"strncpy was initially introduced into the C library to deal with fixed-length name fields in structures such as directory entries. Such fields are not used in the same way as strings: the trailing null is unnecessary for a maximum-length field, and setting trailing bytes for shorter names to ...
...null assures efficient field-wise comparisons. strncpy is not by origin a ``bounded strcpy,'' and the Committee has preferred to recognize existing practice rather than alter the function to better suit it to such use. "
(C rationale)
@TomalakGeretkal i meant it won't necessarily read sizeof(T*) bytes
But it won't reinterpret the bit-pattern by using the representation of the different pointer type. I think that's what the "reinterpret" in "reinterpret_cast" means
I'm trying to understand (a) in what way reinterpret_cast is different from what most people expect (b) what most people expect, and (c) whether this means I have to stop telling people not to reinterpret_cast pointers.
@TomalakGeretkal Oh, they still care (about some things, at least). Asynchronous thread termination was removed because the C committee didn't like one of the two approaches and no one else liked the other approach (or, so I was told...)
@TomalakGeretkal static_cast will generally do adjustments on pointer values. like when casting up or down a hierarchy. reinterpret_cast will generally not.
(c++03 has non-normative text that says it shall produce a null pointer, but no normative text backing it up, and c++0x completely removed that footnote nonsense)
Reference Link: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2009/n2849.pdf
I am trying to gather information about TR2 and how it relates to the upcoming C++ Standard, if it does at all.
Here are my questions so far. If I've missed any important questions, please answer those as well. ...
all addresses that int* (which would only have 2 byte resolution) could store could also be stored by a void* (which needs 1 byte resolution), but it would still be only half as big as a void*.
so the requirement that reinterpret_cast<T*>(u) requires both pointers have the same sizeof isn't really correct. it merely requires T to be able to represent all the values of u (in other words, T shall not have stricter alignment requirements than u).
width doesn't have to do with what and how many values can be represented at all. bool can only represent 2 values, still it's at least as large as char which can represent at least 127 as many values
Reference Link: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2009/n2849.pdf
I am trying to gather information about TR2 and how it relates to the upcoming C++ Standard, if it does at all.
Here are my questions so far. If I've missed any important questions, please answer those as well. ...
@sbi (disregarding that it’s thursday) don’t you have “happy fridays” (or whatever they’re called) at work? I had this in England and found it rather cool … company-sponsored booze while programming :)
[This must have been mentioned before but I’m unable to find it.]
After you post a message in chat, it takes a few seconds (3?) before you can post again. You can submit the message but it will be retained and you need to wait for the amount of time, and click on a link to re-send it.
I get the...
Because references are not const. :)
You have a ref-to-const (consider a rough analog, int const*, where the pointee int has a const context, but the pointer itself does not). The standard mixes terminology here, but I avoid the term "const ref" which is highly misleading.
References are inhere...
@TomalakGeretkal Actually, those down-voting runs (as well as up-voting ones) are detected by a nightly script and reverted. Isn't that happening to you?
@DeadMG I was told there's a script that detects when someone goes on a rampage and votes on many questions and answers of someone else. I don't know whet else it detects.
I'd prefer that votes remained in place, pending moderator attention. I'd hate to think that a situation like DeadMG's would result in valid downvotes being undone for no reason.
@TomalakGeretkal But you know how this site is run. You cant even fetch vote counts without a delay slowing you down, just in case someone was up to something.
I suppose if you know that the downvotes will get undone, and you get a childish kick out of seeing someone panic like this in the chat room, there's no harm in downvoting all someone's answers
Depends on how abstracted you need. For example, I recently needed a getter and setter in C++ when abstracting a Text object. The Direct3D text object just held a string Text member variable. The Direct2D Text object however had to be recreated and recached and that kind of thing. If I had opted ...
@TomalakGeretkal If several of you guys think it's him, and if the evidence (you've all be discussing about him) is so obvious, why don't you go and just ask him about it?
If nobody ever flags it, nothing would ever be done.
Why not message a mod, explain your concerns politely. At least bring it to their attention. If it's nothing, it's nothing... but if he's being a dick, then it'll surface.
@TomalakGeretkal You don't need him to be nice. Just a "BTW, is it you who's been down-voting us since that incident?" under one of his questions should trigger a response. (I wouldn't tell him that a script reverses these, though. Might give him ideas.)
@TomalakGeretkal I don't think this will gain you much except a moderator telling you to wait for that script. But then, maybe with the penalty box they now actually do something about these.
@sbi I'm considering. The problem is that I'd probably join as intermediate (not jr, not sr). I'd also probably become Sr (or better) in few weeks, but hey, I need to pay my bills.
This is excellent: "I thoroughly disagree with this answer and feel that a downvote would be appropriate. Unfortunately, I already upvoted you. I think that this is blatantly wrong"
Actually, getters and setters (as well as public properties hiding these) are very little imporvment over public variables, and a pretty good indicator for quasi classes.
@KonradRudolph I worked with python some months, and this was something that really bothered me. This and that python raises exception for nearly everything! cry
@KonradRudolph Well, isn't C++ known for letting yourself shoot into your foot, if you insist, rather than taking you by the hand to guide you through the minefields?
@jweyrich I try to use Python as much as possible and this is one of the things that really bothers me as well. Python’s far from perfect but there are a few really compelling ideas behind it.
So, that's the power of SO's real-time chat. Post a link to an answer a chat-member has a valid opinion on, ensure it's the only one with any votes. Corruption, I say!! :P
@KonradRudolph Do you? Mhmm. I was once proud to have not checked in a single segfault/AV for more than 6 years - despite a lot of pressure to improve performance. (My tests caught one before I checked in about once or twice a year, though.)
@DeadMG Well, if the processing is done highly parallel by agent in a distributed system across the network, then that becomes quite interesting, actually. (I'm not into any of the actually processing algorithms. I usually work with the infrastructure.)
@sbi Well, I have multithreading (without a library – I am the library) and unchecked array accesses, coupled with a flawed smart pointer implementation that I’m relying on, but that I heavily suspect is buggy
What was your first task in your first commercial C++ position? I remember, with high hopes I went in to my first C++ position and was tasking with removing certain lines from a shitload of SQL statements.
"@sbi I hear you. I’m still getting segfaults in my code despite not using pointers anywhere." "@sbi Well, I have [...] a flawed smart pointer implementation that I’m relying on, but that I heavily suspect is buggy" nice
@jweyrich In a company I used to work for I was handed the task of fixing the leaks in an XPath implementation that operated on a proprietary DOM implementation. I poked at it with a fork for an afternoon and proposed to re-write it from scratch. It took me two weeks, but that was probably much faster than trying to clean up the mess of that guy who had done it.
In defense of the library (which otherwise rocks), this class is due for replacement. Unfortunately, it’s used all over the place and replacing it is a major obstacle
@jweyrich It was an XPath 1.1(?) implementation, though (and I was to leave out a few esoteric corners, too), not that weird stuff they came up with later.