@DeadMG Did you vote to delete the -3 answer (VC6) in the pointers question? (you should – it simply doesn’t belong there and is clutter because it’s so long)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ok perfect they contain "text". Text in C++ is either . c-string or std::string. Which one is the text file considered to be? (or neither)
Well, basic code for drawing a circle is easy: just loop from 0 to 2π at some interval and paint at {center_x + radius*cos(angle), center_y + radius*sin(angle)}.
What kind of constructors can structs in C++11 have to keep this struct as POD?
Only initializer-list acceptable? Or maybe there are no any restrictions?
@ValterHenrique why are you laughing? That's the only way you can make a circle in C. C has no graphics, no VGA memory, nothing excpet stdout/stderr, which lets you output plain text. Anything else is a library.
Well, basic code for drawing a circle is easy: just loop from 0 to 2π at some interval and paint at {center_x + radius*cos(angle), center_y + radius*sin(angle)}.
In computer graphics, the midpoint circle algorithm is an algorithm used to determine the points needed for drawing a circle. The algorithm is a variant of Bresenham's line algorithm, and is thus sometimes known as Bresenham's circle algorithm, although not actually invented by Jack E. Bresenham. The algorithm can be generalized to conic sections.
The algorithm is related to work by Pitteway and Van Aken.
The algorithm
The algorithm starts with the circle equation x^2 + y^2 = r^2. For simplicity, assume the center of the circle is at (0,0). We consider first only the first octant and d...
@R.MartinhoFernandes In rmartinho.github.com/2012/07/06/optimal-tuple-i.html you mention something about a tuple implementation with optimal storage layout. Did you finish that / is the source code available for it?
@NikiC It's not particularly great because it was mostly hacked up. I think I can reduce it and make it a lot more readable, but haven't taken the time to do it yet.
I find the number of upvotes for this Q stackoverflow.com/questions/12135518/is-faster-than rather baffling. It is a transparently silly question, originating from a silly statement in one book. The top answer is a thorough, well written one, but still. Any particular tweeter I can blame?
@CaptainGiraffe "It is a transparently silly question, originating from a silly statement in one book." Sounds like the usual recipe for highly upvoted questions.
POSIX files are select()able. There's no freaking reason to not make FileChannel selectable. Argh, right when I was starting to enjoy nio. Threads it is, sigh :(
I well remember Stroustrup, or maybe it was Sutter, saying how glad they were that they didn't have to go around deprecating huge chunks of their Standard libraries.
@DeadMG Well, in this case, the previous two are not deprecated. All three provide different functionality; and by that I mean, functionality that was missing from the previous ones.
Yep, the new AsynchronousFileChannel is not selectable either. It's a whole different interface, so I can't plug it into my existing asynchronous network I/O code.
Last night I peeked at the Roslyn samples, and the semantic analysis ones always start by building an AST from a string. I haven't delved into it much, but I hope it's only done for presentational convenience.