Bleach 174-274, Naruto 174-220, Naruto Shippuuden 001-091, 07-Ghost (all of them), and quite possibly more. I'm kind of OCD and at some point I started renaming the files because some series spanned like 4-5 sub groups
@Rapptz Rosetta stone sortof does that. It's like an interactive exam where they put pictures up and you have to match text or sound to the pictures. But that software costs hundreds of dollars.
I wanted to make a raytracer.... couldnt get it off the ground. Either I didn't make a UI and got fed up with long iteration times. Or I'd try making a UI and get fed up because it made everything so much more complicated.
@Xeo well, it's safe. and the whole point is to add a bit of safety for the newbie. but it's formal UB to do the cast down to non-existent most derived class, so my question is what you guys feel about that trade-off
it also may teach bad techniques to someone looking at the code and just copying the coding pattern
In C++, the T q = dynamic_cast<T>(p); construction performs a runtime cast of a pointer p to some other pointer type T that must appear in the inheritance hierarchy of the dynamic type of *p in order to succeed. That is all fine and well.
However, it is also possible to perform dynamic_cas...
Hmm, I wonder - can you then use that fact and make a 'Counter' class that has no data members, but can count up to 255 with methods like Counter() { *((char *)this) = 0; } Counter::Incr() { *(char *)this)++; } etc? Is this going to be safe? Is it guaranteed to be safe? — Rollie6 mins ago
@0gravity you can change your password from a wifi connection BUT once you click "apply" you will be disconnected and must use the new password to connect to the router.
@DiscreteGenius yea that is what I thought...but I was not sure If the reset would have worked since when I hit apply it will kick me out in the middle of the reset.
@0gravity It will work. Click Apply, wait 30 seconds, then reconnect with new password. Voila! Now, after you successfully connect with your new password, you may need to wait to log back into the routers "settings" panel because you may be issued a different IP address. If you try to log in and it says that just give it 5 or 10 minutes to time out, then you can log back into settings.
Just a general comment: Downvoting a question from Johannes Schaub - litb after less than 10 minutes study is not a very smart thing to do. — Howard Hinnant14 mins ago
@Johannes: I don't see how you read that you get "copied!" printed. All I can see is "the argument is passed in such a way that the receiving function can obtain the value of the argument by invoking va_arg", nothing specific.
@JohannesSchaub-litb Well, that was my misunderstanding of lvalue-to-rvalue conversion, then.
FWIW, VC10 also doesn't print anything.
@JerryCoffin: "being a copy-constructor" != "being called when passed a non-const lvalue of class type"
@JohannesSchaub-litb: Oh, I see. You're trying to cheat. You're trying to do an end-run around C++11's triviality rules, by pretending that your class is trivial, and using this template function to somehow hijack the copying to call actual code during the copy. — Nicol Bolas1 min ago
Heh, he finally got it.
That the templated ctor wins is a big trip-up for many people.
For example when declaring a perfect-forwarding constructor.
template<class T>
C(T&&){} // oops, called when using an lvalue to perform a copy
template<class T, DisableIf<NakedSame<T,C>>...>
C(T&&){} // now it's ok
@Xeo Not just constructors -- that a templated function wins over what looks like an exact match without a template trips people up -- largely because it's counter-intuitive to the point that it just seems wrong (even after all this time, it still seems weird to me).
@JohannesSchaub-litb Well yes, but that one's obvious, since constructors aren't functions! [closed captioning for the humor impaired: please ignore this message.]
@JohannesSchaub-litb Yes -- just functions without names that predate lambdas, which are named for functions without names, but really aren't functions and really do have names, even though we don't know what they are.
@chris "one"? That comes up roughly once a month. I'm pretty sure I've voted to close at least a half dozen (though I don't recall any that were particularly funny).
@chris C++14 is pretty much expected to have minor edits to the standard itself, but mostly do a better job of specifying what's intended to be essentially the same language. C++17 is intended to have pretty serious updates to the language. They are treating the standard more like a piece of software, and following recognized, modern practices for how to update it so it keeps up with customers' needs.
@Need4Sleep Some. Are you dealing with the shader itself, or the C++ part that does the loading, compiling, linking, etc?
I'm getting word that proposal n3241 by STL was accepted. The one that turns e.g. std::greater<> (note defaulted template param) into a polymorphic functor.
@Xeo Under the circumstances, yeah, about as well as can be done (but even in the paper, he outlines approaches everybody would prefer if we didn't have to deal with backward compatibility).
However arg1 < arg2 truly uses operator<, since you ask for it. That's the non-obvious and difficult design decision imo: what if someone really wants operator<?
Other differences from my stuff is that I couldn't bring myself to name unary_minusnegate, and that I have unary_minus, assign_to, comma, dereference, subscript, call, increment, decrement, post_increment, post_decrement, construct.
@Xeo I suppose. Being generic I leave the user to choose for themselves, e.g. val(ops::less {})(arg1, arg2) if that's the behaviour they want. I should provide some shortcuts though.
long is guaranteed (at least) 32 bits. int is only guaranteed (at least) 16 bits. on 16- and 8-bit systems long provided range at a cost of efficiency.
cheers & hth.,
After two years I'm still receiving downvotes on that very short and correct answer.
of course it was partly my fault for not reading the whole standard closely at once, and noticing the use of the term "incorporated", in an obscure place
i just could not imagine that anyone could doubt it
Is there a good name for the operation that turns (f, args...) into a functor g such that g() returns f(args...)? It's not a bind imo because e.g. there is no placeholder business.
(Strictly speaking it returns invoke(f, args...) just in case that inspires you.)
Things like deferred/delayed invocation have their appeal, yes.
defer_invoke or deferred_invoke? First one is shorter but I feel like the meaning is a bit harder to grasp. The result/effect of op(f, args...) is not to defer anything, but it represents a deferred invocation, no?
You can use /ignore:4099 as a linker flag, but there's a catch. Unfortunately, Microsoft decided to make 4099 a non-ignorable warning, so you have to patch the link.exe. Sounds kinda crazy, but there's simply no other way. More details here: bottledlight.com/docs/lnk4099.html
I used HxD as a hex editor, and following the description on that page worked fine with VS10. The order is still 4088, 4099, 4105. — Andreas HaferburgFeb 13 at 14:59
What you should do is separate the BaseVisitor.
class BaseVisited;
class BaseVisitorInternal {
public:
virtual void visit(BaseVisited*) = 0;
virtual ~BaseVisitorInternal() {}
};
class BaseVisited {
BaseVisited();
virtual void accept(BaseVisitorInternal* visitor) { visitor->vis...
My NFC normalization would benefit from quick-checking first. Right now, if you pass something that is already or is almost in NFC, it decomposes everything and recomposes everything again. It becomes a very expensive identity operation.
// But I am considering this instead:
//! Move the underlying storage out
Container storage() && {
return std::move(storage_);
}
//! View the underlying storage
Container const& storage() const {
return storage_;
}