Looking at n3290 §15.4/14-15, deallocation functions (not destructors) have a special noexcept(true) by default. A destructor is noexcept if all functions it calls (subobject destructors) are noexcept.
But that's actually defined indirectly through exception-specifications. So there's another point of possible breakage, if the empty exception-specification failed to translate to noexcept.
Actually my usual way is to declare, and then define elsewhere. I used to default define but this particular snapshot segfaults now. So I guess it's back to an empty destructor indeed.
@DeadMG ideone.com/CLhuu is the code that seems wrong. We have to implement the Game of Life in a pixel shader, and its really easy AFAICS. My neighbor counting function just seems to fail
> (Bitte beachten Sie, dass die Markierung der Zellen in den gegebenen Texturen möglicherweise nicht 100% Weiß bzw. 0% Schwarz ist) > In english: (Please note that the cell marks in the given textures may not be 100% white or 0% black)
all my blood tests and my breath test came back negative
except apparently my liver is failing, but since they ran a shedload of tests, then apparently it's likely to be an anomaly rather than my liver is actually failing
that tends to be fatal in rather less than five months
Maybe it's just my natural curiosity. I mean, when I started writing C++ in Visual Studio, I immediatly wanted to understand the internals and didn't hesitate to step into the MSVC headers like vector and stuff
Granted, I didn't understand anything in there for the first few month
it didn't take me long to start saying, "But what if I want to take a function that takes ANY argument type?" "Why, DeadMG, now would be an excellent time to introduce you to templates!"
"But I want to construct an argument that stays around so I can pass it to Lua!" "Why, senor DeadMG, here's dynamic allocation!"
honestly, I figure that if you want to write a C++ compiler, it would be less effort to design, specify, and implement a totally separate language that sucks less
Forth is a structured, imperative, reflective, extensible, stack-based computer programming language and programming environment. Although not an acronym, the language's name is sometimes spelled with all capital letters as FORTH, following the customary usage during its earlier years.
A procedural programming language without type checking, Forth features both interactive execution of commands (making it suitable as a shell for systems that lack a more formal operating system) and the ability to compile sequences of commands for later execution. Some Forth implementations (usually early...
@Xeo I'm sure it will once the compilers support user-defined literals…
The irony isn't just that templates weren't initially intended to be Turing-complete, it's that metaprogramming is now the defining feature of the language, and there's a kind of competition against the compiler writers to make build times slow.
I think that Software Engineering, things like "Don't use exceptions as control flow", "Use source control" would have been much more what I was looking for
but I didn't even realize that there was a difference and this university does not offer them separately anyway
I was commenting on an answer that thread-local storage is nice and recalled another informative discussion about exceptions where I supposed
The only special thing about the
execution environment within the throw
block is that the exception object is
referenced by rethrow.
Putting tw...
> The class nested_exception is designed for use as a mixin through multiple inheritance. It captures the currently handled exception and stores it for later use.
When I figured it out, first I thought I had this reality-bending hack, and then I realized that I was just accessing something that was well hidden, but specifically put there for that purpose.
I realize this isn't C++ but its not about the language. Would this method be considered a recursive method since it is calling upon itself? http://i.imgur.com/NTADh.png