« first day (2754 days earlier)      last day (323 days later) » 

AAB
AAB
16:15
Hi all
say an application calls another binary which does a small bit of work
on a scale of 1-10 how bad is it to use cout for printing output/logging compared to say a logging header file?
Even if we know the application is single threaded does it still make any sense to use it wihtout logging just with cout
 
1 hour later…
17:39
@AAB in what context? terminal? are you using console pipes?
@AAB not necessarily, it depends on the context you're in. But libraries should never write to standard out or standard error without that being documented first so the calling app isn't surprised by it
AAB
AAB
18:16
python code invokes the binary and the binary write some crap to a file we do some system calls
I just feel logging to a file on the operations would be better I mean its not very complex but its not like we have 1 function alone
the issue is you don't know who's listening to stdout/stderr
you could really mess those things up
 
1 hour later…
AAB
AAB
19:30
ok, I will ask and see if I get any info...
 
3 hours later…
22:56
@JerryCoffin I see. So a valid state doesnt necessarily mean pointing to the same initial object. Just valid semantically speaking
I don't know why a copy constructor wasn't just coopted for move semantics. I guess it;s for backwards compatibility but there is not stopping you from implementing a move as a copy

« first day (2754 days earlier)      last day (323 days later) »