I've always felt that ! being too hard to see is a problem that can be solved with rendering alone. Importing std::ops::Not so you can use .not(), or other "higher visibility" variations always slightly annoy me
@trentcl Since English is the lingua-franca of programming, and all keywords are already English based (as well as everything in the standard library), I don't see any reason why symbols are preferred over keywords in this case. If it would be Math, which has no natural language bias and symbolic-expressions are the norm, much would be different. But at as I said above, we're likely too late to change this, and the only way to fix it now, is to tinker with rendering options.. :/
..or wait for some idiot to propose some weird unicode character as synonyms, which must be the natural next step after the acceptance of non-ASCII identifiers :see_no_evil:
@PeterVaro I don't have any particular opinion on ! vs keyword not in the abstract. Just, since Rust already exists and has chosen the first option, I am annoyed when people go out of their way to avoid using it
I am having some difficulty compiling a C++ program that I've written.
This program is very simple and, to the best of my knowledge, conforms to all the rules set forth in the C++ Standard. I've read over the entirety of ISO/IEC 14882:2003 twice to be sure.
The program is as follows:
Here i...
explain why you need a structure with a reference to an other structure but can't be init properly would be way better than ask if something is UB when it's obviously UB, your question look like "please someone tell me it's ok cause I already do this" :p. I would bet you have a xy problem — Stargateur32 mins ago
and guess what
Op just downvote an answer that literally quote the reference xd