> I've been following the excelent Coursera course on Functional Programming Principles in Scala led by Martin Odersky. This was not my first encounter with Scala as I've been using it including for my day job. In parallel, because I felt the need for a Javascript replacement, I've been learning Clojure too, because of the excelent ClojureScript.
> I've fallen in love with both and I can't really pick a favorite. For what is worth this document represents my (rookie) experience with Scala, being complete yack shaving on my part, or you could call it the intellectual masturbation of a fool.
@sehe And you're not gonna have that with the update either. The VC++ blog article mentions that the CTP only updates the compiler, not the standard library.
@JohannesSchaub-litb that is great. but i had an idea. because the most common use i can think of for such a variable is like a with statement in Python or using statement in C#, and isn't it possible to abuse just a little macro machinery + perhaps a double for loop or something, to do that?
I would not do this personally but just come up with unique names. But if you want to do it, one way is to use a combination of if and for:
#define FOR_BLOCK(DECL) if(bool _c_ = false) ; else for(DECL;!_c_;_c_=true)
You can use it like
FOR_BLOCK(GlTranslate t(1.0, 0.0, 0.0)) {
FOR_BLOCK(GlT...
I like how the MSVC team managed to deliver basically no new C++11 functionality in VC11 or the two years leading up to it. And now in what, 3 months or so, they're able to deliver a pretty major list of new features
I tried to make a replacement IO library, but didn't think some parts through, and tried to make it mostly backwards compatible. Ended up lousy, confusing, and slow.
@DeadMG At one point they said they were going to update MFC. AFAIK, they've never retracted that claim, but I'd be surprised to see it happen either. I suspect if you really pushed them on it, they'd say "yes, we did that. It's called .NET"
@jalf I've never been able to understand how that could be. What's so expensive in terms of performance in ref counting? It's just a few additions and subtractions, no?
@TonyTheLion atomic increments/decrements every time you copy the pointer, and you have to check the ref counter every time you dereference the pointer
but I think the bottom line is basically that with ref-counting you have to do something extra both when reading and when copying objects. With GC, those operations have zero additional cost
but in return, you have to do a GC every once in a while, but that's so rare compared to how often you dereference pointers, that it can afford to be pretty costly
overall your performance might be better than with ref-counting, but you have no way to predict when a GC might run, which will stall your app for a moment
user406009
Is there any way to use runtime polymorphism (virtual functions) without using dynamic memory? Having every instance being contained in a std::unique_ptr seems rather wasteful.
For the purposes of polymorphism, the important part is just that you refer to it by pointer or reference. Where the object is actually located doesn't matter