@EtiennedeMartel Yeah, not enough traffic to need owners around much, I'm afraid. I'm kind of torn. This Lounge is too slow to be interesting, but the Discord Lounge is so busy it's overwhelming for my little brain...
@EtiennedeMartel I suppose that would help. But I'd probably have to spend a while being overwhelmed to figure out what parts to mute. Maybe I'll feel ambitious enough sometime soon...
@JerryCoffin The collection would be the collection of phosphorescent pixels, but I don't really want to collect them, just apply <algorithm>s on them.
@JerryCoffin Yeah in C++17, I thought it was deleted and added to zombie names in C++20, but apparently they haven't done that yet
Despite a tendency to remove library features from the standard quickly enough, thanks to the zombie names mechanism which allows implementers to keep providing them
IIRC, Mys mentioned about looting in his area. Soon after, he has disappeared. So let's make a fairy tale out of it instead, let's say ... maybe he met a mermaid, and they lived happily ever after on a tropical island with porcelain clean sand and crystal clear water?
Also my does my bluetooth headphone keep on making random calls on my phone??
I must repent - I kept on having this image in my head: a pale slim Asian dude being carried away by some dark hunky dudes from the looting crowd. Please, Goddess, forgiving me for having such an evil thought!
Fortunately I only maintain a small library without a lot of dependencies ^^
So far there's been rough edges with GitHub Actions though: no anchor support in the workflow YAML, no Valgrind on MacOS for some reason (brew install tells me it's a Linux tool, but I could run Valgrind on MacOS just fine with Travis CI), no built-in [ci skip] support
Just finding a way to list my configuration in the build matrix was more painful that I want to admit
Conan is pretty good at that with conan-docker-tools
It downloads a bunch of Docker images for several configurations and tests your package in all those environments
I can't delete some of my old experimental Actions runs from a workflow that doesn't exist anymore because they're attributed to a "ghost" user for some reason
It seems like a classic dynamic programming problem. You calculate the score for a[i] by i + score(a[i+1]). The trick here is to put the result of your score functions into a lookup table so you don't need to compute the same scores multiple times.
Though in this instance you can do it even easier. Since you can only move to the right you can go from right to left and fill the scores without having to do more than 1 step for any fill.
Here's the absolute minimum to encapsulate a unique_otr<T[]> in a first-class value-type that models a RandomAccessRange:
#include <memory>
template <typename T>
struct dyn_array {
explicit dyn_array(size_t n)
: _n(n), _data(std::make_unique<T[]>(n)) { }
auto begin() const { return...
Did I miss something obvious existing?
Replaced my answer with the simpler and more complete takes. Thanks for making me go a step fruther. It's actually simpler (reinforcing the mantra: choosing the right abstractions leads to simplicity) — sehe1 min ago
@Morwenn He may have also proposed something similar, but I'm pretty sure Puppy did propose something on this general order--a halfway point between array and vector with fixed size chosen at run-time.
@sehe If you do, then you probably want to read the original proposal (not the one with just the wording) since it contains an example of such a array class
@sehe Both are non-standard in different ways haha
@sehe Rechecking, I was pretty clearly mistaken. Puppy submitted four proposals, but none of them was what I was thinking of. For anybody who cares to look at them, they were N3572 through N3575.
Yeah, although one reason I don't like the enum class stuff is that you gotta prefix everything with the enum name? So enum class direction {north,south};. In this case, north & south become direction::north, direction::south. This will rapidly exceed my typewriter's ink.
@A.H. No biggie. Point at hand is that its using would let you bring all the names in a Record (its equivalent of a struct into scope, so you could do using foo; a = 1; b = 2; c = 3; d = 4; to get the equivalent of foo.a = 1; foo.b = 2; foo.c = 3; foo.d = 4;