In fairness to him, often in C++ most of the errors are meaningless and disappear once you solve the real ones. Doesn't excuse not quoting any of them, though.
@MohamedAhmedNabil when most people hear "initialization", they think of the point where the variable holds a defined value. This is remarkably close to the real definition, but is technically wrong.
§8.5\11 "If no initializer is specified for an object, the object is default-initialized; if no initialization is performed, an object with automatic or dynamic storage duration has indeterminate value." § 8.5\6 "To default-initialize an object of type T means: otherwise, no initialization is performed"
Is name mangling strictly necessary? I mean: linkers now can take care of longer symbol names, can't they? So why not just use the fully qualified name instead of mangling everything to death?
§ 3.6.3\1 "Destructors (12.4) for initialized objects (that is, objects whose lifetime (3.8) has begun)..." § 3.8\1 "The lifetime of an object of type T begins when: — storage with the proper alignment and size for type T is obtained, and — if the object has non-trivial initialization, its initialization is complete."
@R.MartinhoFernandes > A value of type str is a Unicode string, represented as a vector of 8-bit unsigned bytes encoded in UTF-8. Really the only plausible interpretation
@MooingDuck Yeah, seems they mean "code units": "A value of type char is a Unicode character, represented as a 32-bit unsigned word holding a UCS-4 codepoint"
An octet is a unit of digital information in computing and telecommunications that consists of eight bits. The term is often used when the term byte might be ambiguous, as historically there was no standard definition for the size of the byte.
Overview
The unit byte is platform-dependent and has represented various storage sizes in the history of computing. However, due to the influence of several major computer architectures and product lines, the byte became overwhelmingly associated with 8 bits. This meaning of byte is codified in such standards as ISO/IEC 80000-13. While to mos...
To follow the example of The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List for C Books here is a wiki post for organization.
A tag search for "C" and "Books" returns no complete book list results as of writing this question. That search is here.
This post is to providing QUALITY books and an approximate ...
Why does this question get a pass, but I can't ask my own book recommendation question?
Can I ask my own book recommendation question in a way that is acceptable to the community, like the C++ book list question?
The issue of book recommendations has been raised before (to name a few examples); however, I'm raising it again because the problem doesn't seem to have gone away. books has over 2,500 questions, so I haven't had a chance to sort through them all. That being said, I've burned through almost 200 ...
Another guy said that this is a Clang bug. You can work it around if you change the using declaration like this
template<unsigned T, unsigned U = T>
using uint_ = integral_constant<unsigned,U>;
As an educated guess, apparently Clang does not correctly update the identity of the tem...
I have an answer based on Iterating over a Tuple:
#include <tuple>
#include <utility>
#include <iostream>
template<std::size_t I = 0, typename... Tp>
inline typename std::enable_if<I == sizeof...(Tp), void>::type
print(std::tuple<Tp...>& t)
{ }
temp...
For some vertical lines (and horisontal too, probably) the XCode has more gridlocking than QtCreator does. Can't really say why that is (for the samples I've compared it might be just the window position; but that's unlikely if you notice the problem all the time)
But on this slightly higher DPI screen (IIRC around ~130) it's hard to see without zooming in