But it wouldn't fit into the Stack Exchange program.
Stack Exchange is a Q&A site, not an A&Q site.
The point of an A&Q site is to answer an arbitrary question with information, then everyone posts questions that qualify as being answered by the OP. Such a site would require the searching of questions. Does SE support searching "answers".
Someone made the c++11 tag a synonym of the c++0x tag: stackoverflow.com/tags/c%2b%2b0x/synonyms. IMO calling this "wrong" would be a serious understatement. As someone else (@jalf?) said: That's as if we'd still refer to Vista as "Longhorn". (Please star this if you agree with me that this is wrong.)
@Xeo What do you want me to repeat? It seems like @Jerry proposed it and it got enough upvotes to be rushed through behind our backs. But it's plain wrong. I was thinking about posting a question to meta, but I first wanted to get an impression of the room's opinion on the matter.
@Xaade You should smoke less of that stuff. Really. Much less.
@Xaade You got this wrong. <sigh/> (It's not you. The matter is confusing.) Now c++11 is a synonym of c++0x, which means that whenever someone tags a question c++11, it will automagically be retagged c++0x. That is stupid.
@sbi I don't have to smoke anything. When I was 16 I had my first annual physical checkup. At which point the doctor discovered that my brain naturally produced enzymes that acted as toxicants.
Yes, I proposed it. I don't see the relevance of Windows versions either. I see a couple of points to tag synonyms, and both seem to fit in this case. First, that somebody who's interested in ("following") C++0x as a tag would also see questions tagged c++11. It's a bit hard to imagine somebody following one, but not caring about the other.
@JerryCoffin The problem is that with this, every question tagged c++11 will automagically be retagged c++0x. Sorry, but that's bovine excrements. We don't want to be calling this "C++0x" five years from now (just as we don't call Vista "Longhorn" anymore).
@sbi Right.... so when C++0x is pushed back another year and they change the synonym, all those questions tagged C++11 will lose that data, and people will see the questions as referring to C++0x, which they'll assume also means C++12. At which point meta-data about the question is lost.
@sbi They won't.... I'm saying that IF WHEN C++0x isn't finished in 2011, and is pushed back to 2012, someone MIGHT change the C++0x synonym to C++12, and remove the C++11 synonym.
@Xaade One more (and last) time: This is another discussion, which we had here recently, and in which i was convinced to not (yet) make c++0x a synonym of c++11. The problem is that it is now the other way around. (Synonyms are uni-directional.)
For example, what if someone has a valid question about an issue in the unfinished standard. C++11 would imply the standard as finished at which point their question may not be valid, or even make sense. Then it will get downvoted unnecessarily.
As far as I know, the tags c++0x (1,048 questions) and c++11 (8 questions) on Stack Overflow refer to the newly finalized C++ standard that is expected to be published in summer 2011.
Should c++0x be the "real" tag and c++11 be a tag synonym, considering the question count and the fact that it'...
This is cr*p:
throw LangException(builtin_classes::exception_class::create_ImportError(String::fromAscii(e.filename)-> append(String::fromAscii(":"))->
...
That's what I'm saying.... when I want to use a lamda, I don't really care if it can specify equivalence, because I look at it as a one time use inline.
what if I pass a lambda, and it gets put into a std::function, which is moved into some arbitrary object on the heap, stuck in a vector, and a billion other being moved around in a completely implementation-defined way, and then being called?
there's no meaningful/intuitive definition of equivalence for a lambda function though. And exposing the underlying functor's equality seems an odd way to break the abstraction
@Xaade: As I said, because you could just make a simple std::function to hold the lambda and then pass that std::function around however you like, and then call it six hundred times in a completely different place
@DeadMG if you want a functor, define a functor. A lambda is supposed to represent a lambda function. The fact that it uses a functor under the hood is an implementation detail, and that shouldn't leak out into the abstraction of a lambda function
@DeadMG I'm not saying lambda use case isn't reusable. I'm saying most of the time I wouldn't reuse them. I don't really loop through an array more than once and reuse the same logic. If I'm going to do that, I'm going to call a function that wraps around it, because a lambda by itself doesn't do enough to bother reusing.
either you can compare lambdas in the general case, or it doesn't make sense to compare lambdas whether they use the same functor under the hood or not
@Xaade: How about the simple case of a callback, like say, a button click? Gosh, now you might want to call the lambda every time the button's clicked, and store it in some object somewhere!
A lambda is supposed to represent an anonymous function. That anonymity kinda gets tossed out the window if you start distinguishing between "a lambda built on this functor" and "a lambda which does the exact same thing ,but is built on that functor"
C++'s type system doesn't allow us to completely disregard the type of a lambda, unfortunately, but that's no reason to smash even more holes into the abstraction
@jalf: Personally, I don't see that much reason why identical lambdas should not be folded into the same type, although I haven't thought about it that much
@Xaade: The purpose of lambdas is to be defined inline and easily, which is an incredible boost to programmer productivity. The lifetime of the lambda is irrelevant to this benefit.
That's like saying.... function pointer p = pointer of method int GetInt(int&) function pointer m = pointer of method int GetDouble(int&) p == m // TRUE
@DeadMG How is it any differently from callback with respect to productivity if you don't type it at point of use. At that point you're simply inlining a method. That doesn't increase programmer productivity, that saves on the call stack.
You're only passing an object from scope of the method at use point into the lambda's scope. Which if it is inline, would get all the surrounding references anyway.
It could be a member of the class.... but my class is full of members, and I don't want another flag that's used in only one method, when a static does the same thing.
I have a control window message that invokes the same message, but I don't want an endless loop, so I have a static bool that tells me if it's already been called.
DeadMG says static variables are the devil, and is trying to find alternatives.
after all, what if you did decide that one control should invoke that message on another control? Or if the code's maintainers in five years decided that it would be necessary given that your code has a completely new purpose from what you wrote it for?
intend != always will be
just because in the current state, there should only be one, most definitely does not make it a smart idea to enforce or depend on there only being one
Hmm.... well that's universal.... when you refactor, you have to be aware of what you're refactoring....
But I see your point.
@CatPlusPlus What happens if I want separate variables in GWLP_USERDATA for different messages.... surely I wouldn't want to have one struct to store all these different purposed variables?
Don't want my update anti-loop checker to be in the same place as the windowpaint's anti-loop checker.
I have an edit box, that expands as you type in it. The only way I found this could work is if you set the editbox to autoHScroll, and before it paints (on the onupdate message), control the text size by cropping the text, and then setting the select to 0,0, then back to the previous value.
However, if I set windowtext inside the onupdate, it calls onupdate again.
Since I know I've set the window text already if it calls as a result of being called, I only want to do this once, so I have a static variable that checks for the second call and returns.
mine isn't supposed to scroll.... it scales. If I turn scrolling off, windows prevents any text from typing as it won't expand because the new letter typed isn't allowed.
If I allow autoHScroll, then it scrolls after the user types, then expands....
However, if at the onupdate message, I set the selection to 0,0, then restore the selection, it will not scroll AND allow more characters, thus expanding as they type.
@DeadMG There is, but windows limits text to the size of the window.
I have allow the typed character before it expands.
Like, why when you call GetWindowText and the window has a null hwnd, do you get an invalid parameter error. Apparently it's because the GetWindowText fails, thus sending a length of -1 to the method that creates the string GetWindowText passes back.
Then the memory creation for the string fails because it gets a length of -1 and asserts.