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00:03
posted on June 02, 2021 by Scott Meyers

Last June I blogged about how electric vehicles (EVs) were luxury goods. I'm gearing up to write a post discussing what's changed in the intervening 12 months, and it occurred to me that last year I asserted that an 80%+ price premium for EVs over their internal combustion engine counterparts put them into luxury territory, but I didn't justify the claim. Doing so would require knowing what lux

Does Scott Meyers not like electric cars or something?
I assume he retired and now spends his time larping scenes from Jorge Louis Borge's "House of Asterion", which is made even more lamentable by his insistance on spelling it as "Aristeia"
00:55
:v
01:30
@Mgetz What's your thought on this?
 
4 hours later…
05:50
Because you worth it!
 
2 hours later…
07:52
Hey all, I'm a C++ newbie. I know Python and Java decently well, but C++ is a bit difficult for me to get the hang of, mostly the pointers and memory allocations/de-allocations
Can anyone mention a good resource for getting up to speed with that (which ideally doesn't treat me like a kid and start by explaining what are data types and that C++ has int, float blah blah blah)
08:46
Got this, thanks to a user on the C++ Questions and Answers chat: stackoverflow.com/questions/388242/…
09:14
Morning
I want to drive that thing
doesn't look like it has great suspension
or a good top-speed
nwp
nwp
Or a tight turn radius.
Or great fuel efficiency or that it has low noise and doesn't shower you with the exhaust. But it's probably still fun.
nwp
nwp
It does look kinda fun indeed.
perfect for camping
 
2 hours later…
11:07
@Morwenn Best vehicle to do this:
If you want to get your passengers off really quick 😂
nwp
nwp
Then invest in a magic wand
11:42
Looks fun x)
11:53
@TelKitty my experience with acquisitions is that they inevitably the kill the company even if the actual corporation lives on. E.g. anyone that matters leaves
@TelKitty Seems Like WWII Vehicle
 
1 hour later…
13:08
The one I shared at least is a WWII vehicle ^^
 
1 hour later…
14:24
@JerryCoffin Yeah I read that. I wondered if it also affects things like whether shared_ptr uses atomic refcount or not. Also when linking the preprocessor isn't involved. So it seems like -pthread should also be used for compilation. But then again, I don't think our buildsystem adds -pthread for the individual files, never did, and never noticed any problems.
 
2 hours later…
16:45
@StackedCrooked Yeah, I think for most code, the only part of what it does that matters is that it adds -lpthread when linking.
posted on June 03, 2021 by Herb Sutter

This special Guru of the Week series focuses on contracts. Now that we have considered assertions, postconditions, and preconditions in GotWs #97-101, let’s pause and reflect: To what extent does a failed contract imply “UB”… either the Hidden Dragon of Undefined Behavior, or the Crouching Tiger of Unspecified Behavior? 1. Briefly, what is the difference … Continue reading GotW #102 Solut

 
1 hour later…
17:58
Do you guys think its strange that user defined literals must match a few specified signatures? For example, all floating point goes through long double...
or even if you need std::int64_t as the argument..
18:15
@Mikhail integer literals are allowed?
Seems like https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/user_literal has a list of 13 options?
unsigned long long int
you would just cast it...
(-12)_something
yeah I guess it somehow works
19:18
@Mikhail it should be able to work because the conversions are defined AFAIK. The float ones are of more concern as they could cause numerics issues
yeah, those darn 80 bit floats
@Mikhail 64bit on most platforms, I don't think GCC supports it anymore except on x86-32
I stand corrected...
but why....
20:15
maybe 80 bit floats are easier, and involve less registers? From what I recall when you used floats in the linux kernel you hit fault handler that had to push stuff. Maybe you need to push less stuff in the 80 bit case...

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