Why the fuck can't Firefox show a notification that it has downloaded updates and wants to apply them, instead of just behaving slowly, badly and only working on some sites?
On Windows, FF just becomes more and more slow and unreliable when it has downloaded updates. After a while, I recognise 'update syndrome' and close/reopen, whereupon it installs the updates and then runs 'normally'. It's just annoying :(
but , as per my knowledge , as we are going to make changes to the node*n , we should pass it by call by reference , hence deleteNode(node **n) should be appropriate but why deleteNode(node *n) also works well ??
@Mysticial It returns a reference to a local. It's as broken as it would be with std::string&, or std::string* as return type (and body adjusted appropriately, of course).
@Mysticial IIRC, when returning values from functions, the order is this way: RVO when the "accepting" variable is being initialized, move when object is movable, copy when that's the only option.
I know how to search a node with a particular key into an AVL tree . But I want to know how to search in an AVL tree with a balance factor of -2
Here is the code that I have tried.
void searchForUnrequiredBalanceFactor(avlnode *n , avlnode *r)
{
avlnode *ptr ;
ptr = n ;
if (ptr==NUL...
@EtiennedeMartel "Multi-paradigm" includes the OO paradigm. Also, we are not mentioning (explicitly, at least) other paradigms supported by C++ such as functional programming and (if I'm correct) TMP. That seems to be a bias (though that bias would be helpful in attracting programmers that are interested in OO), IMHO.
@Johann If people really knew how Minecraft is written in Java, they'd know it sucks for games like that. I constantly have 2 to 5 sec lags because of the stupid GC
@Xeo a) tune your GC better b) Minecraft is, what I have gathered, really badly written c) yeah, JNI is a real killer and is a big reason why Minecraft has such terrible performance d) the server is also very bad, again as I understand it, as it uses hardly any multi-threading
It's, like, fucking useless. :| It doesn't save any character as opposed to trait<T>() and the only reason to use it would be a shortcut to a bool value without relying on the conversion op - but if you actually want that, man, type out those 5 characters for "value".
@Xeo They currently have utf8, which is "some sort of UTF-8 that only goes up to three bytes because god fucking knows why", and utf8mb4 which is "UTF-8".
@Nican if you think that one is shitty, you will also probably think the same about the other. I am not bashing node, but I can't help but notice its users are mostly 17yo javascript hipsters
I have a confession to make; I used Node.JS to connect my arduino that is controlling my massage chair to my server through serial port. So I can have a web interface, and control the chair from my android.
No, I am asking what's the benefit of encoding that information in the types if you are tossing it away at the drop of a hat and making no compile-time use of it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am still considering clamping to be a desirable mechanic under certain situations, one where you know you want clamping and expect such behaviour.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, it is the easiest option, but only makes sense if that is the behaviour you want. you know that clamped_int<1,10> a = a + b will NEVER fail
This question is related to: Check if a class has a member function of a given signature
Is this functionality implemented by C++11 standard or do I need to use custom implementation?
one downside of having lots of Wide types correspond to LLVM types so you can take them, return them, and pass them around, is that the resulting IR is full of gunk.
hi everybody. i found this piece of code in a old software patent : s10.postimg.org/vkdqtpnsp/sss.jpg does anybody have an idea which language it could be ? i think its COBOL but not sure about it...