Hello, can someone help me interpret what this line means MovementParameters() : x(0), y(0), vx(0.5), vy(0.2) // initialization list in pastebin.com/yf5RKiEA example code. I'm not all that familiar with c++ and that's the first time I see something like that.
It's basically similar to a constructor like MovementParameters() { x = 0; y = 0; vx=0.5; }. The big difference comes with things like references--they have to be initialized, not assigned, and an initialization list supports actual initialization (where doing it in the body as I've shown here obviously uses assignment instead).
Let me try to rephrase that to sound more familiar to lingo I'm familiar with: if I wanted to have a class that's a composition (contains an object as a member) I would not be able to do it within a constructor if I wrote it up with {} and the user of that class would have to initialize it specifically and then call the constructor with the reference to that initialized object?
sup? http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/functional/function/function >5) Initializes the target with a copy of f. If f is a null pointer to function or null pointer to member, *this will be empty after the call. So it will fail silently until I use `this` or data member?
>Partial specializations of member template may appear both at class scope and at enclosing namespace scope, but explicit specializations may only appear at enclosing namespace scope.
What's rationale for prohibiting explicit specializations in class scope?
@EuriPinhollow Maybe that stuff in class scope is supposed to be private and having different specializations depending on if you are in a member function or not seems complicated and surprising and ignoring private looks like a bug.
@FerencRozsa No. Ideally you can separate out high level concepts like "Shaders", "Lighting", "Models" and so on and can keep them somewhat separate.
At least some of them have to interact with each other, but having small pieces with some glue logic tends to be easier to maintain than one monolithic monster.
In computing, a data segment (often denoted .data) is a portion of an object file or the corresponding virtual address space of a program that contains initialized static variables, that is, global variables and static local variables. The size of this segment is determined by the size of the values in the program's source code, and does not change at run time.
The data segment is read-write, since the values of variables can be altered at run time. This is in contrast to the read-only data segment (rodata segment or .rodata), which contains static constants rather than variables; it also contrasts...
this is basically a "which compiler is right" question, and one I'm not qualified for. I believe this shouldn't compile because the addition of using A::func unhides the function and makes it participate in the overload resolution, and having these two as free functions in the global namespace fails
@EuriPinhollow if you put the functions in the same namespace, they'll participate in overload resolution. If you use using A::func;, they both participate in overload resolution if you call b.func()
Now, here OR probably doesn't even matter, hence the disclaimer that basically says that I have no clue
i have a question, if i have 2 threads both accessing the same memory, one thread reads from a file in 512 blocks and saves the blocks in a vector, the other thread copies whatever is inside the vector and puts it in another file, how do i synchronize the threads? is there a simples way do to it? or do i have to do something nasty like creating a variable and changing its value constantly?
hmmm, is the situation the same if my vector stores 2 512 blocks, when a new block comes it pushes the previous forward, the writing thread only writes the last block and the reading one only writhe to the first block, i would still need the queue no?
maybe it wouldnt be safe
nah, what i sed didnt make much sence, ill try what you guys sed
Several days ago I tried moving a question about C from a C# room to the C room, but this failed for two reasons:
First, in order for autocomplete to happen, you need to type in several characters, even waiting long enough won't trigger it. I had to work around this by adding spaces.
The room d...
Unless I'm mistaken (spoiler: I was), GCC is kinda in the right. This simply isn't specified to be resolved somehow.
For one, there's [temp.fct.spec]/3:
Trailing template arguments that can be deduced or
obtained from default template-arguments may be omitted from the list
of explicit te...
that said, even if gcc was right, the OR remark still wouldn't be relevant