@GMan shouldn't the foo function be called with foo f; f.pop()? or does your language change that to pop(f)? eg. allows both syntax for the same thing? I think i saw a starred post about sth like that
Right, so when you say pop(f), it looks up all the available pop functions, finds two, sees both work as candidates, so compiles each to see if it can eliminate one.
The problem is that (I don't think I mentioned it, sorry left you in the dark) both could work.
Should that be a "cannot resolve" error, or should there be some ordering method?
@Xeo I think all functional languages that are used at scale must have some support for state. Otherwise it is very hard to do 2 letter things any general purpose language must be able to do -- IO, UI, etc. (somebody on internets said so)
@sbi: No, I dare not look down upon anyone trying to learn English (or anything for that matter) I am not a native English speaker myself English is not my first language.
@Jalf : Hello..I am in favor of it too but the context of how it is used matters..and I don't know how can that context be controlled or evaluated because it would then require moderation
I'm fine with bringing sex up if it's done in a mature manner, but the reaction to requests for it to be put aside or for the room description be changed was both rude and petty, and now recent talk of it has been more in jest than in seriousness.
@jalf It seems you haven't followed the discussions on that meta question of mine. I envy you. ("I found it appalling that you pretended the discussion was merely how pornography and sex related to bandwidth and global climate change, when you knew full well that in context it did not start out that way, and in terms of words and messages sent, less of the conversation was about that than was about sexual humor.")
@Tony: Its a pre employment medical test...Its pretty common I guess...They make sure you don't leave them hanging with just "Hello" when you are supposed to write "Hello World!"
@Als funny eh, how you can assume something is a certain way all around the world, just cause you have it where you live. I'm sure there's things we do around here that aren't done in Asia
And pre employment medical checks are usually in place for almost all job positions..So..But perhaps If you are in one of the scandinavian countries health infrastructure is better there and hence the checks not needed
@Als I'm not sure (never had a reason to look into this), but I have the distinct feeling that it would be unlawful here for your employer to request information about your health status. I think this would be alike them deciding whether to employ you based on your gender, race, religion etc., which is forbidden.
I have a typedef of double or float which is called scalar, eg typedef double scalar; How can I check later weather scalar is a typedef of double or float?
Basically, if you do is_same<int, int>, the compiler sees that your specialized version fits (template <typename T> struct is_same<T, T>{};), and so it picks that over the non-specialized version (template <typename T> struct is_same /* note, no specialization here */ {};).
@Tony Shame, because the hairy problem is in C++03. They intended for what I said above to be true, but eff'd up the wording, so technically it doesn't have to be contiguous or null-terminated.
That said, any real implementation is contiguous, so much so that given the changes in C++0x and the original intentions, it's fair just to say they are always contiguous in C++03.
I'm not as sure about the null termination, I'd need to check. But you can str.push_back(0) and use &str[0] to mimic C++0x, pragmatically.
But in both cases beware, here comes the wild card! Your C function may shove a null-terminator somewhere midway through the string, intended to truncate it. But the std::string container will have no idea.
So in the end, unless you're positive it won't attempt to change the length, it's best to provide a buffer then shove it back into a std::string.
(By the way, if the C function simply failed on const-correctness, using const_cast is fine.)
(That is, if the argument could have been const char* but they made it char* instead, like C often does, feel free to const_cast the const off; it's only undefined behavior if modifications are actually made.)
You may ask a question, but I am going to sleep now. :)
I have read many posts asking the question on how to convert a C++ std::string or const std::string& to a char* to pass it to a C function and it seems there is quite a few caveat's in regards to doing this. One has to beware about the string being contiguous and a lot of other things. The ...
So basicallly asking on whether someone should learn C++ after java is off topic both in SO and programmers... where is it on-topic? "Seasoned advice" (i.e. cooking.stackexchange.com)?
@Tony & @Xeo: Got out much too late, made up some time on the way, but still arrived 15mins late at work, left a dozen people waiting for the scheduled meeting, had the dev head speak very serious words to me. It's one of those days, you'd rather stayed in bed...
@Model That is a linker error (LNKxxxx) and it is saying that somewhere in your code (void CImageToolDoc::OnBitsSep) you are using a function DibBitSeparation that returns void and takes some arguments and is correctly declared, but that the linker is unable to find the symbol
Translating that a little bit more into English, it may mean one of a set of things: you did not provide a definition for the function, you did not compile the definition, or you did not linked the object file / library that contains it
void foo(); // declaration
int main() {
foo();
}
That will trigger exactly that error, now if you defined foo in the same translation unit, or in a different one and linked them together, then the error would go away
I have this piece of code that prints the content of a directory using Boost.Filesystem:
class Shell {
private:
const string& command;
const path& firstPath;
const path& secondPath;
public:
// constructor
Shell(const string& _command, const path& _firstPat...
@Tony When you try to bind a const char[] to a std::string, a temporary is created, The class refers to that by a const std::string. The temporary dies at the end of the fully statement, leaving the class to refer to a dead object.
@Tony Go for it, if you like. I won't ever say anything against grumpiness. :)
@Tony No. Look at Erik's answer. Shell shell("ls", Path) passes "ls" to const std::string& _command, which then passes it to const string& Shell::command.
@sbi: About the "enable desktop notification" link we were talking today, I just noticed there is some funny business about it...In the Starred Feeds, try clicking once or twice on "show 3 more" or that kind of link...and then sometimes that "enable desktop notification" link shows up...I noticed because for me by default it is visible and clicking once or twice hides it.
@KonradRudolph Yeah, I was contemplating adding this to your answer, but wasn't sure whether it's fair to extend it by almost 50%, then got distracted, and now James has already explained it all. But I'm a sucker for lists and enumerations, and if some comprehensive answer came along which listed easy-to-remember rules of thumb in list items, it would get my vote. <nudge/>
@Tony Well, in some cases it might be the lesser evil, which is why I wrote "if possible", after all. But I think one's POV as to which evil is the lesser might considerably change after a few nights debugging such issues.
Well, maybe if I'd make it a CW, so I wouldn't be stealing their rep directly... Anyway, I got work to do now. Feel free to poke me about this later on, when you haven't gotten anything satisfactory.
@sbi: I just came in...Didn't read through ...I usually starr after reading transcript, when at ease.....About the that thing being browser specific you might be correct..just check on Firefox and it doesn't show up
ok so I have multiple projects in my solution, I have project A depends on B, but now I need to get a header from B included in A without having circular reference... any idea?
@Tony If it would only be files, I would suggest forward declaration, but for projects... Could you try to split a 'common' part (I don't know if it is such a good idea)
Yeah, a project is just vistual studio's (rather rigid) way of compiling related code to a single output. There's no magic in it, and it doesn't change how the language works
I normally add footnotes by putting a number in superscript, then adding the footnote following a ---, and preceding it with the same number in superscript.
Uhm... on the starred comment about singletons... there are those of us that don't agree, but are afraid to standup. I mean, a friend of a friend once said that they can be valuable.
@David: Compose a Pro-Singleton argument. Post it (somewhere, not sure where). One of two things will happen. Either anti-Singleton'ers will learn something, or you will.