I have a struct with three fields a, b, c for which I want to implement a lexicographical operator <. What’s the easiest way of doing this? At the moment I have the following:
@KonradRudolph depends on how far you want to take it. Not if you want to highlight type names differently, for example. You’ll also need a preprocessor for that.
@Zoidberg'-- If you want to highlight type names, you need to parse the complete code (with all dependencies). But that’s the same for almost all languages
there are various tricks you can try to establish a connection if both parties actively participate, but if you just want to send a message from the outside (say, a ping), and the recipient isn't actively helping create the connection, you're stuck
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, not necessarily. Basically, it needs a way to share information between both endpoints. A phone call can do that. Or an IM message or something. :)
I am making an app that uses notification center on mountain lion. I included support for growl on snow leopard and lion. How do I make it so the binary will be able to run on both and not require 2 separate .app bundles.
I am developing a WebKit browser in Qt and C++. I want to be able to launch and external application using an URL protocol. The application has it's protocol registered in Windows registry but when I click on the link I get the following error:
"Protocol "ca4protocol" is unknown" 301
The same...
what you're doing makes no sense. Browsers check these registry keys to check if there are special actions associated with the specified protocol. If you are writing a browser, you need to check that key yourself
Asking Qt to connect using a protocol it doesn't understand is futile
Donald Ervin Knuth ( ; born January 10, 1938) is a computer scientist and Professor Emeritus at Stanford University.
He is the author of the seminal multi-volume work The Art of Computer Programming. Knuth has been called the "father" of the analysis of algorithms. He contributed to the development of the rigorous analysis of the computational complexity of algorithms and systematized formal mathematical techniques for it. In the process he also popularized the asymptotic notation.
In addition to fundamental contributions in several branches of theoretical computer science, Knuth is the...
What the browser checks is this: "which protocol does the URI use? Is it a protocol I know? If yes, I use my native functionality to handle the protocol. If not, is a custom protocol handler specified? If yes, invoke whatever command the custom handler says to invoke. Otherwise, report an error"
> He applied his intelligence in unconventional ways, winning a contest when he was in eighth grade by finding over 4,500 words that could be formed from the letters in "Ziegler's Giant Bar"; the judges had only about 2,500 words on their master list. This won him a television set for his school and a candy bar for everyone in his class.
The problem is that Alexandrescu uses exceptions for something that is not at all exceptional, in my opinion. In fact, one could argue that if you parse a string from the outside world that should contain digits only, the exceptional case is that everything goes well, because there is just too many way to fuck up :) — FredOverflow8 secs ago