@Neil The bit logic is taken care of. I have a function int getPriority() and wondered whether I should change the return type to uint8_t. However, it is a bit problematic when printing.
Basically it's a value in the [0, 3) range. No need to use bitset.
In practice Net16 is sufficient. By consistently using the NetEncoded values for incoming network data I can assume that built-in type are always host-encoded.
So I have tried to find out about the validity of those flags in the iPhone room, but I got lost in a maze of "message" on the level of "hi how r u mate ?" "5n & u ?" and still have no idea what they are about. I am now tempted to validate those flags just because I am so annoyed about those guys.
@BartekBanachewicz Clang is proud of decent diagnostics. This is clearly a fubar'ed diagnostic. They don't like that, and probably will fix that, as the problem is bound to be more general.
@rubenvb You kids are so spoiled nowadays! How is that "totally messed up"? That's the kind of error message we had to put up with for decades — only the formatting wasn't as nice.
@rubenvb Oh that. What's so surprising about it? I mean, the compiler got confused, after you threw it a subtle, but effective syntax bomb. So? Also, it points at the first column of a non-existing line, pointing out the semicolon missing there. Isn't that obvious? (And I have never looked at clang's error messages.)
@sbi no it's not. The error has absolutely nothing to do with the problem. If you can't see why a compiler writer should fix that, please leave us spoiled kids with our toys and keep staring at GCC 4.2's template errors for another half hour.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Uh oh. Has nobody told you that? Damn, so I am the one left to break it to you, right. :( Well, here it is: As a robot you have never been a kid. You are manufactured Yes, that's true. No, really! What memories? Ah, those. Well, they put 'em in afterwards. Yes, I am sorry, but someday the truth had to come out, right?
GLaDOS, short for Genetic Lifeform and Disk Operating System, is a fictional artificially intelligent computer system in Valve Software's Half-Life video game series and the main antagonist in the video game Portal and remains a main character in Portal 2. She was created by Erik Wolpaw and Kim Swift and is voiced by Ellen McLain. She is responsible for testing and maintenance in Aperture Science research facility in both video games. While she initially appears to simply be a voice to guide and aid the player, her words and actions become increasingly malicious until she makes her intenti...
@rubenvb like i said, the 'magicness' of main might call for a 'courtesy' diagnostic. But as a parser it is doing precisely what you'd expect: parse an expression, which declares a variable of type int and subsequently followed by an initializer expression
@rubenvb This is probably due to the nature of error recovery: parse has already failed, and it wasn't clear what to expect. So instead of { it suggests simply ; to end a simple decl like int main;?
@BartekBanachewicz I think the parser already backtracked out of the possible initializer list and subsequently mentions, that instead of 'garbage' it expected (most likely suggestion) the end of declaration: ;
@rubenvb It does so by printing the file name, then the line it failed at, and an indicator for the column. And it did exactly that in its second error message — only the line was nil.
@sehe I tell you to look at a new finding, to which you agree, and you act as if I'm commanding you to do something you don't like. I don't follow your reasoning here. Either you're interested in this and keep discussing it, or you stay silent and I'd shut up after that.
@rubenvb Yeah, and if this regression was the error message, I even would have agreed with it. But you kids first file a bug and then start to create a repro...
Wikipedia explains the automatic rename detection:
Briefly, given a file in revision N, a file of the same name in
revision N−1 is its default ancestor. However, when there is no
like-named file in revision N−1, Git searches for a file that existed
only in revision N−1 and is very simil...
@BartekBanachewicz When calling a function that uses a template, and when you do foo<type>(). When "type" is void can I omit the brackets? Like this: foo(). It works for what I'm doing.
Why do people use foo as the name of an arbitrary method?
I mean, what was going through the head of the first person to use foo? "Hmm, we'll call it 'method'.. nah.. too generic.. how about 'foo'.. ah yes, I like the ring of it."
The terms foobar , fubar, or foo, bar, baz and qux (alternatively quux) are sometimes used as placeholder names (also referred to as metasyntactic variables) in computer programming or computer-related documentation. They have been used to name entities such as variables, functions, and commands whose purpose is unimportant and serve only to demonstrate a concept. The words themselves have no meaning in this usage. Foobar is sometimes used alone; foo, bar, and baz are sometimes used in that order, when multiple entities are needed.
The usage in computer programming examples and pseudo...