So I wrote a small program to try out Boost Filesystem. My program will write how many files there is in the current path and then the file names.
Here's my program:
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/filesystem.hpp>
using namespace boost::filesystem;
int main(){
directory_ite...
> Iterators are in fact not a single concept, but six concepts that form a hierarchy: some of them define only a very restricted set of operations, while others define additional functionality. The five concepts that are actually used by algorithms are Input Iterator, Output Iterator, Forward Iterator, Bidirectional Iterator, and Random Access Iterator.
By the way, that link describes the STL, but it should equally well apply to the standard C++ library. (Not sure about that Trivial Iterator, though. Never heard of it before.)
@kbok a professor at my university wrote an entire programming language just for generating random values (and computing distributions) from D&D-style dice specifications.
@FredOverflow I think there are a lot of people who would like a new facebook. Unfortunately it is a big company now trying to fill that place but I don't mind some competition on that field
I know we spoke of it here a cople of days ago (was it @tomalak who didn't want searches incorporated in their social media? or sharing with friends?).
I am currently trying to understand the new uniform initialization of C++0x. Unfortunately, I stumpled over using uniform initialization of references. Example:
int main() {
int a;
int &ref{a};
}
This example works fine:
% LANG=C g++ uniform_init_of_ref.cpp -std=c++0x -o uni -Wall -...
@MartinhoFernandes: int &ref(a) is syntactically different to int &ref{a}, that's what I meant. I think I will have to read more on uniform initialization :)
Small talk is conversation for its own sake, or "…comments on what is perfectly obvious." It is an informal type of discourse that does not cover any functional topics of conversation or any transactions that need to be addressed. The phenomenon of small talk was initially studied in 1923 by Bronisław Malinowski, who coined the term phatic communion to describe it. The ability to conduct small talk is a social skill.
Purpose
In spite of seeming to have little useful purpose, small talk is a bonding ritual and a strategy for managing interpersonal distance.Bickmore, T. (1999) A Comput...
believe me, im not where you are in terms of OOP'ness, and not where the guy in the article was when he started with java. I'm somewhere in between still. The good thing is, the more i study C++, the more i realize that I almost always had a OOP mindset, just did not have the tools (in my very good friend C) to do it
can't the functions that change the state push the changes to some intermediate manager class that batches the operations to be flushed once a frame or something? that sounds like a cleaner solution than marking things as dirty, and iterating over dirty instances once per frame to aggregate what needs to be updated
Based on this comment, I have started building a unicorn avatar maker. It's still quite ugly, and the results aren't different enough yet, but this is what it looks like so far:
Question list / Joel's profile (removed the images from here to make this thing a little shorter).
Is this just way t...
> For instance, try adding multithreading in and see what happens. Well, I'll tell you what happens: half the time, you get a Doubleton or a Tripleton, unless you're a synchronization expert, and having a Tripleton is about as desirable as having three Balrogs show up at your tea party.
This just broke my sarcasm for the day....
Horny Ponies....
Or maybe not.
I think it would have been a little better if you made the mouth a rounded rect instead of a line. That way you'd have more control over the look of those with "fatter" mouths.
To be fair, I think @balpha was not on the SO team at the time. Even if he was, he implemented the unicorn generator on his own. All the SO team had to do was to change all gravatar urls to the unicornatar.
Every space show I watch mentions that anti-matter used to exist, or still does and we just can't detect it. I think some shows even say we can create a small amount of anti-matter. It is not presented as an unproven conjecture like string theory, but rather as a fact.
In terms someone without ...
This is an interview question and I will appreciate some answers.
Consider...
struct A {};
struct B : A {};
A a;
B b;
a = b; // line 1
b = a; // line 2
Why does Line 2 throws an error, while line 1 is perfectly fine?
Why does this work? The answers so far are wrong (though highly upvoted).
(I’m assuming to simplify the underlying type system of pointers but this doesn’t make much sense to me …)
@Johannes Aaah. – But I suspect that most people (in particular, neither the OP nor the other answerers) will understand this answer. Mind expanding it?
while slicing is bad, I can't immediately see a problem though. Yeah you will kill some information from the object, but since every B is-a A, it seems fine to me that you can get the A from the B
this site : devx.com/tips/Tip/14570 (dunno if it's correct) says the vtable is copied as well, so reference to nonexistent instance variables can happen
@MartinhoFernandes tbh the real thing that annoys me (beyond the fact that it should be the other way around with an implicit keyword) is that I still want to write just return { a0, a1, a2, a3 };
No you can't unless there's an implicit conversion.
Writing stuff like std::unique_ptr<T> foo(U bar) { return std::unique_ptr<T> { new T(quux(bar)) }; } is tedious.
Also I discovered that it's not always acceptable in generic code to write T t { std::forward<Args>(args)... };. It fails for T = std::vector<double> and Args&& = { int, double }, i.e. generic_code<std::vector<double>>(42, 0.);
Uniform initialization is starting to be somewhat of a letdown beyond value-initialization of T {}
Because the implicitly declared copy assignment operator of B hides the implicitly declared copy assignment operator of A.
So for the line b = a, only the the operator= of B is a candidate. But its parameter has type B const&, which cannot be initialized by an A argument (you would need a d...
Hi, Can some experts help me on understanding between Inversion of Control vs Dependency Injection: stackoverflow.com/questions/6550700/… There are two sources which explains quite a bit different. I am confused.