Just a question: someone says it can write this `void func(void *data) { // conversion from MyClass* -> void* is implicit MyClass *c = static_cast<MyClass*>(data); ... }` where as I say it is impossible since there is not relation between the `void*` and the `MyClass*` type... and it violates much of what I thought about casts
> A prvalue of type “pointer to cv1 void” can be converted to a prvalue of type “pointer to cv2 T,” where T is an object type and cv2 is the same cv-qualification as, or greater cv-qualification than, cv1. The null pointer value is converted to the null pointer value of the destination type. A value of type pointer to object converted to “pointer to cv void” and back, possibly with different cv-qualification, shall have its original value.
I am little confused with the applicability of reinterpret_cast vs static_cast. From what I have read the general rules are to use static cast when the types can be interpreted at compile time hence the word static. This is the cast the C++ compiler uses internally for implicit casts also.
reint...
> Otherwise, if the next three characters are <:: and the subsequent character is neither : nor >, the < is treated as a preprocessor token by itself and not as the first character of the alternative token <:.
Day of the Tentacle, also known as Maniac Mansion II: Day of the Tentacle, is a 1993 graphic adventure game developed and published by LucasArts. It is the sequel to the 1987 game Maniac Mansion. The game's plot follows Bernard Bernoulli and his friends Hoagie and Laverne as they attempt to stop the evil Purple Tentacle—a sentient, disembodied tentacle—from taking over the world. The player takes control of the three and solves puzzles while using time travel to explore different periods of history.
Dave Grossman and Tim Schafer co-led the game's development, their first time in such a ...
Oh yes this is a bug. §2.7/1 "Blanks, horizontal and vertical tabs, newlines, formfeeds, and comments (collectively, “white space”), as described below, are ignored except as they serve to separate tokens." — Xeo15 mins ago
+1 this is a lesson consultant take far too long to learn (and, admittedly it is a difficult concept to follow through on during a tough economy). The value of your expertised is as much a function of the work you do as it is a function of the work you refuse. — Tim O'BrienNov 19 at 18:19