud of this, but I made "Everything went better than expected." as the message logged if user attempts update and none found.
That'd mean you'd have to keep track of when users enter the room and leave, then figure out based on a timestamp what users were actually in the room at the time
You could be in the chat room for months on end, in theory, so you'd have to check that far back
Sounds complicated enough that I'm sure the guys who did this chatroom said, "fuck it, not getting into that"
Keeping chatroom history is a cakewalk by comparison, I assure you :)
Document 12-571-3570 (also entitled NASA No. 12 571-3570) is a hoax document originally posted to the Usenet newsgroup alt.sex on November 28, 1989. According to this document, astronauts aboard space shuttle mission STS-75 performed a variety of sex acts to determine which positions are most effective in zero gravity. The document goes on to report that of the 10 positions tested, six required the use of a belt and an inflatable tunnel, while four were contingent on hanging on. The document also discusses a video record of the 10 one-hour sessions in the lower deck of the shuttle, and note...
@fogbit: At the very least dig out some copy of BCB6 and port to that. But, yeah, if the coded uses BCB's RAD GUI features, it's stuck in a dead end. OTOH, despite all the bugs in BCB4, I am pretty sure that it implemented template argument deduction. — sbi2 mins ago
isn't it awful that the only way i can find to programmatically trigger a "save as" dialog for an image in a web page, with reasonable file name, only works with Internet Explorer
and Internet Explorer doesn't support html 5 canvas
i'm sure if more c++ programmers did webdusign instead of just TMP and that sort of stuff, then a solution to this problem would be readily available just by googling
it's like this: in firefox i can generate the image, but can only programmatically save it with default filename like "blahblah.parts" (using data: protocol); in IE i cannot generate but I think I can save it (using a frame and 'execCommand').
@rubenvb Many browsers do that because there's no logical reason why you'd give it any other name, but it's not the web page dictating anything. Think of it more like a suggestion
Like going to the pet store and getting a new pet, and they tell you the pet's name is Mimi... you could continue to call her that or you could name her something else. The pet store could care less what you're going to call her.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Canvas can be emulated using flash and a javascript library
So yeah, I think if you could find a way of doing it in flash, you'd be set
@Neil well a more reasonable way to emulate it in IE is to use the Microsoft xml image thing that SVG was based on. Google had/has some code that does/did that.
of course in the old days we had those *nix textual images that looked like C constant declarations. but IE stopped supporting them back in version 7 or something. i think they still worked in IE 6.
Here is a very simple Scala GUI test:
import scala.swing._
object FirstSwingApp extends SimpleGUIApplication {
def top = new MainFrame {
contents = new GridPanel(30, 20) {
contents ++= 1 to 600 map (_ => new Label("test"))
}
}
}
Every contained label is displayed exactly ...