Given the following:
// not a problem
int i = 2, j = 3;
so it surprises me that this:
// compiler error: Implicitly-typed local variables cannot have multiple declarators
var i = 2, j = 3;
doesn't compile. Maybe there is something I don't understand about this (which is why I'm asking this)...
@Cicada Nope, you cannot read your timeline when you don't have a Twitter account, because a timeline is where you read the tweets of whom you follow, and you can only follow tweeters when you have an account... It's actually quite simple.
Variant a:
const auto end = whatever.end();
for (auto it = whatever.begin(); it != end; ++it)
{
// ...
}
Variant b:
const auto end = whatever.cend(); // note the call to cend insteand of end here
for (auto it = whatever.begin(); it != end; ++it)
{
// ...
}
Is there any reason to bel...
@FredOverflow seems to me like the unanswerable question. I'd suggest when compiling with optimizations, it might not make much of a difference. It will depend on your compiler and library implementation though
@Cicada I feel compelled to pay you a complement. Take it however you wish; I don't care. I just thought I'd say, if that is you in your gravatar, that you are very pretty.
@Cicada Oh, C# is a very neat and clean little language, and I like it for that. But.
Compared to C++, C# comes across like a sweet and innocent little girl facing a battle-hardened soldier. If things get rough, I know who I'd rather have at my side, no matter how hard to deal with at times.
Do invocations of std constructors need to be qualified with std::?
class whatever : public std::runtime_error
{
public:
explicit whatever(const std::string& what) : runtime_error(what) {}
}; // ^ do I need std:: here?
It works on my compiler ...
argh, i'm so frustrated. helping a festival here with adding content to their web pages. and now the designer (self-educated) has been in there messing up the design. i will probably get the blame, because it will be there until next i get to talk to people, on tuesday.
The "god particle" is a load of bullshit. Higgs boson and the higgs field, awesome. I would've loved if the Standard model had crashed, in order for new physics to emerge, but its pending confirmation is also nice.
@Foxinsocks That's OS-specific. When your program gets its hands on the string, the OS has typically already accepted it. All you can do is to bite bigger or smaller chunks out of it. If you don't want that, you need to employ OS-specific methods.
@Foxinsocks However, I very much suppose that you did not ask the question you wanted to ask. So you might want to lean back for a moment, think about what you actually want to do, and ask that question.
Well, I have another Powershell question. What is better to work with in PS, a space-separated string, or XML? Background: SVN can emit properties as plain text or as XML. I need to get at those substrings. In plain text they are space-separated, in XML they are their own node.
@sbi I'm trying to write simple console app. Which waits from user some string data. And data should be short(about 5 symbols). hastebin.com/wejihupota.vala
@Foxinsocks In a simple console app you cannot prevent users from entering longer strings. O suppose that you can, however, limit the number of characters you accept. Likely that's some funky format string for scanf(), but I wouldn't know that much C.
But if there are escaping issues involved (like, can property names have spaces in them? I don't remember), the XML APIs are probably less of a hassle.
Uh oh. I only now have closely looked at what that XML stuff actually contains. The smallest granularity is what the plain-text option gives me, too. They just wrapped it in some talkative XML: :-/
<lines>
<line>This is a line.</line>
<line>This is another line.</line>
<line>I can turn anything into worthless XML</line>
<line>Isn't that awesome?</line>
</lines>
Ok. So I have that list of lines, each consisting of a path and a name. How do I split the list into lines? And how do I split each line at the last space?
@RMartinhoFernandes Part of the problem there is that there hasn't been a good, authoritative tutorial repository for PHP. Yep, that's kind of a problem with C++ as well.
@EtiennedeMartel although most (all?) said there is literally correct, it's nit-picking of the worst sort, and i think from an adversarial source. many of the criticisms seem like quotes taken out of context, in particular when statements that apply to HTML 4.x and earlier are compared to HTML 5. which no browser yet supports fully (and perhaps never will).
@Prætorian Haha! "We tried to call Barclays’ security expert R0b Ste!nway for a comment, but he was not available for 24 hours, having answered his phone incorrectly three times in succession."
I have the Compiler Error C2071 when I try to implement the explicit operator bool:
class C
{
public:
explicit operator bool() const
{
return !!*this;
}
};
Why? How can I solve this problem?
I'm using Visual Studio 2012 RC.
Uh, another PS question: Now that I have a string "A B", how do I get $A to be "A" and $B to be "B"? Or, what I rather want to know: I need to turn "A B" into "A B'", where "B'" needs to be computed from "B". So I need to get at "B", manipulate that, and then need to replace ``"B"` by the manipulated value.