@TheShortestMustacheTheorem In this case, no, it wouldn't. But there are circumstances in which ++i is/would be faster than i++, so it's generally considered a good idea to use the prefix form when possible, and use the postfix form only when you really need to.
I am practicing pointer and array manipulation. Here it is:
int B[2][3] = {
{1, 2, 3},
{4, 5, 6},
}; // array of array of int
void BFlatten()
{
int *p = *B; // pointer to int : first row of array of array of int
int *q = B[0]; // pointer to int : first row of array of array of int
int *r = &B[0][0]; // pointer to int : the address of the first cell of array of array of int
// Double Loop
for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++)
{
for (int j = 0; j < 3; j++)
cout << p[3 * i + j] << " ";
cout << endl;
}
// Single Loop
for (int i = 0; i < 2 * 3; i++)
@TheShortestMustacheTheorem My immediate advice would be to not bother. It's much less a matter of understanding, and mostly a matter of being meticulous in tracing things through the code. But, if you really insist on fiddling with things like this, feel free to figure out what the following bit of code prints out, and only then run it to see if you figured it out correctly:
@TheShortestMustacheTheorem It can use a negative index, but it's not like Python, where a negative index works backward from the end. It just works like usual, indexing from where the pointer points to.
@Morwenn I am, but I've established a date/time suitable for paperwork purposes, to keep government bureaucrats happy.
It's like a kid's fake ID, but in reverse.
Getting more painful to establish ever generation though. Used to be all I had to do was move 100 miles down the road, give a new name, and my new identity was established. Nowadays, it takes almost a solid hour of hard work to forge papers for a new identity.
that's basically what's happening, people didn't plan their allocations well. Whereas MS isn't afraid to make the xbox's and let them sit in a warehouse if necessary
a lot of companies they expected lower sales during covid but the opposite happened, and some companies didn't lower their allocation and were able to ride out the shortage because contracts guaranteed fab capacity for them
shipping issues might have been a thing but that's would still mean their product got made, only but delayed in shipping
@Mgetz I can imagine, they also bought a bunch to put in their data-center, so they could shift some of the inventory between cloud and retail as necessary