#include <stdio.h>
int main(void) {
int one = 1, two = 2, three = 3;
for (int *const end = &three, *iterator = &one; end != iterator; ++iterator)
::printf("[%p -> %p]: %i\r\n", iterator, end, *iterator);
}
Why does it not iterate over the addresses of two & three?
The problem statement is as follows:
To find the number of substrings with at least X bits set; given a string consisting of 0s and 1s
Example:
string: 1010
output: 2
The sample test case passes, but all the rest (hidden ones fail).
Here is my code:
#include <algorithm>
#include <iostream>
#inc...
You can't clearly define the task, so it's impossible to know if an answer is correct. To make the question answerable you should define the rules clearly, even if they differ slightly from the actual task.
Is 12 the correct answer for the given example? The possible substrings are: 11, 110, 1100, 11001, 110011, 1100110, 11001101, 1001, 10011, 100110, 1001101, 11, 110, 1101, 101. Total substrings are 15 and unique substrings are 13. — srt11041 hour ago
You have to address that properly. "I have no idea whatsoever" is not sufficient.
What is this referring at ?c45.Using in-class member initializers lets the compiler generate the function for you. The compiler-generated function can be more efficient.
The difference is that in one case you have the compiler knowing to generate a default constructor and in the other case you have the compiler compiling an arbitrary constructor. It may be able to figure out that in this case the arbitrary constructor does the same as a default constructor and generates the same code, but it may also not do that analysis for compilation speed reasons or because it doesn't have a measurable effect in practice.
Could you give me an example of an try catch block for initialiser list of a class? How would you actually use that in real life? I heard that after getting to catch block, all initialised objects calls their destructors so what could you do more than rethrow?