Jan 3, 2020 00:00
Why are you trying to use inheritance here?
 

Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
Apr 18, 2019 23:59
@Rick PIP51L GKK69M CRJ03K ... are all the same length. Assuming 1 character == 1 byte this means each can be represented by 6 bytes .. so a std::uint64_t (or the fast/least variant) works to keep it.
Apr 18, 2019 22:53
@CaptainGiraffe How about converting this representation GKK69M into an (unsigned) integer and then apply radix sort?
Feb 25, 2015 00:19
Bye :)
Feb 25, 2015 00:19
@Rapptz Hm, I probably need to go with the comparator, as I also need operator<
Feb 25, 2015 00:16
@Rapptz Using the third template argument of the container (in this case map) ... I should've tought of that myself, so obvious. Thank you very much :)
Feb 25, 2015 00:12
orlp: -.-
Feb 25, 2015 00:11
Hi, quick question: Can you forward declare a specialization of std::less? It feels wrong to put the implementation of my specialization into a header file.
 

SO Close Vote Reviewers

This room is for support and discussion about reviewing and co...
Apr 18, 2019 22:44
For reference, here's the older question: stackoverflow.com/questions/26690083/… It also has an answer which is good but that's not the accepted answer.
Apr 18, 2019 22:43
Hi, I just stumbled over stackoverflow.com/questions/55754053/how-to-split-a-list-in-c ... there's a suggestion for a possible duplicate (which matches), but the supposed duplicate is of .. relatively poor quality and has an answer accepted which doesn't actually answer the question (but circumvents the issue at hand). Should this be marked as a duplicate or not?
 

 bin

It's a bin, for binning things.
Jun 11, 2017 22:21
Is there a question on SO about possible approaches to reduce code duplication with member functions overloaded on const? (think std::vector::at as example) I'm almost sure there is (at least) one, but cannot find it atm.
 
Aug 19, 2015 00:15
I've edited the answer ... hopefully it's more clear now.
Aug 19, 2015 00:07
Ah, I think I understand what you're about. I didn't intend to suggest that one could use the "x" after using it with the placement new.
Aug 18, 2015 23:59
What code exactly? In your code there's no issue. You modify q, which is perfectly fine, since it's non const.
Aug 18, 2015 23:59
Which pointer? Both are non const, so they can change what they point to.
Aug 18, 2015 23:59
The const int doesn't change value. It's two distinct const ints that happen to be at the same location in memory (at different times).
Aug 18, 2015 23:59
I'd guess so, yes. If you were constructing an object of a different type, then it would be UB to access that using a wrongly typed pointer.