hi does anyone know if you = delete a certain c'tor will code for it also not be generated? as in some minor savings in memory? I have a codebase where the old guy had a bunch of "static" classes where he deleted the default c'tor, but also literally every other c'tor, which is pretty redundant in my eyes, however if deleting them has some savings in memory then it might be somewhat worth it.. thoughts?
I know that, but at the end of the day, the code is compiled to binary, do you think deleting a certain c'tor will actually prevent code from being generated?
When you're being pressuring to release something before hammering out all the bugs, you're going to have bugs. Is it your fault? Not if you bring it up before releasing
I have no doubt that their license says that the software works without any warranty of any sorts etc
Legally, not possible.. Should it be possible? i think not. There are far worse damage software can do, like planes crashing or medical devices failing, and they go through a lot more rigorous testing (even if it sometimes fails).
if your shitty code gets customers hacked and you knew about it... then GPDR says yes
The fact that From Software writes garbage code isn't new btw. This is the same company that couldn't be arsed to fix the 30FPS frame limiter they put on all the Souls games because they did crappy code on console.
I think the biggest advantage of boost is not that it's the greatest library around code-wise, more that it's an all-in-one, and compiling it is much simpler as a result
There are more factors at play rather than just usability, another factor is "will it be maintained for a long time, or abandoned by the github dude who wrote it as a side project"
frankly speaking I d rather have a library with perfect and clear documentation that requires a bit of an effort to setup instead of the opposite, ie a library you can install in 1 minute but has shitty documentation
@A.Smoliak I make medical software, but it's arguably the least critical type. If the medical software fails then the patient is surrounded by doctors who will save the patient immediately. If, say, train software fails making them crash into each other then you end up with a lot of injured people with no doctors around.
That said ISO 62304 does exist.
One would say a game crashing isn't that bad, no serious harm done, but remove code execution exploits actually do significant damage.
Nah. It's things like "this device just measures the pressure of the front wheel. If you think that it tells you if you are standing on the ground or flying, well, that is your own doing."
Not a good example. There are better ways to tell such things. It works better in the medical area.
But really, if you screw up peoples' computers with your software there should be consequences and putting "use at your own risk" in a prominent place really isn't sufficient.
Though it seems like most people would blame the one who found the exploit, not the company who published it as part of a game.
Nah, you make sure of that beforehand. "You can't pay for the medication of your terminally ill mother, but we're willing to help you out. For a price."
And by the time she dies they have so much proof of you breaking the law that they don't need any more leverage.