@Rob You take a function pointer but pass a capturing lambda, so the types don't match. Either make the capturing clause empty to allow decay to function pointer or use std::function as the parameter type.
for(Object * o : objects){ objects.removeOne(o); delete o; } I am trying to do something like so, which occasionnaly creates an invalid pointer, is there something wrong with what i am doing ?
@d4rk4ng31 it doesn't have to be, the standard just says it has to do thing so the "observable side-effects" are the same. But it doesn't have to literally output c++ code to do that
@colin not necessarly outside, just undefined behavior, can crash, can work fine
It is hard to read these to understand whether to consider a letter a part of \ or string literals, for example,
//example from TC++PL
char v1[] = "a\xah\129"; // 6 chars: 'a' '\xa' 'h' '\12' '9' '\0'
char v2[] = "a\xah\127"; // 5 chars: 'a' '\xa' 'h' '\127' '\0'
char v3[] = "a\xad\127"; // 4 ch...
> Octal escape sequences have a limit of three octal digits, but terminate at the first character that is not a valid octal digit if encountered sooner.
> Hexadecimal escape sequences have no length limit and terminate at the first character that is not a valid hexadecimal digit.