Waterloo is a city in Southern Ontario, Canada. It is the smallest of the three cities in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, and is adjacent to the city of Kitchener.
Kitchener and Waterloo are often jointly referred to as "Kitchener-Waterloo" (K-W), or "the Twin Cities", although they have separate city governments. There have been several attempts to amalgamate the two cities (sometimes with the city of Cambridge as well), but none have been successful. At the time of the 2011 census, Waterloo had a population of 98,780.
History
Waterloo was built on land that was part of a parc...
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Funny, in my parallel universe, it says this: "If the operators * and -> aren't overloaded, both versions accomplish the same.". Nothing about calling any functions, just that they "accomplish the same"
@Cheersandhth.-Alf If you overload one of the operators to do something else, then both versions do not "accomplish the same". So hwo can it be irrelevant?
let me see if i can get this straight. you think that the answer was suitable for some other question and other example, with no mention of that, and therefore it was a very fine answer even though it was incorrect for the OP's question?
@Cheersandhth.-Alf No.... I'll help you "get it straight": He posted an answer which answered the exact question posted by the OP. It also mentioned what would happen if the type in question had been an UDT and not a raw pointer. And you think including the last part makes it deserve a downvote?
@Cheersandhth.-Alf why I object? Because I think your behavior is pathetic. Because I see you repeating a pattern in which you downvote legitimate answers
@Cheersandhth.-Alf If overloads of those operators exist (which they can only do on UDTs), then they have an influence.
Okay, considering you've got two of the biggest egos around and it's pretty much guaranteed that none of you is going to admit they're wrong, could you peeps take a room?
And even if I agreed with you that overloads were irrelevant, then there would be no harm in mentioning them. It would not make his answer incorrect. It would also be correct if his answer stated that "on tuesdays, the two operations are equivalent", because it says nothing about what happens on other days (where they might also be equivalent)
It says that "if no overloads exist, the two are equivalent". It says nothing about what happens if overloads exist, or if overloads can exist. It just describes what happens when they do not
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I don't believe I ever said you "pursued" any individual. I said that you exhibited a pattern of downvoting legitimate answers, and I said that because I had seen you do it
And if you want me to stop saying that you do it, then stop doing it
@Cheersandhth.-Alf That's fair. I didn't mean to imply that you pursued any individual. I don't believe that you pick a target, and go through all their answers looking for something to downvote
But I have noticed you downvote correct answers on several occasions, and I think that is harsh, uncalled for and counterproductive
"pursue" was the wrong word, and I apologize for that. I used it because you used that word about me
Now, I have proven quite conclusively that the answer you downvoted was not wrong. End of story as far as I'm concerned
@Cheersandhth.-Alf at least I'm not not doing it towards random people who are just trying to contribute to SO. I'm only doing it to people who behave like shits towards said random people
@jalf you know that isn't true that you have proved anything. the answer is just wrong. directly wrong. it is exactly the kind of answer that one should downvote. technically wrong, misguiding readers, sounding plausible. downvote.
Seriously I've never seen a telephone pole in the middle of a road before. Here in America people run into them when they are on the sides of the road, let alone in the middle of it :D.
@nixeagle Maybe it's the standard to be drunk and drive besides the road, so they thought it would be safer to put the pole in the middle of the road instead :P
What are the differences between the following three initializations with std::initializer_lists?
std::vector a{ 2, 3, 5, 7};
std::vector b( { 2, 3, 5, 7} );
std::vector c = { 2, 3, 5, 7};
Honestly, I haven't learned C++ but I was interested in learning about reading and writing memory addresses so I looked up online for examples so here's what I got:
#include
#include
#include
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int address = 0x57F0F8;
int value;
DWORD pid;
HWND h...
Infact I got my first upvotes in over a month today. :P Just happened to see a question I knew the answer to that was not already answered well. A very rare thing these days.
though there was a happy twist with performance, it was laggy for a while then when I ran the profiler I discovered my emulator spent 60% of its time setting the background color of the canvas one pixel at a time
I changed that with a fillRect or a CSS directive, I don't remember which (but I remember both were extremely fast) and my emulator suddenly went real-time speed
Although I'm not sure it will be ever possible with my machine. The C++ implementation is dog slow right now, so I'm a bit afraid for the javascript performance
Need a quick 10 minute break from developing your latest Visual C++ masterpiece? Want to give us feedback about your project build experience? Yes? Then we have a link for you: http://aka.ms/cppbuildsurvey There are a mix of questions including an invitation for further discussion if you opt in. We look forward to your feedback and hope to share some insights soon!
all instructions take one cycle (though the PSX has some weird instruction in its "geometry transformation engine" coprocessor), it has no flags, and the PSX has no FPU
so that's really easy to recompile and optimize
oh and instructions have a fixed length
the GPU itself also works with command packets that, at first glance, look easily translatable to OpenGL calls
macros should always be in all caps because, well, that's mostly just a very old, very widespread convention and it's good to use it because it makes macro usage clear.
I can't help but think that template<int val, typename T> T unref_with_default(T* p) { return p ? *p : val; } would be helpful. Am I sick or something ?
No. With private/deleted copy and move constructors Foo c = { 2, 3, 5, 7}; compiled fine but Foo c = Foo{ 2, 3, 5, 7}; didn't. At least on my gcc. So for now all 3 cases from the question are the same on my compiler. — Mateusz Pusz16 mins ago
Any idea why the copy/move constructor is not required for the initializer_list case?
@Pubby Yeah, if I try to do that with a constructor that takes an int and no copy/move construction allowed, gcc complains about deleted move constructor
You're manually deallocating it, that's what you're doing wrong. Use a smart pointer like a wise man, have a program that works like a man who wants to get paid for his craft.
@Praetorian @MooingDuck Seems the standard doesn't even differentiate between direct-list-initialization (T a{};) and copy-list-initialization (T a = {}).
It just mentions that they're named like that when list-initialization occurs in that context.
> List-initialization can occur in direct-initialization or copy-initialization contexts; list-initialization in a direct-initialization context is called direct-list-initialization and list-initialization in a copy-initialization context is called copy-list-initialization.
How can I make a viewcontroller singleton, to then use this code:
FacebookManager *manager = [FacebookManager sharedManager];
[manager openSessionWithAllowLoginUI:NO]
??