Fixed width integers like uint64_t are only provided if the implementation supports the type. So even if your code is standard C++ there is no guarantee that it will work on all platforms.
@Insilico A lot of the code was a decade old, although we (hesitatingly) replace some of the core code over the years, to gain better performance, smaller memory footprints etc.
@StackedCrooked Yeah. And L"this is a wide string" will be UTF-16 on some platform, and UTF-32 on others. When you code cross-platform, you will have to deal with that.
@Xeo I have written desktop apps that were deployed on Windows and Mac and translated to 20+ languages. The procedure is simple: use std::string everywhere (UTF-8) and do a just-in-time conversion to std::wstring (UTF-16) when interfacing with WinAPI.
errorformat=%*[^"]"%f"%*\D%l: %m,"%f"%*\D%l: %m,%-G%f:%l: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once,%-G%f:%l: for each function it appears in.),%-GInfile included from %f:%l:%c:,%-GIn file included from %f:%l:%c\,,%-GIn file included from %f:%l:%c,%-GIn file included from %f:%l,%-G%*[ ]from %f:%l:%c,%-G%*[ ]from %f:%l:,%-G%*[ ]from %f:%l\,,%-G%*[ ]from %f:%l,%f:%l:%c:%m,%f(%l):%m,%f:%l:%m,"%f"\, line %l%*\D%c%*[^ ] %m,%D%*\a[%*\d]: Entering directory `%f',%X%*\a[%*\d]: Leaving directory `%f',%D%*\a: Entering directory `%f',%X%*\a: Leaving directory `%f',%DMaking %*\a in %f,%f|%l| %m
@DeadMG This is old code and it's funny how I used a named variable for the wstring back then because I wasn't certain if it would work as a temporary.
@StackedCrooked For one, and only one, release, we used std::string to hold UTF-8 strings in that software. It was the first Unicode release we ever made, and it was the last where we did that. It was a nightmare, since UTF-8 string kept creeping into the GUI unconverted. We literally had hundreds of bugs reported (by the test department of a major software company) within a few weeks. It almost drove us mad, and some still slipped through the net.
For the next release, UTF-8 strings were held in a std::basic_string<unsigned char>. This made the compiler complain when you tried to assign it to a std::string, made us find hundred more bugs at compile-time, and put an end to all those worries.
@SethCarnegie Great, can you upload the Clang 3.0 clang/tools/driver/driver.cpp file for me somewhere? I want to patch it to make a.exe the default output on Windows
@StackedCrooked There's also a non-Unicode version for every WinAPI call. And the GUIs on some Linux variants (wxWindows, back then, IIRC) took system-encoding, which usually was UTF-8. And OSX has UTF-32 in its API calls...
@StackedCrooked IIRC, the first time we were required to Unicode-enable our software was 2001. That code was used in quite a few applications, not all of which we could afford to make Unicode-aware. So we had to be able to switch the whole code from system encoding to Unicode with a #define, still make it compile and run properly, and display all the right strings, no matter what encoding some parts would throw at the rest of the code.
@Xeo No. The <windows.h> header defines thousands of macros, many of which have very popular names, without any means to turn this off globally. It's a nightmare.
@DeadMG In that company we had our own "Windows.h" header, which would turn off everything that could be turned off, except for what you specified explicitly (using a #define) because you needed it. Including this in a header basically made your cow-worker trample you to death on the spot, no questions asked.
@Insilico It's fine if a well-maintained 3rd-party lib does that and keeps it up to date. I'd never do this in my own code, though. Making sure these always match the API versions of those types even in just a medium-sized piece of software will turn into a maintenance nightmare within half a decade.
IMO, if you're going to dynamically allocate, then you may as well expose that to the user so they know the cost of what they're doing
although, of course, that choice is somewhat influenced by the fact that, for me, I might have an application that wants to choose between rendering pipelines at run-time
@DeadMG If I had access to a Windows machine (I'll try a VM soon) I'd love to write a decent C++11 wrapper around the WinAPI. It's just… I have no Windows.
11 made the genius move of ditching their pre-provided text interface and then simply not replacing it with anything, so if you want to render text to the screen it's endlessly irritating, and 10 has no value
the simple truth is that I don't need any new shizzles, I need ease of use, and 9 is better for that than 10 or 11
I have a problem with people from my country forming cliques wherever they go ! and I see a room active in the chat rooms everyday which uses a regional language in both the description and the name.
I think one member of the meta police who were present here recently said that the language should be restricted to English, except when the room is explicitly designated for chatting in another language. To me that seems to indicate that it is Ok to have rooms in other languages.
@sbi They dont chat in the regional language inside the room though , its all English ! Its just a clique where the room name serves to discourage other people from joining in
the C++ Community shall be your shield, if you shall donate all of your earthly possessions, then your faith in the Room Owners shall protect you from the evil Meta Police
@angryInsomniac That would a glitch in your browser. (It does refer to you, and you were plink'd for it, after all.) Very likely, though, the problem is between your monitor and your chair's back.
Can there be support for superscripting in SO chat? Possibly with a syntax such as:
^^text^^
For example:
My birthday is On the 27^^th^^ of February
or
Teh Internetz^^TM^^
It will be quite awesome. Thanks.
@daknøk From my POV a question is a dupe of another question if it can be adequately answered by an answer from the other question. It doesn't need to use the same words, nor does the OP need to understand that his question is already answered by an answer to the other question. (If this weren't so, we could never close the "What's the result of ++i + i++?" questions, because those who ask them usually have never heard about sequence points.)