It's one of the solutions. It's also arguably the lazy solution. The proper solution is that you know that std::unordered_set is a type of hash table, that hash tables rely on a hash function, that the error message tells you that no such hash function exists and that you can supply your own.
From the docs you'd read the documentation on std::unordered_set, note that it has std::hash<Key> as a template argument and then see that std::hash has no default implementation for std::tuple.
is deleted the right word there? "use of deleted function" that makes it seem like it is something that is deleted, I would expect missing / not implemented
I am not questioning the error message, that would take me no where, its just that I cant wrap my head
the designers surely had a reason which I fail to understand
Those are different things. Deleted functions are functions that are explicitly deleted. They take part in overload resolution but cause an error when you try to call them.
An example would be void f(int){} and void f(double) = delete;. If you try to call f(3.14); it will fail to compile. If the second overload doesn't exist you instead get an implicit conversion from double to int.
They probably just did template <class T> std::hash(T) = delete; in order to improve the error message. Otherwise you would get a linker error telling you that it didn't find std::hash<T> at a later time.
Basically, yeah. It originated from classes. C++ wanted to be backwards compatible with C, and in C you can assign structs, so in C++ you have to be able to do that too. So they gave structs default copy constructors and then the question comes up how you would get rid of those, so they added this = delete syntax which is also sometimes useful for other things.
One could argue that C++ is a series of unfortunate accidents that made sense at the time.
Depending on what type of learner you are you might be happy enough to know that deleted functions exist and how and when to use them. Or you try to look up why they exist in order to remember them better.
The latter tends to be difficult though. Often times "because the standard says so" is the best you get outside meeting minutes and then things become a lot of effort for not much gain.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Does it work in a terminal?
What exactly does initializing git-flow do? If you are cloning a repo, why would it be a necessary step since wouldn't the repo already be structured in the appropriate way?