mmh, found a solution :). std::u32string ret; auto str = std::to_string(d(re)); for(auto c : str) ret.push_back(c);
@HamZa but you may want to get a premium account, so as to download the tutorials instead of reading them in very tiny little parts which are quite horrible to use. (artificialy badly rendered, they were confortably readable in the V3 !)
you may also want to attend the MOOC and pay to get the exam...
they just don't care AT ALL about their community, 3/4 of the benevols (is that an actual english word ?) left at the same time, living a letter explaining that they had been treated like "we do no give a $ about what you ask" for more than two years.
I used to actually love the tutorials on it. I even recommend the sdz C++ tutorial today, because it's still the best in french (sadly). I hope i'll be able to change that...
hehe, it was like 5 years ago. I wanted to dive into programming, I started there with java/C but gave up since I was on a P2 and starting the IDE was a pain
I have some C++ code, and have noticed that the performance of particular stl functions (most notably, the constructors of stl::map and stl::vector) are substantially slower on Windows than on OS X or Linux.
On the order of 40x slower, that is, which matters a lot in a couple of my functions. Anybody have any vague ideas about where I might start to look for what might be going on? Wondering whether there might be some Visual Studio project setting for memory debugging that might have gotten turned on, or something.