Also, see what happens if you format the error message block as code - the regexes may be catching the backslashes/colons etc. and interpreting them as code.
But seriously, guys, you need to stop worrying about little details a bit. Last post I made, someone was going off on me for using reinterpret_cast until I deleted the whole thread. Saying it is not minimal enough if there is a reinterpret_cast in it.... many people here make this site more frustrating than it needs to be
@QPaysTaxes It was literally one function, ripped out of a platform independent class of mine, so I casted void* to Windows' HANDLE. The code is running on it's own, but he took great offense to the cast :D. But no it wasn't that person
@QPaysTaxes It's a bit of a moot point since it's already been reopened, but this is at least an answerable question. Before it wasn't. I think it's clear enough to get an answer, so I'm answering it.
Hmm, Jobs ad fail; Saw this ad i.stack.imgur.com/TlPgB.jpg but I have 0 answers/questions (let alone score...) in any of those tags, and I'm thousands of miles from Indianapolis.
Guess it's partly due to me not having a Jobs account though
In that case, if I find that the OP had a good reason to delete, I sometimes pastie it elsewhere and send it to them on an unrelated post. They get a bit of a telling off though :-)
@AndrewLi That is if you are answering OP centric posts. If you answer knowledge centric posts, you'll get votes flowing throughout. I don't want to plug any of my answers, but I wrote one on my birthday last year (June 22nd). It got it's first vote in September. Today there are 13 votes on it. It all depends on the post that you answer.
@AndrewLi Exactly, make your posts canonicals. They'll stand the test of time. You don't need to worry about the few upvotes that you get when you FGITW.
@QPaysTaxes My brain:-) I don't write too slow code from the start:-). For profiling, I use the internal hardware; most Cortex-M3/4/7 e.g. have built-in cycle counters.
@QPaysTaxes Don't forget: I'm on bare-metal when I use C. On the PC, I prefer Python.
Hmm, why not just use the OS clock functions?
@QPaysTaxes I'm pretty sure in the "real world" there are approaches from using clock functions up to hardware-mechanisms at the bus-interfaces and CPU-emulators. Just use what suits you best; anyone complaining should come up with a better approach.
You also could consider profiling e.g. with gprof, if that helps. But I never used it myself (mostly for lack of something I can write the logs to)
@QPaysTaxes There is always someone telling you you're wrong or can do better. If we were in the same project, chances are good it would be me;-). But then the person has to reason why.
@QPaysTaxes You want to profile, not benchmark first then. Identify hotspots and optimise them. Proper profiling includes benchmarking. But then: there are better things you can spent your time instead of profiling code which is fast enough
@AndrewLi Looks on-topic. Only closure reason is it's a dupe (which there should be one around given how basic it is)
@AndrewLi The difference there is that person is asking a specific question. If he had vomited a code block and said "It doesn't work" that's Too broad
@NathanOliver Yeah, doesn't seem to answer the question though
that one is asking if there's a 'proper order' for listing your tags in CSS, which is not really the same thing as "what's the difference between ul li {} and li ul {}
I would really like to close the question as just "Too Basic" tbh
@KevinMontrose When do you expect us to be able to close questions as pointers (a la duplicates) to Stack Overflow Documentation topics? — TylerH10 secs ago
@QPaysTaxes Tsk! Back in my time, where were writing important formulas on slate, if someone did not know the answer, the cat-o'-nine-tails came to use. You have no idea how easy-peasy your living is today ... (going to get some logs from the woods for the fire).