Even this is: int main() { int* pi; { int i; pi = &i } /* pi points to garbage here */ }. It's UB to even point to a bad location, in the most pedant setting.
@thecoshman return 0; is implicit for main. (Useful for snippets!)
@Pubby Right, sorry, I made a mistake. I believe it was this that was UB: int main() { int* pi; { int i; pi = &i } int* pi2 = pi; } because pi is read (converted to an rvalue), and points to garbage. (Likewise, your return value is read (and then ignored) within main.)
That said, this beer is gat-dayum delicious so who knows if I'm correct.
Really though, I have been convinced for the past couple years that reading a pointer that is merely pointing to a bad location (but initialized) is UB, and I think I learned that from litb, so he's to blame! But I still want your original example to be UB.
This is a listing of common symbols found within all branches of mathematics. Symbols are used in maths to express a formula or to replace a constant. Each symbol is listed in both HTML, which depends on appropriate fonts being installed, and in , as an image.
:
Symbols
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:auto; width:100%; border:1px"
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Symbolin HTML
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Symbolin
! style="text-align:left;" |Name
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Explanation
! rowspan="3" style="font-size:130%;" |Examples
|-
! Read as
|-
! styl...
I have some buffer of ~10M size like:
float* buffer = (float*)malloc(1024*1024*sizeof(float));
accessing it by index
float v = buffer[k] ;
//some operations
buffer[k] = v2;
inside 2 nested loops it seems quite slow, while accessing by pointer
float* ptr = buffer+k;
float v = *ptr
//some...
I hate searching for something in Boost and coming up on some documentation 10 versions old. Why is there not a link at the top saying, "For the most recent version of this library documentation, go here..."? Bah.
Next time, consider posting a minimal selfcontained example. It takes an experienced Spirit dev about 10 minutes to setup a compilable example from the fragments above. That raises the barrier to answering to about 'infinite' for about 95% of the SO audience. — sehe7 mins ago
darn for some reason chat always comes with :3500425 prefilled in the text input box
@StackedCrooked also partial. clang++ only compiles in -m32 and valgrind only works on 64bit binaries. Ah well, that's for another day. The relevant bug is here or here
@stdOrgnlDave You'll want to use this userscript: (<C-up><C-up><C-up>R to reply to third message up)
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Legends tell of a prolific Meta Stack Overflow chatter who despised using their mouse above all things. In an effort to keep t...
> Norine Dworkin, from San Francisco holds the world record for the longest masturbating time with 6 hours and 30 minutes. A woman in London holds the world record for the most orgasms at 49 big O's.
> You can sponsor someone to whack of for you if you'd rather not have people watching you, you can give cash, masturbate in your own home while watching live via webcast or you could consider starting your own masturbation team. Mind you there are rules for masturbation teams in the Masturbate-a-thon. Lastly you can just walk around and watch the action without being a registered masturbator.
Really, "starting your own masturbation team"? WTF?
> This year, Good Vibrations has decided to include a new competition into the Masturbate-a-thon; an ejaculation distance spewing contest. There are sections of the event cordoned off for spectators that have passed a respectability test to watch all that whacking.
ROTFL!
> So join in this year in May and beat your meat in the name of Sex Ed.
> Warranty: To be clear this is the smallest of extensions. It only listens to two events and it's only 12k so you have no reason that I know of to be afraid of it. Plus, it works on my machine so you've got that going for you. — Scott Hanselman
@Pubby "Motorola is prohibited from acting on today's decision, and our business in Germany will continue as usual while we appeal this decision and pursue the fundamental issue of Motorola's broken promise."
Was wondering, I have a mac desktop that i trying to repair... If in install Mac Operating system via windows using an external device. will i be able to then log into it via remote desktop / since i do not have a keyboard or a monitor for the powerdesk
@Riley That's great, the installer still won't run on windows, you could put the install CD image on an external HDD, but then why don't you just boot off the CD?
> From what I heard, CMake seems to be something like C's preprocessor on steroids, but without all of the nice syntax, consistence, and ease of use. — sbi
@Xeo I have yet to see a good cross-platform build system. Makefiles, however, aren't even close. Rather, they are on the opposite ("bad") end of the spectrum of possible build systems. CMake I have had to deal with briefly a few years ago. It's off the scale, far beyond makefiles.
@Collin I have tried card and yest it works what i see is a mac folder flashing with a question mark.. MY usb keyboard was not recongizined but possible thats because no hardrive in there
he he he. list contents of a directory sorting by modification time in reverse order, showing hidden files and displaying slashes in front of folders: ls -crap
I'd delete my comment but it's still interesting code
although now I'm starting to wonder how one would force it to fulfill its promise if it was set to lazy
oh cool!
when deferred, you get() - and it will propagate a deferred exception when you get() it! that's just asking for user-triggerable multi-threaded exception program destruction
std::async is one of the least useful futures ideas I could think of at 3am if I were drunk. come on C++11 standard committee, don't be such jerks.
@KonradRudolph basically you give it a future and say "fulfill it now" or "fulfill it when I ask for it." deferred fulfilling causes behavior as if it were single-threaded. in other words, it's useless
@KonradRudolph it's not like one can write an entirely generic futures scheduler can they? it returns an std::future which you can then choose to get() later in your own scheduler, I suppose, if you want to
if you're bothering to keep a futures pool, allocate resources and schedule them, though, I have a feeling std::async is still not quite up to the job
@RMartinhoFernandes yes indeed, you're correct that that's the reason, but why was it so difficult to figure that out last night (and do you ever sleep or work or anything?)
The funniest part is implication that C is created by a bunch of hermits wrapped in yeti furs, somewhere is a cave deep in the mountains, in complete isolation from the real world. Because that's the only way you can get a spec that, because of system headers, makes behaviour of nearly all programs undefined. Especially in a systems programming language, and I can't even enter that train of thought, it makes no sense.