> Otherwise, if T is a specialization of std::initializer_list<E>, an initializer_list object is constructed as described below and used to initialize the object according to the rules for initialization of an object from a class of the same type (8.5).
@Xeo In a very crude, totally not accurate way, I would describe it as static initialization of variable-length arrays. But some of those need to be zero sized :(
@Xeo There is this struct that is supposed to have an array in it. There's no fixed size for that array (I could precompute the maximum and waste tons of space, though). I need an array of those structs.
@sehe There's a big difference between "Learn enough German to get along", or even "Be fluent in German", and "Enough German to study complexity theory."
By the way, if @Xeo gonna show up today again... After I accepted my offer from Intel, I got a call that informed me that this small game company would pay me 50% more. <headdesk>
@jalf: i added clarification to stackoverflow.com/questions/13455139/…. i think maybe you simply didn't understand the technical stuff. but if so please refrain from lashing out out of ignorance.
I know that on a raw pointer, the two are equivalent, and I know that both can be overloaded for user-defined types, and I know that when they are overloaded, you can't be sure that they are equivalent. Which was what the answer you downvoted said
And I see nothing in your clarification which justifies that downvote either
Looks to me like exactly what I said: your habit of downvoting correct and useful answers because you would've written it differently or emphasized a different aspect
@FredOverflow Um, fun but amateurish, I guess you could say. ;)
some terrible speakers, and a few things that weren't planned out very well
but lots of fun, interesting talks and nice people
@jalf no it didn't (and doesn't, it's the same still) say that. and you know that. "if you have sweaty hands, touching the high-voltage fence can be dangerous"
that's implying that the danger is less or non-existent without those sweaty hands
it is not like it is TRUE except in perverted literal interpretation
...
so now you have clarified that you understand the technical, why the personal attack?
@sehe well thinking about it while watching the potatoes so they don't boil so fast, i struck me that simple rewrite with out of class member function definitions might fully explain the CRTP. then probably inheritance does require complete type. i must have followed this chain of reasoning many times before, and repeatedly forgot it...
Well, what rocket would that be? If I'm not wrong EASA (or something) has many successful launches behind it's name. Some of my college/highschool friends actively contributed to the on-mission equipment and software
> while watching the potatoes so they don't boil so fast
@Cheersandhth.-Alf lol
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Sounds so apt for something Curiously Recurring
I don't follow the news in astronautics. I just contributed a few facts I did know about. Sorry if actuality made my helpful mumblings irrelevant :) As ever
> It turned out that the cause of the failure was a software error in the inertial reference system. Specifically a 64 bit floating point number relating to the horizontal velocity of the rocket with respect to the platform was converted to a 16 bit signed integer. The number was larger than 32,767, the largest integer storeable in a 16 bit signed integer, and thus the conversion failed.