so from what I've heard in this room a few times, it's better to write something like std::for_each(v.begin(), v.end(), MyOperation()) then a for loop iterating over the vector, right?
@Insilico I think that's fundamentally flawed though -- you seem to be assuming uniform distribution of mass along the forearm, but the hand concentrates a disproportionate amount of the mass at the end.
@TonyTheLion Unlikely to make a difference in speed. Then again, for_each is rarely useful anyway. One possible speed improvement though: there are implementations of standard algorithms that automatically distribute work across threads.
@Mysticial Yup. Assuming our calculations aren't completely stupid that's how much mass you would need to convert to energy with 100% efficiency to be able to conduct 2^80 facepalms.
Interviewer: How would you calculate a square root (java)? Me: Math.sqrt(double) I: What if there were no square root function? M: I'd Google for John Carmack's formula to calculate it. I: What if you couldn't use Google? M: Assuming you mean no access to the internet, since I don't happen to know how to calculate a square root, I'd ask someone... I: What if there were nobody to ask? M: I'm not a math whiz; I'd drive to a bookstore and get a book on how to do it. I: What if there were no bookstore?
While watching a clip from C++ And Beyond:
link
I heard something about problems with std::async (begining of the video), but tbh I didnt really get what the problem is. So my questions are:
1) for a junior dev is there a do this, dont do this set of rules when using std::async
2) for somebody i...
@JerryCoffin A bad mix of both I would say. People who want to lead should be the ones on the sidelines voting and the ones who want nothing more than to live their lives should be leading
Wanting to lead should be automatic disqualification for a job in politics
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think the greater good is more important than the happiness of those who lead
As for the rest, there are way too many of them to all be in politics anyway. They'd be happy cutting each other's throats as lawyers and trying to gain favor with the judges
There are a lot of performance-related questions like this:
Is ++i faster than i++?
Is i++ faster than i+=1
and so on and so forth. While I absolutely understand that modern compilers optimize such occasions and produce the exact same assembly output, I'm wondering what are those questions b...
I'm reading a book where the author says that if( a < 901 ) is faster than if( a <= 900 ). Not exactly as this simple example, but slightly performance changes on loop complex code. I suppose this has to do something with ASM in case it's even true.
Thank you for checking out the question....
hadn’t we (as a programming community) already established that null pointers should not be used except to indicate the absence of data, and to use empty collections otherwise?
yet in the current discussion on SO, everybody chimes in to say how fab it is to hide null values in code …
I have a big problem while evaluate my java code. To simplify the problem I wrote the following code which produce the same curious behavior. Important is the method run() and given double value rate. For my runtime test (in the main method) I set the rate to 0.5 one times and 1.0 the other time....
@KonradRudolph dunno, I don't recall signing anything to that effect. ;) I do sometimes use null pointers to denote (absent) optional data. Depends on the situation though. An empty collection or boost::optional might well be preferable
but if you might have zero or one objects, then a collection doesn't really communicate that constraint. It indicates that you have "zero or more" objects
I read a long time ago that:
"".equals(var)
is bad practice. But i can't remember why
and i didn't find the information about that.
I would say that is bad practice,
cause you're not knowing the current state of your variables.
Do someone know that or is it a invalid fact?
oh. In that case, no, the managed language guys love their null pointers/references way too much
I don't think there's ever been any kind of consensus that their use should be minimized, or that you should even try to establish invariants like "this object is not null"
@jalf Well, when I say “consensus” I do refer to sensible people, i.e. people who’ve published acclaimed guidelines for programming, not John Doe or Joe the Plumber.
Do you know if a namespace with the same name in the same assembly are combined? For example std namespace in #include<string> #include<iostream> Does the compiler combine it into one std namespace?
@LuchianGrigore Damn... I'm searching through the recently active performance questions. There are a LOT of "Is A faster than B" type questions... geez.
but yeah, I agree with you, and with the sensible people, that you should try to avoid needing null checks in the first place, instead of assuming everything can be null. Just saying C#/Java people in general rarely code like that
As a part of a team of developers, I wanted to ensure that a set of functions (and operators) are implemented on the custom iterators that we publish. Using STL iterator types as base types help, however due to some reasons(outside my control) we decide not to enforce STL compatibility. The iter...
@kbok right, then this paragraph from @DeadMG tuts makes no sense:
> This means that any code paths which lead to UB must, by definition, never be executed at run-time. This means that if you accidentally invoke UB which the compiler figured out at compile-time, you can end up with sections of your source code that were simply deleted by the compiler without ever telling you.
@TonyTheLion This was allegedly said by Scott Meyers: "we all know what an undefined means: it works during development, it works during testing, and it blows up in your most important customers' faces." -
I am trying to write a comparator inline for std::sort using Boost.Phoenix but this does not work, as in, it complains type 'boost::phoenix::actor<Eval>' does not have an overloaded member 'operator ->'. The comparator so far looks like this: (*_1)->getId() < (*_2)->getId()
Meme: jQuery
Originator: Unknown (possibly Ólafur Waage)
Cultural Height: TBD
Background: A Stack Overflow-centric meme, jQuery began its career early on as the answer to beat for any question that even remotely referenced JavaScript. Its popularity became so great that eventually jQuery becam...
OK let’s make this clear once and for all: conservative coding has no correlation with conservative political leaning. The two are totally unrelated, two different semantic usages of the same word.
and Yegge’s wild, fanciful speculations are nothing but a dialectic trick.