@Tony I live in a world that doesn't make any sense. And by now I've absorbed enough Internet to either die from the exposure, or develop some funny mutations.
Is it somehow possible? Suppose it's only for user convenience, as one could always type out the real type with template<class T, T X>, but for some types, i.e. pointer-to-member-functions, it's pretty tedious, even with decltype as a shortcut.
@Xeo You may now share the costs for my new monitor with @Piotr.
@JohannesSchaublitb In front of the old lady?! You pervert!
@Xeo Would you please stop distracting @Johannes! He's managed to draw out a 90secs scene over half an hour now, and I'm almost dead from the suspension!
I've tried the C++0x initializer-list implementation of my G++ version but it outputs only empty lines.
#include <initializer_list>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
int main() {
std::initializer_list<std::string> a({"hello", "stackoverflow"});
for(auto it = a.b...
@Johannes: We're all used to you drawing out those little stories over an unchaste amount of time. (I remember the story where you lost your key.) But this is really stretching our patience. What was the point of your story about that old lady?
hm. are lines in a textfile always at most 1024bytes? on windows this seems to hold true, but is that really so? and for other OS too? or is that just the text-editors?
A declaration introduces an identifier and describes its type, be it a type, object, or function. A declaration is what the compiler needs to accept references to that identifier. These are declarations:
extern int bar;
extern int g(int, int);
double f(int, double); // extern can be omitted for...
(No, I'm not here. I'm already in bed. But thanks for asking.)
The problem is if I define my own type, class foo{}, and foo happens to have a function pop, say: pop(T)(T other) { /* foo-specific code */}, it can't resolve the overload without attempting to compile both, if I do foo f; pop(f);