@thecoshman Because it isn't a dick comment. It's dick beliefs and opinions and he knows that is more important. So, no, he didn't resign over the single comment :)
Refactor common, private code in the relevant TU. Seems fine to me, except that using *this during construction really is error-prone. Depends on what openContents is doing. Also, references.
An oblate spheroid is a rotationally symmetric ellipsoid having a polar axis shorter than the diameter of the equatorial circle whose plane bisects it. Oblate spheroids stand in contrast to prolate spheroids.
It can be formed by rotating an ellipse about its minor axis, forming an equator with the end points of the major axis. As with all ellipsoids, it can also be described by the lengths of three mutually perpendicular principal axes, which are in this case two arbitrary equatorial semi-major axes and one semi-minor axis.
An everyday example of an oblate spheroid is the shape of conf...
@sehe Ah. Meh, it's pretty weak. I think the WTF is that the guy forces the http:// prefix to immediately remove it (and I don't want to know what happens if you pass in something starting with https://)
@sehe I didn't have this bookmarked. I just remembered the story (and how could you ever forget it?) and googled "pissing on spider and all over bathroom".
@sbi About your meta question. One difference between the auto-protection vs. manual protection is that auto-protection only kicks in when there are 3 mod-deleted answers. I use manual protection when a question is getting low-quality answers that are still technically answers, even though they might be wrong or really bad answers.
"For a variable which is manually placed into memory by the program, then the destructor must be manually called by the user. Failing to call the destructor before the memory is freed is undefined behaviour." - is this like placement new?
Hey, I could use some help with string streams. No debugging on them devices, and I got stuck with my code scrambling the device. :(
To cut a long story short, I need to provide an output string stream used for logging with a static buffer, because we suspect memory fragmentation to be the culprit for the problems we are seeing.
@sbi You might consider a strstream instead -- officially deprecated, but still present. The other possibility would be to use a normal stringstream, but define your own stream buffer class that just uses a static buffer, and fails when/if it overflows.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The issue is that this must be doing something wrong, as it wrecks the machine within minutes.
@JerryCoffin I definitely wanted to avoid using the old string streams, and I wanted to avoid writing my own stream buffer, as it's such a hassle. I thought pubsetbuf() would be a get-me-out-for-free card. But I must be doing something wrong.
I'm writing a subroutine that needs to write data to an existing buffer, and I would like to use the stringstream class to facilitate the formatting of the data.
Initially, I used the following code to copy the contents of the stream into the buffer, but would like to avoid this solution as it c...
@sbi I don't think that removing one single allocation would do the job of solving memory fragmentation issues. You'd want to get a fragmentation-free allocator like object pool or memory arena, I think.
@sbi When you're just doing a fixed/static buffer, I don't think a stream buffer will be such a huge hassle. I'll admit I haven't actually written one like this, but I've written a few others that weren't all that bad, and they were doing things I'd have expected to be more complex.
@sbi yeah, considering it was you, I made sure to read the answers and made sure they looked like they might actually help you before I posted it here :)
@TonyTheLion I don't. Logging is the only way to get any information out of this damn box. If this fails, the whole device might just as well... Oh. Damn. You got me there. Sigh.
@StackedCrooked Comparatively, programming doesn't pay that well, now does it? There's a lot of jobs that will pay better. (unless I get paid really shit?!)
Is my usage of assert as the left operand of the comma expression valid standard C? That is, does the standard allow me to use assert as an expression?
Yes, it is valid as the left operand of the comma operator can be an expression of type void. And assert function has void as its return typ...
@DeadMG Look, I have this test app that does nothing else but log a few messages each cycle. We're talking 20msecs/per cycle here, and this starts out with eating <20% CPU, goes up to 40% after a while, and ends up eating the damn machine. I would never even consider switching to static buffers if I had any idea what else could cause this.
For each log message, this string stream buffer is created, expanded (I checked and this implementation starts out with 512byte), copied when I call str() (no SSO applies), and then everything is discarded. (This used to be half a dozen reallocations, I am now down to two or three.) I could very well imagine heap fragmentation to be an issue.
> I tend to think of being a programmer is very similar to be a bumble bee; you get up in the morning, you fly around in nature, look for the most beautiful flowers, and when you find them you collect them, take them home, press the flowers, put them between pages in a book, and later, you can show the flowers to your friends and neighbors.