I gave you the answer on last question: defining variable is not the same as using it. Two different actions – in first you may want to USE a namespace member – but that should not influence the using part. PS. Size of the array is not needed, though I am giving it. — AllCoder1 min ago
> The declared type of an array object might be an array of unknown size and therefore be incomplete at one point in a translation unit and complete later on; the array types at those two points (“array of unknown bound of T” and “array of N T”) are different types.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I suppose the array decay is the one way to make use of such arrays. One could declare a pointer (or range) instead of declaring the array as incomplete though, even if the semantics are not the same.
@rubenvb Ah, you mean to pick an item. Yeah, VS behaves the same. Ctrl+space forces it to pop-up (well, "forces" as in "convinces it if it's not already dead, or something else").
The OpenGL standard pages states that the OpenGL is callable from C and C++. The API, however, is of course in pure C. As the OpenGL uses for example a lot of enumerations, using enum-classes (from C++11) could greatly reduce number of errors and make the API more feasible for beginners. It could...
Why do we still use structures and typedefs (or usings) for metaprogramming?
Look at the code in this question - Inferring the call signature of a lambda or arbitrary callable for "make_function" :
template<typename T> struct remove_class { };
template<typename C, typename R,...
@Cicada the percentage is just an additive number. If it was 21%, and you wore two items that increased your critical chance, which would be calculated first?
@rubenvb I can't make sense of your notation. Previous what? Why not use multiplication notation for a multiplicative group? E.g. 1 * 1.5 * 1.3 is unambiguously identical to 1 * 1.3 * 1.5.
@Neil And games tend to be more intuitive than correct. They're games, after all. You won't and shouldn't find something like this in say, calculation programs.
Well, anyway, percentages multiplication is much harder to do ingame than addition. In fast paced games, sitting with a calculator would be really annoying.
is crit not normal a % chance that a hit does bonus damage? so if you have 10% crit, but 25% hit change, 25% or your attacks will hit, but only 10% will actually it. ie, out of a 200 attacks, 50 will hit and of those 50, 5 will be a crit hit?
@Neil I think it is a lot easier to think of crit as the chance of a hit (not just attack) doing bonus damage. the alternative is trying to think you have a 20% hit chance, and a 5% crit chance, meaning 75% of your attacks are misses
@thecoshman Against a boss, I think that's fair. If you can kill in 3 hits or 1 crit, then it gets exciting to hit. Otherwise you're doing round after round of repeated damage
@Neil yeah, you can still have it so that three normal hits would take out the boss, but if the first one was a crit then it does bonus damage and takes him out
though, how you present it to the user does not have to be the same as how the system works
This video is so wrong. It shows pictures of the actor named "Andrew Koenig" who died a while ago. Some of the pictures turn out to be the C++ Koenig. Oops.
@sehe No need to watch it to answer that question. If the Andrew Koenig is among the pictures, and if there's pictures of a man with a cat, those two will necessarily correlate.
Google test question: I have a test which I would like to run with different input data and obviously different results to test. How can I avoid repeating boilerplate code?
This doesn't seem to be a good book, judging from the table of contents. "Chapter 27: Standardizing on the Standard Template Library." is definitly atleast 25 chapters too late. From the excerpts, he also declares variables and assigns them afterwards, which is bad style in C++. Overall, I'd not recommend it from the few things that are publicly available about the book. — Xeo1 min ago
Comments?
hm, doesn't seem to render comments a second time :s
From the linked page: "You’ll discover ten ways to avoid adding bugs to your programs, what pointers are and how to use them". Holy crap: The #1 way to avoid adding bugs to your programs, is by avoiding the use of pointers! — sehe38 secs ago
@sbi I remember this always being a problem with dr dobbs articles. Sort of concluded it was my use of Opera. I'm surprised the problem affects more people