Of course, in C++, to call any function you have to bind it to an identifier somewhere, simply owing to syntax constraints. But, if you will accept parameters as being sufficiently unnamed, then it is possible to create a version of the y-combinator in C++ which recurses nicely without being "nam...
Hi everyone. Is there some comparsion sheet of VS2010 and VS2010 in terms of support of C++11? I need to use Qt5 binary build but they are only for VS2010, so i kind of limited to it (since i don't have time to tinker with source code and build it myself, tryed already actually). Or maybe someone already distributes pre-built Qt5 binaries for VS2012?
@sehe I know. I'd rather keep it as a last ditch attempt, it would leave people scratching their heads I would think. Or is it more common than I think?
Or, well, I guess it's not like void*, since nothing converts implicitly to that.
Whatever, bottom line is: You can fuck around with pointer types, as long as you cast back to the correct type before usage (or to char*, but that's another matter)
The reason you can't do this is because non-constant expressions can't be parsed and substituted during compile-time. They could change during runtime, which would require the generation of a new template during runtime, which isn't possible because templates are a compile-time concept.
Here's...
@nneonneo Doesn't make them related. std::vector<int> and std::vector<float> are also both instantiations of the same template - no reason for them to be related though
i just saw code like this in one old DOS source : if(x1^x2) < 0 ... if (y1^y2) >=0 //(x1,y1) and (x2,y2) are 2D vectors. anybody have an idea what it does ? (except xoring and bit test sign)
@DeadMG i think you are right, its in a 2D collision test function that check if a point is inside a polygon. unfortunaly there is not comment on these lines.
@LucDanton It's for conversion between types that have a relation in the type-system, where "relation" means that objects of the argument type can be implicitly or explicitly converted to the target type. Blah. Whatever :| Do you also want the explanation when one type is considered to be convertible to the other type?
I think we should define "Gosling's law": "As an online discussion about C++ grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Java or James Gosling approaches 1."
[21:40:52] <zygoloid> Xeo: i'm surprised. we should fail to constant-evaluate the lambda argument and pick false_type both times
[21:41:27] <Xeo> It's never called, though
[21:41:54] <Xeo> Although I guess the lambda expression itself isn't a constant-expression? I'd wonder why, though.
[21:44:35] <zygoloid> and if you make Zero call the lambda, or make its body ill-formed, we still accept
[21:44:48] <zygoloid> eg, make zero return T::error
[21:44:57] <Xeo> huh.
[21:45:19] <zygoloid> conclusion: we are not instantiating Zero, and we are not evaluating that expression