Good Evening,
I'm building a website which will will look something like this:
So probably a widget-centred web-framework would be best...
Which C++ web-framework supports cookies (for user-login [session] storage+config storage) and SQL (MySQL or SQLite)?
Thanks in advance for any suggestion...
Johnsyweb: C++ is a nicer language, and I'll be doing some [very] advanced calculations, and it would be nicer if I could write everything in C++ rather than have a C++ executable run for every calculation
Singletons are evil. You end up facing more problems than benefits but if you still want to use Singleton are your own risk you can see this for how to inherit from singletons.
I just want to delete it if you think so too.
I don't think anything wrong about it in the first place but seems lots of peeps do think so
@JohannesSchaublitb and in a dream-world I'd like < ... > and ( ... ) pairs to distinguish between compile-time and runtime behaviour like so: static_if< ConstantExpression > { ... } (even simpler: if< ... > { ... }). But given the precedent set by static_assert I'm not holding my breath for that.
@JohannesSchaublitb I don't really see the point, tbh. I'm disappointed that there appears to be no real integration between fancy new touch-based UI and traditional mouse-based stuff
seemed like "and I can touch here, and I get.... a Windows 7 desktop where all the classic apps are going to live"
If they're going to support both, they should make it so I can use touch as well as mouse/keyboard for existing and new apps, and allow them to coexist in the same ecosystem
rather than create "new shiny touchworld", and the "windows classic ghetto"
admittedly, that'd be a ridiculously hard problem to solve, but if they want to integratte touch and traditional input, then they should do it properly, or not at all
yeah, I might be wrong and they've actually got it all figured out, but from the video they released, it just looked like they were two separate worlds living side by side. Except that you could use touch to scroll in the traditional Explorer
which is a pretty primitive kind of integration. You'd still be crippled because every icon, button and link is mouse-cursor-sized, rather than big-fat-finger-sized
the other part I don't get is what purpose it's supposed to serve. Do they seriously expect PC's to have (and use) touch screens within the next couple of years?
Seems like on the PC side, the touch-based stuff will go basically unused, and on the tablet side, the "classic" environment will be crippled and useless
so no matter where you run the OS, you get one sane interface, and still have to carry around the other, crippled one
If they'd split it in two, and made a touch-only OS for tablets, I think it'd have been great.
but it's early, and there are so few details available, it's impossible to say how it turns out. Just my initial thoughts
but I just don't see what the "one size fits all" approach is going to buy them
> The report railed against France and the United Kingdom, which have passed laws to remove accused copyright scofflaws from the internet. It also protested blocking internet access to quell political unrest (.pdf).
You need to sort the set of edges, so O(E log E) where E is the number of edges. Then you consider each edge once, for each each the work to do can be done in O(log V). So we have O(E log E + E log V) and as E <= V^2, we have O(3 E log V) = O(E log V).
unfortunately the language does not support those semantics.
static storage duration objects SSDO (both static and dynamically initialized) are only guaranteed to be initialized before main if they are in the global namespace.
Thus all SSDO in the global namespace will be fully initialized befo...
@MartinhoFernandes I had the inverse problem for a while: I did put explicit where appropriate but I got over enthusiastic with uniform initialization syntax and used return { ... }; everywhere.
I have another rudimentary question. I somewhat recall hearing that everything in C++ goes inside a class. Then I hear that classes shouldn't be used where possible. So my question goes: When do you make classes and when do you not? (an example or two would be cool)
And a random side-question: W...
@JohannesSchaublitb You know, I'm currently thinking of this question, where you told me it was a horrible abuse to use lambdas for such stuff. :P What about your code?