@AlexCerry because without the * you try to convert the address of test into a char. In this example you are not interested in the address however, you want the value.
Is it good idea to get effective c++ instead of accelerated C++? I know quite good C++. yes I don't understand those lambdas and other recent stuff(and I am deciding of reading it on internet). I don't want to read the things again like functions, variables, operators, classes (but my sir said I should to be good at cpp) ?
Hello Guys. Is there any crossplatform binary serialization technology, which allow me serealize class on one platform (let's say mac desctop) and then deserialize this object on mobile device (android for example)?
@samjoe That is because front = rear = x = 0; is not evaluated as front = 0; rear = 0; x = 0; (which would make your syntax valid). It is instead evaluated as x = 0, which returns the value of x, which is then assigned to rear, and then the value of rear is assigned to front. However, you cannot assign an int (x) to an int * (rear), so compilation fails.
Modern C++ tends to see the 0 to pointer conversion as a mistake. A correction was attempted to use nullptr instead of 0 for pointers, which is not an int. However, because of backwards compatibility you can still assign 0 to pointers.
@ratchetfreak That's true--it could be. That's where you get into making a decision balancing its size against the possibility of a collision. In most cases, you'd probably be better of with a somewhat smaller hash (e.g., 64 bits) and put up with a few collisions.
create 2^n processes; give each process a n bit number; each process reads all the files and hashes each line; if n bit hash doesn't match process number ignore otherwise check uniqueness and output if unique