@LewsTherin Oh, you meant that code literally. string &name = n; is how you declare and initialize a local variable one the same line, : name(n) is how you initialize a data member declared elsewhere.
i would like to thank all who post Interesting Stuff here, so that I can repost it on my FaceBook. thanks. in particular Fred for whitenoise music, and robot for that Euler lecture video.
@LewsTherin Please don't store references to dereferenced pointers to heap objects. You would later have so say delete &ref;, and that's just not how we roll in C++.
@LewsTherin References are extremely limited by design. (They were put into the language to support passing by reference.) For example, if you later want to rebind it to a different PlayerBeing, you can't do that.
If you come from Java and you want a "Java reference", you don't want a "C++ reference", you want a "smart pointer" or a "raw pointer" (or no indirection at all.)
@Lews: I missed the beginning of the discussion. What is the real problem, does you code not compile? Does it do the wrong thing? Do you need to extend it and don't know how?
Just to give you an example of what is wrong with raw pointers: when if(!allegro_init()) fails, the gameBeings array contains garbage pointers, but you still execute the delete gameBeings[i] ; loop, resulting in undefined behavior.
@Lews Get rid of that & in your data member declarations and constructor parameter types, and then pass a Vector(x, y) instead of a *new Vector(x, y) and all should be fine.
@LucDanton references were introduced to C++ I don't see why we can't use it if it makes life simple...I don't understand what you guys mean by rebinding though
Lol, I suppose you have to do a lot of C++ to understand..makes perfect sense why not to use it..although it should be fine if you intend the reference to be constant
Note that everything after the first 16 digits is noise (meaning those digits couldn't be anything else given the first 16 digits), but nevertheless, those digits are there.
I noticed that there is no reference to reference but there is pointer to pointer, and also there is no an array of references but an array of pointers.
Could anybody give me any reason?
C++ Standard 8.3.2/4 says:
There shall be no references to
references, no arrays of references,
and no pointers to references.
But I can't understand why this restriction is added to c++. In my opinion the code bellow can easily be compiled and work? What is the real cause of this restr...