@Rishav: At the time that you commented on the absent alt text when Loquitor one-boxed an xkcd comic, I had already edited it to remove the one-box, so I couldn't check myself. Sami just used the xkcd command in the Sandbox, and the alt text is there.
You'd rather have a button than a clickable picture?
Alright. I see the difference in the picture. The lighting on imgur wasn't very good, but now that I see it with a different background color, I can see it. It does indeed look better.
In the code you gave:
int foo(int i)
{
const auto a = [&i](){ i = 7; return i * i; };
a();
return i;
}
You are not assigning after you initialized your constant lambda function. Therefore, const doesn't mean much in this context.
How to extract table names and column names from Complex sql queries (Select, update, insert or delete). The Databases can be SQl, ORACLE or DB2.. I know about http://www.sqlparser.com/ but im looking for open source projects available in .net?
Take a look at the LibGDX Javadocs regarding MathUtils:
randomBoolean
public static boolean randomBoolean(float chance)
Returns true if a random value between 0 and 1 is less than the specified value.
That means if you specify a number (passed as an argument), the method will retu...
I have a nullptr in Game.h
Tile * _playerTile = nullptr;
I give it to the Player constructor in Game.cpp
Game::Game(int winW, int winH, string winTitle) :
_inputManager(),
_textureLoader(),
_tilemapLoader(),
_player(_playerTile) // <----
{}
Player.h:
Tile * _tile = nullptr;
The player cl...
This is an example to illustrate my question which involves some much more complicated code that I can't post here.
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int a = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++)
{
printf("Hello\n");
a = a + 1000000000;
}
}
This program contains undefine...
How can I multipy two integers using bitwise operators?
I found an implementation here. Is there a better way of implementing multiplication?
For example: 2 * 6 = 12 must be performed using bitwise operators.
NOTE: Numbers are arbitrary, not power of 2
I'm working in C++ and I have a function that uses the std::find function to check for the presence of an element inside a vector. As far as I know, std::find returns some form of InputIterator. What I'm having trouble with is figuring out what I should list the return type as. As an example:
#i...
@AndrewL. sorry to ping you here, I didn't want to create noise on main, and I don't want to go to SOCVR because I'm glad those silly event notifications have finally stopped for me:P I'm just glad I see you exerting some nice peer pressure on crap posts, keep up the good work:)