@thecoshman Maybe. I never saw vodka as the kind of drink you get "on the rocks". It's ideal as a base for other drinks (which I don't consume, considering that's for ladies).
@thecoshman Distillation just removes other "stuff" (mostly water) so you're left with a higher percentage of alcohol. Until it ferments, you don't have any alcohol, just sugar water.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So you're saying people would let their own ignorance get in the way of a good flamefest? I don't know whether to be amazed or appalled!
Thousands of years ago, beer started out as a way of treating water that was undrinkable and turning it into something that wouldn't make you sick, without changing its fundamental property of being undrinkable. All that's changed since is that we now have water that's drinkable.
@kbok There was a lecture about it at my university once, and it was a French guy. Being French, his English was terrible, obviously. He would not say it like "kawtch", but instead say it with French phonemes, kinda like "koosh". It is my understanding that is the same as a word in French that means diaper.
How can I get the size of a string array dynamically?
For example:
string names[5] = {"John","Smith","Noob"};
And somehow I should get the size which is 2
How can I do that? without using vectors or loop?
suppose a function as this: int &a(int &x) { return x; } why can't I do this: int *p = a(x); ie, why can't I store the return value in a pointer? pointers are meant to store addresses and that is what the function is returning?
@EtiennedeMartel We've been assigned Balagurusamy by our course teacher
@AyushChaudhary It's returning a reference, not a pointer (and the fact that a reference may be implemented internally as a pointer doesn't change that). To get a pointer, you'll still need to use the address-of operator (&).
@R.MartinhoFernandes isn't this the concept used when passing arguments by reference in traditional C? Eg: swap(&x, &y) and the prototype as void swap(int *a, int *b) ?
@AyushChaudhary No. The && has to be present as a single token to signify an rvalue reference. When you return a reference, then take the address, you get the address of the referred-to object.
@AyushChaudhary Ohhhh. I see your confusion. The return type of the function is int&. The & is part of the type to indicate it's a reference. It is not the address-of operator applied to a.
@AyushChaudhary You could probably glean it from information on cppreference.com, but I doubt it'll have it packaged up into a nice, neat article just about that.
@Cicada Once upon a time, my brother taught at the University of Waterloo. After three years his work visa expired. Canada said they'd only extend it if he was a full professor. Waterloo said he needed (minimum) of four more years to get promoted to professor. Neither side would compromise at all, so he ended up moving back to the US...