by way of introduction, I have a C++03 functor that does a lot more than the example lambda expression, and I explain what a lambda expression that does the same thing as the functor would look like..
@FredNurk Pah! I haven't lived in a household with a TV for >20 years now. I sometimes think about whether I should equip myself at least with the minimal means to watch TV once in a while (like some TV stick), in order to see the news or watch a football (soccer) match, but whenever I get to watch TV (about twice a year when I'm visiting somewhere), then that enforces my opinion that the disadvantages greatly outweigh the advantages.
@rlc IME, when teaching C++, you'll have to come back revisiting the same topics again and again, on a higher level each time. C++ is too complex, and the different areas all depend on each other to much, in order to teach them systematically.
For example: In order to fully teach dynamic memory allocation, your students will need to know about exceptions. However, in order to fully learn about exceptions, they'll need to know about polymorphism. And I haven't found a useful way to teach polymorphism without also introducing dynamic allocation.
Anyway, what I was trying to hint at: I'd probably (never had to) first teach lambda functions without mentioning capturing, and introduce the topic only afterwards, when they have gained some ground.
Oh, and you might find this interesting:
Herb Sutter's talk on C++ lambdas @ NWCPP video: http://vimeo.com/23975522, slides: http://www.nwcpp.org/images/stories/lambda.pdf
@sbi could always pop out to the pub to watch matches, good excuse for a pint :)
@sbi The problem with using C++ ... is that there's already a strong tendency in the language to require you to know everything before you can do anything. -- Larry Wall
@FredNurk I don't bother with excuses for having a pint. :)
@FredNurk To some extend that's true. However, while I agree that it takes more pushing, you can teach C++ so that students are able to write simple programs almost from the go. Koenig/Moo have taught me the trick, and I have since performed it on many occasions.
@TonyTheTiger Ha! I have, just this week, actually been looking out for questions I could answer (rather than stumbling into them) for the first time in what I believe have been months. If you look at my activity page, you'll see that I'm mostly commenting nowadays, and that my answers are few and very far between.
@TonyTheTiger closing dupes 1) provides a link for anyone finding through that question, and 2) directs people on where to put updates, new answers, etc.
@TonyTheTiger actually, I don't think anyone could add comments in oct '08, so that was the only way to include a link besides closing, and people were still figuring out what closing meant
@TonyTheTiger Closing questions as duplicates isn't just a way to prevent you from getting rep on it, it's a tool to prevent the site from being flooded with identical questions with answers of wildly varying degrees of sophistication.
@TonyTheTiger: and somehow I forgot to mention just now that links incoming to a question do figure into the site's metrics. I either forgot how or it wasn't mentioned, but I could see it being useful to add search terms from duplicate questions to aid in gauging relevancy
Question "The Eternal Question". Close button with no indication of vote to close. Click on it: already one vote. Select "subjective". That's reload the question with 3 votes. Reload the C++ tag page, question closed.
@TonyTheTiger Yeah, I just checked. You can't book anything for this weekend, so I checked for the next weekend. Leaving Fri 1300 Gare du Nord, arriving Sat 0915 in Berlin, going back Sun 1900 Berlin, being back Mon 0545 GdN, costs 102. I'm not sure saving €54 is worth the discomfort, though.
@Reno That might be somewhat better in comfort, but is likely much more expensive than the bus. In fact, it might even be more expensive than the flight.
@sbi one more question, would you be able to meet me around 4 or whenever I arrive, I kinda don't wanna have to hang around in a city until we have the eve meeting...
@TonyTheTiger I could give you exact instruction. But. When you'd arrive 1600 at SFX, you'd need at least an hour to my garden. Since the meetup is at 2000, and we'd need 20mins to walk to my apartment (I would need a shower), and another 30mins to the Prater, we should leave at 1900. That would give us two hours to relax and eat. I'm not sure that's worth the hassle.
@TonyTheTiger I dunno. @Konrad, could you give a shelter to the tiger for a few hours Sat afternoon? I think you're living in P'berg, right? It'd be a lot of hassle for little gain for him to come to me to Pankow.
@sbi @Tony Sorry, I’m currently not at the computer but we can talk later. Either way, if Tony needs shelter on saturday, that can be arranged. I’ll be off now
@TonyTheTiger You could always come to my garden, but it's like an hour from Schönefeld, you'd pass by the meetup place (and @Konrad, who lives in the vicinity) after two thirds of the journey, and we barely have time to say hi and gobble something down before we have to leave.
You can still stay with me, though. (Although I do have something to do on Sun morning (about 10-12), so you would have to breakfast with my teenage daughter. :) She speaks pretty good English, though, so you don't have to stress your German after having had to much beer the night before.)
@TonyTheTiger Oh, that's early! And you likely have to be there an hour earlier, right? Ok. Well, my daughter just called to tell me she'll at a friend's birthday party tomorrow and will also sleep there, so it's just the two of us. I need to leave at about 09:30 tomorrow, which is pretty much the time you need to leave if you want to be in Schönefeld at ~10:30, so we could have breakfast together before you leave. What do you think? Would that work out for you?
@KonradRudolph @Tony said he'd be in Berlin at about 4pm, and the meetup is at 8pm, so he has 4hrs to kill. (Though he might be landing at 4pm, which would make him be in P'berg at around 5pm.)
@Konrad: I offered to shelter @Tony until the meetup, but I'll be in my garden (Schönholz), and it would take him even longer to get there, and he'd pass by the Prater (and, IIRC, your place). That wouldn't make much sense. So maybe you two can arrange something?
@TonyTheTiger Ok. So you stay with @Konrad in the afternoon, we meet at the meetup, you're coming with me afterwards, and we'll leave together. And I don't have to get up early the Sun after the meetup all alone. Sounds good to me. :)
Let's say I have something like this:
<?php
namespace Twitter;
class Twitter {
function __construct()
{
$config = array ('api' => 'something', 'api_url' => 'something2');
}
// some code goes here
}
class TwitterConnection {
...
@DeadMG There might be differences between pointers and references, though. References aren't supposed to be dangling.
@wilx No, because it needs to copy elements, for which it needs a sequential container. Associative containers have some of these algorithms as member functions, though.
@wilx If a function returns a local variable as a const reference then its lifetime can be extended if the caller binds the return value to a const reference.
Ok, this is the first question I've asked and I didn't know you couldn't answer your own question.
Answer:
March 25, 2011. :-) I'm not kidding, it's official. Well, at least as far as the committee is concerned.
@rlc Fixing of identified problems has already started. The publication of the fixes in another form than DR answers will probably wait 5 years due to ISO process.
(and I'm not sure if "editorial fixes" can be applied or not. ISTR that there were some difference between the latest FDIS and the standard for C++98).
@rlc Have you posted them to comp.std.c++? If you prefer not to, I'll be happy to -- despite FDIS status, clear bugs can still be fixed (though, of course, they might not get fixed if others disagree about whether they're clearly bugs).
@jalf Not so -- it's (what they intend to be) the last draft, but things can still be fixed if they're clearly wrong. Unless I'm badly mistaken, there are still some actions approved at the last meeting that are still being applied.
@JerryCoffin It's @FredN that found the bug I was thinking about. I've suggested the same thing (that he post it to csc++) I don't know if he's done that yet
According to the MSDN docs the ReceiveBufferSize defaults to 8192.
I checked and it's not a result of a power of two which makes sense when using buffers.
Is there a special reason? Maybe due to the fact that there is some extra overhead with TCP?
that would either mean there are two times as many powers of two than there are positive integers, or that there are two powers of two (depending on how you interpret "the amount of..."
@MartinhoFernandes if you mean to say that there is both an infinite amount of integral powers of two and an infinite amount of positive integers, you're right, but inf == inf doesn't necessarily hold
in this case, the proportion of integral powers of two w.r.t. the number of positive integers nears 0