- "CppCon 2019: Herb Sutter "De-fragmenting C++: Making Exceptions and RTTI More Affordable and Usable"" - 8 Updates
- NASA is also using Delphi - 1 Update
- Putting two colons before std -- is it ever needed? - 4 Updates
- Community service -- do not pass Go ... - 1 Update
- overloading static operator + (non member) with non-class native types ... - 1 Update
- Is it possible to use std::cout for binary output? - 1 Update
| woodbrian77@gmail.com: Sep 27 09:24AM -0700 On Thursday, September 26, 2019 at 5:37:20 PM UTC-5, Lynn McGuire wrote: > RTTI More Affordable and Usable"" > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARYP83yNAWk&t=1s > That is a 1.5 hour speech ! I'm not keen on the title either. It's more like De-fragmenting programming. If this goes well, we can reach out to those who have considered C++, but chosen other languages. Brian Ebenezer Enterprises - Enjoying programming again. http://webEbenezer.net |
| rick.c.hodgin@gmail.com: Sep 27 09:54AM -0700 On Thursday, September 26, 2019 at 6:37:20 PM UTC-4, Lynn McGuire wrote: > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARYP83yNAWk&t=1s > That is a 1.5 hour speech ! > Lynn The keynote with Bjarne Stroustrup was prefaced by a boy in drag. I contacted the CppCon and told them it was inappropriate, and I would not be watching any of their videos from that point forward. My loss in C++ technical content. Will have to rely on second-hand recounts. -- Rick C. Hodgin |
| David Brown <david.brown@hesbynett.no>: Sep 27 07:30PM +0200 > not be watching any of their videos from that point forward. > My loss in C++ technical content. Will have to rely on second-hand > recounts. I know you don't read my posts, I know this is off-topic, and I know it might provoke another ridiculous sermon. But it bothers me too much to see prejudice left uncommented. The man introducing the speaker has long hair. That is /all/. Please stop being so judgemental and trying to find something to hate in everything and everyone. |
| Ian Collins <ian-news@hotmail.com>: Sep 28 07:43AM +1200 > The keynote with Bjarne Stroustrup was prefaced by a boy in drag. > I contacted the CppCon and told them it was inappropriate, and I would > not be watching any of their videos from that point forward. You really a nasty bigoted twat. -- Ian. |
| rick.c.hodgin@gmail.com: Sep 27 01:01PM -0700 >> I contacted the CppCon and told them it was inappropriate, and I would >> not be watching any of their videos from that point forward. > You really a nasty bigoted .. . If by "nasty bigoted t-word" you mean "I believe in the principles of male and female as created by God, upheld by Jesus Christ, and those that will endure in this world by His guidance until the end- times, then yes I agree. It's not being a bigot to uphold the principles God established: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis+1%3A27%2C+2%3A21-25%2C+5%3A1-2&version=KJV In those few verses are heterosexuality, lifelong marriage, an establishment of the traditional male + female family, and the propagation of the species being through such a marriage. God is not a bigot. He is God. He's teaching us the right way to do things. Those who rebel against God are rebelling against His teachings, and calling God's servants bigots. Wise up, Ian. The day of accountability for your life is coming hard and fast. How will you stand with such a rebellion against God active and present in your life? It's time to repent and seek the truth, lest you lose your soul on that day of accounta- bility, also known as Judgment Day or the Great White Throne Judgment. Study God, Ian. Read the Bible seeking the truth. You WILL NOT be disappointed in God's guidance and provision for your life, and in the age to come. You will be disappointed by the future your current rebellion against God does not afford you, and very solidly does not afford you in fact. Tick tock, people. Your lives are winding down. That final day where you stand before God to give an account of your life is coming. For some it will be sooner rather than later, so it is a right course of action to take steps for that final day while it is still called TODAY. -- Rick C. Hodgin |
| red floyd <dont.bother@its.invalid>: Sep 27 02:38PM -0700 On 9/27/2019 12:43 PM, Ian Collins wrote: > On 28/09/2019 04:54, rick.c.hodgin@gmail.com wrote: >> [his usual drivel] > You really a nasty bigoted twat. And this surprises you how? |
| Ian Collins <ian-news@hotmail.com>: Sep 28 10:51AM +1200 On 28/09/2019 09:38, red floyd wrote: >>> [his usual drivel] >> You really a nasty bigoted twat. > And this surprises you how? No one bit unfortunately, but it still annoys me given the effort conferences go to to be safe, inclusive places. Sorry for setting him off. -- Ian. |
| rick.c.hodgin@gmail.com: Sep 27 04:11PM -0700 On 9/27/2019 6:51 PM, Ian Collins wrote: > Sorry for setting him off. Read what "he" wrote, Ian. It's important to your soul. What this world calls being "inclusive" is actually enmity with God. "Friendship with the world is enmity with God": https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James+4%3A4&version=NIV;KJV Seek God, Ian. Let Him lead you, your life, your family, your business, everything. It is THE right and proper way. -- Rick C. Hodgin |
| aminer68@gmail.com: Sep 27 03:40PM -0700 Hello, I am not stupid to use Delphi and Freepascal compilers, and of course i am also using there modern Object Pascal (and in the Delphi mode of Freepascal), and if you are not convinced that i am not stupid to use them, here is the proof that Delphi is a serious compiler: NASA is also using Delphi, read about it here: https://community.embarcadero.com/blogs/entry/want-moreexploration-40857 The European Space Agency is also using Delphi, read about it here: https://community.embarcadero.com/index.php/blogs/entry/delphi-s-involvement-with-the-esa-rosetta-comet-spacecraft-project-1 Read more here: https://glooscapsoftware.blogspot.com/2017/05/software-made-with-delphi-how-do-you.html Thank you, Amine Moulay Ramdane. |
| woodbrian77@gmail.com: Sep 27 08:50AM -0700 On Wednesday, September 25, 2019 at 3:02:13 AM UTC-5, Frederick Gotham wrote: > ::std::cout << sizeof(a) << " " << sizeof(b) << ::std::endl; > SomeFunc(); > } It's an easy step to take to improve the safety of your code. In this 29 line program: https://github.com/Ebenezer-group/onwards/blob/master/src/cmw/tiers/genz.cc there's one ::std. In this 228 line program: https://github.com/Ebenezer-group/onwards/blob/master/src/cmw/tiers/cmwA.cc there are 10 uses of ::std. If I remember right Gabriel Dos Reis is also a proponent. Maybe Howard Hinnant also. It's kind of like "east const". Brian Ebenezer Enterprises "We few, we happy few. We band of brothers." St. Crispin's Day http://webEbenezer.net |
| scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal): Sep 27 04:25PM >On Wednesday, September 25, 2019 at 3:02:13 AM UTC-5, Frederick Gotham wrote: >> So the question I ask is if there is **ever** any situation when it's necessary to put two colons before 'std'? >It's an easy step to take to improve the safety of your code. It has absolutely nothing to do with code safety. >In this 29 line program: Snip blatent product placement. You haven't justified your statement about code safety. |
| woodbrian77@gmail.com: Sep 27 11:40AM -0700 On Friday, September 27, 2019 at 11:25:46 AM UTC-5, Scott Lurndal wrote: > It has absolutely nothing to do with code safety. > >In this 29 line program: > Snip blatent product placement. I think of it as a service not a product. Products in my experience aren't free. Brian |
| scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal): Sep 27 08:19PM >> Snip blatent product placement. >I think of it as a service not a product. >Products in my experience aren't free. Neither are useful services. |
| woodbrian77@gmail.com: Sep 27 09:00AM -0700 Shalom Can you give me ideas on how to improve my code generation service <https://github.com/Ebenezer-group/onwards> ? FreeBSD's motto is "the power to serve." The back tier of my service runs on FreeBSD. The middle tier is a UDP server, and my front tier is a small, highly portable program. The service is free so I don't think that can be improved on, but if you want to get into the code, that's good. Maybe you have a suggestion about how to organize things differently, etc. Thank you in advance. Brian Ebenezer Enterprises - Enjoying programming again. http://webEbenezer.net |
| Jorgen Grahn <grahn+nntp@snipabacken.se>: Sep 27 10:14AM On Fri, 2019-09-20, Soviet_Mario wrote: > On 20/09/2019 11:52, Bo Persson wrote: ... > maybe I'll have to resort to them. The format string is > rather obscure, but later the comma notation of the variadic > list is very short and clear. Also consider using stream output using << -- things like these (I think you mentioned formatting error messages elsewhere in the thread) are the reason the feature exists. Format to a temporary stringstream if needed. /Jorgen -- // Jorgen Grahn <grahn@ Oo o. . . \X/ snipabacken.se> O o . |
| David Brown <david.brown@hesbynett.no>: Sep 27 09:02AM +0200 On 26/09/2019 16:19, James Kuyper wrote: >> That doesn't follow. >> Unix (more specifically POSIX) code is very portable, by intent. > How portable is it to non-POSIX systems? I'd expect that depends on what the code does. A fair amount of systems and libraries have POSIX or POSIX-like API's to aid portability (or at least reduce programmer learning curves), even in non POSIX systems. I've seen embedded network stacks with POSIX-like socket interfaces while running on bare metal, and RTOS's with POSIX-like API's for multi-threading. Clearly these only implement a subset of POSIX features, but if they cover your code's needs, you have portability. |
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