@Als What's up? Being on holiday and rarely online, I don't feel like I want to catch up with everything afterwards, so please fill me in if I missed something important.
vector::erase
Removes from the vector container and calls its destructor but If the contained object is a pointer it doesnt take ownership of destroying it.
You will have to explicitly call delete on each contained pointer to delete the content it is pointing to, for example:
void clearVector...
@Als My opinion is that I'm sitting on a shady terrace on the otherwise sunny Canary island of El Hierro, looking at the sea, having just finished a book, waiting to have dinner, and don't feel like looking at SO questions, let alone decide about their future as an FAQ entry.
@Als Don't be shy to ask, but I might decline to have an opinion. :)
@MartinhoFernandes It wasn't bad, actually. I though the underlying plot idea was somewhat questionable, but the way the two dealt with the inter-human relationships was pretty good and convincing.
@MartinhoFernandes Wow, now that I think of it, that's quite a coincidence!
Trouble is, this is only my 6th day of vacation, I'm out of books, the animal protection league (who give away books for a small donation on Sunday market) didn't have any interesting books on Sunday, and I'll have to wait till next Sunday to lower my standards enough to buy another book. I might now have to resort to crime, which I don't like, but which is available in abundance in this household.
@MartinhoFernandes I wasn't when I started this book. However, I spent most of the night before last reading instead of sleeping, which made me finish it much earlier than I planned to.
Now the next bookshop with English books is on Tenerife, which is a 4hr boat trip, a bed to stay over night, another boat trip, and a lot of money away. (I could fly, too, but that would make the book even more expensive.) So I have to wait until Sunday market again.
@MartinhoFernandes Yeah. I only have two of my bigger kids with me, who can pretty much watch after themselves. That is holidays!
@DeadMG Well, you know, this is not exactly the British west coast here. The Atlantic at this time of the year has ~22°C. For a middle European like me, that seems jolly good.
I want to write a metafunction which returns the corresponding const_iterator from an iterator
template <class Iterator>
struct get_const_iterator
{
typedef ??? type;
};
get_const_iterator<int*>::type must be const int*
get_const_iterator<const int*>::type must be const ...
You can do it in C++0x
template <typename Container>
Container container (typename Container :: iterator);
template <typemame Iterator>
struct get_const_iterator
{
typedef decltype (container (Iterator())) :: const_iterator type;
};
Although I'm starting to agree with Steve --...
@JohannesSchaublitb I looked at this code sample again today: ideone.com/6SDsv And I'm a little confused because it assumes that long long is 64-bit and long is 32 bit. Shouldn't it also work on an architecture where long is 64-bit?
@JohannesSchaublitb ah now I see, its purpose is different than what I had in mind. Never mind then.
I thought it would intelligently map Integer<32> to long and Integer<64> to long long. But it would map Integer<64> to long if long were 64-bit on this particular platform. I hope I'm making sense...
It's just a puzzle I've thought about, but haven't yet solved.
yeah, but there can be a type that can hold arbitraty big numbers... and that class comes in handy once in a while... I mean, they have so many things that they call general-purpose that I can't even imagine a usage... but sumething as simple as this is missing...