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forophobia

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  • P peterchen

    Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

    // deprecated, don't use:
    // for(int i=0; i

    I tell you what: unless I can write

    count_if(container, element > 0)

    I stick with my loops.

    Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

    I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

    The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

    It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

    What can go wrong in a loop?

    • you forget to increment
    • you are off by one
    • you invalidate the container or the iterator

    The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

    How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

    Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

    R Offline
    R Offline
    Rob Manderson
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    What an excellent rant!! Got my 5 :) Rob Manderson I'm working on a version for Visual Lisp++

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • P peterchen

      Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

      // deprecated, don't use:
      // for(int i=0; i

      I tell you what: unless I can write

      count_if(container, element > 0)

      I stick with my loops.

      Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

      I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

      The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

      It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

      What can go wrong in a loop?

      • you forget to increment
      • you are off by one
      • you invalidate the container or the iterator

      The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

      How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

      Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

      J Offline
      J Offline
      jan larsen
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      peterchen wrote: The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo! Hey,try to be a little sensitive man, there are logically challenged programmers too you know. I once met this loop written by an Oracle consultant:

      for (int i = 0; i < 1; i++)
      {
      // And here was 1 (one) line of code!...
      }

      He obviously hadn't consulted the Oracle the day he wrote that... "After all it's just text at the end of the day. - Colin Davies "For example, when a VB programmer comes to my house, they may say 'does your pool need cleaning, sir ?' " - Christian Graus

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • P peterchen

        Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

        // deprecated, don't use:
        // for(int i=0; i

        I tell you what: unless I can write

        count_if(container, element > 0)

        I stick with my loops.

        Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

        I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

        The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

        It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

        What can go wrong in a loop?

        • you forget to increment
        • you are off by one
        • you invalidate the container or the iterator

        The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

        How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

        Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

        P Offline
        P Offline
        paulb
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        for loops are way too readable, the whole purpose of STL and especially Boost is to enable the production of completely unreadable code that will utterly confuse the slack-jawed imbecile who only knows C# and is asked to maintain my C++ code. I plan to leave behind a legacy that will cause tears of frustration and untold misery in the so-called "programmers" of tommorrow.

        C N I 3 Replies Last reply
        0
        • P paulb

          for loops are way too readable, the whole purpose of STL and especially Boost is to enable the production of completely unreadable code that will utterly confuse the slack-jawed imbecile who only knows C# and is asked to maintain my C++ code. I plan to leave behind a legacy that will cause tears of frustration and untold misery in the so-called "programmers" of tommorrow.

          C Offline
          C Offline
          ColinDavies
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          paulb wrote: I plan to leave behind a legacy that will cause tears of frustration and untold misery in the so-called "programmers" of tommorrow. You definitly have the right attitude. Now for god-sake never comment any code, unless you learn Klingon. Regardz Colin J Davies Attention: Watch this signature for an upcoming announcement that will effect you.

          K 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • P peterchen

            I'm actually trying to move on to an iterator pair, that acts like an iterator that knows it's end, so you can

            for(iterpair it(container); it; ++it)
            DoSomethingNastyTo(*it);

            Just got to roughen out the templates and make it an CP article... maybe tomnite - no, it rained the first time since weeksof a brutish heat. I'll have a walk down to the river.


            we are here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is Vonnegut jr.
            sighist || Agile Programming | doxygen

            J Offline
            J Offline
            Jorgen Sigvardsson
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            That's pretty smart! -- Denn du bist, was du isst! Und ihr wisst, was es ist! Es ist mein Teil...?

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • C ColinDavies

              paulb wrote: I plan to leave behind a legacy that will cause tears of frustration and untold misery in the so-called "programmers" of tommorrow. You definitly have the right attitude. Now for god-sake never comment any code, unless you learn Klingon. Regardz Colin J Davies Attention: Watch this signature for an upcoming announcement that will effect you.

              K Offline
              K Offline
              KaRl
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              ColinDavies wrote: for god-sake never comment any code, unless you learn Klingon :laugh::laugh::laugh: That's brilliant, I start from now.


              Собой остаться дольше...

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • P peterchen

                Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

                // deprecated, don't use:
                // for(int i=0; i

                I tell you what: unless I can write

                count_if(container, element > 0)

                I stick with my loops.

                Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

                I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

                The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

                It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

                What can go wrong in a loop?

                • you forget to increment
                • you are off by one
                • you invalidate the container or the iterator

                The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

                How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

                Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

                N Offline
                N Offline
                Nemanja Trifunovic
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                For your eyes only:

                vector<pair<int, int> > v;
                transform(x.begin(), x.end(), y.begin(), back_inserter(v),
                bind(constructor<pair<int, int> >(), _1, _2));

                :jig: :jig:


                My programming blahblahblah blog. If you ever find anything useful here, please let me know to remove it.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • P paulb

                  for loops are way too readable, the whole purpose of STL and especially Boost is to enable the production of completely unreadable code that will utterly confuse the slack-jawed imbecile who only knows C# and is asked to maintain my C++ code. I plan to leave behind a legacy that will cause tears of frustration and untold misery in the so-called "programmers" of tommorrow.

                  N Offline
                  N Offline
                  Nemanja Trifunovic
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  paulb wrote: slack-jawed imbecile who only knows C# and is asked to maintain my C++ code. Most VB C# programmers wouldn't come near any C++ code - they are too afraid of pointers. Pointers bite, you know.


                  My programming blahblahblah blog. If you ever find anything useful here, please let me know to remove it.

                  P 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • P peterchen

                    Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

                    // deprecated, don't use:
                    // for(int i=0; i

                    I tell you what: unless I can write

                    count_if(container, element > 0)

                    I stick with my loops.

                    Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

                    I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

                    The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

                    It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

                    What can go wrong in a loop?

                    • you forget to increment
                    • you are off by one
                    • you invalidate the container or the iterator

                    The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

                    How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

                    Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

                    M Offline
                    M Offline
                    Marc Clifton
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    peterchen wrote: What can go wrong in a loop? Well, apparently it was a loop that brought CP to its knees a few weeks ago. :-D Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog Hunt The Wumpus RealDevs.Net

                    P 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                      BTW, when I do iterator loops, I use while loops;

                      container::iterator i = c.begin(), end = c.end();
                      while(i != end) {
                      // Do some funky stuff here
                      ++i;
                      }

                      . The for loop tends to become very kludgy when you define 2 variables in its initialization part. :) -- Denn du bist, was du isst! Und ihr wisst, was es ist! Es ist mein Teil...?

                      P Offline
                      P Offline
                      Paul Watson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      Then you forget the ++i;... regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Christopher Duncan wrote: "I always knew that somewhere deep inside that likable, Save the Whales kinda guy there lurked the heart of a troublemaker..." Crikey! ain't life grand?

                      J 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                        paulb wrote: slack-jawed imbecile who only knows C# and is asked to maintain my C++ code. Most VB C# programmers wouldn't come near any C++ code - they are too afraid of pointers. Pointers bite, you know.


                        My programming blahblahblah blog. If you ever find anything useful here, please let me know to remove it.

                        P Offline
                        P Offline
                        Paul Watson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        >Most VB C# programmers :mad: Let us not start more idiotic prejudice based on language choice eh. regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Christopher Duncan wrote: "I always knew that somewhere deep inside that likable, Save the Whales kinda guy there lurked the heart of a troublemaker..." Crikey! ain't life grand?

                        N P 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • P Paul Watson

                          >Most VB C# programmers :mad: Let us not start more idiotic prejudice based on language choice eh. regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Christopher Duncan wrote: "I always knew that somewhere deep inside that likable, Save the Whales kinda guy there lurked the heart of a troublemaker..." Crikey! ain't life grand?

                          N Offline
                          N Offline
                          Nemanja Trifunovic
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          Paul Watson wrote: more idiotic prejudice based on language choice eh Hey, hey, hey! This is SoapBox. Why are political, religious and sexual prejudices better than programming ones? I have no opinion on gay marriages or affirmative action (whatever that is), so I am excluded from SoapBox? More programming rants to the people. :cool:


                          My programming blahblahblah blog. If you ever find anything useful here, please let me know to remove it.

                          P 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                            Paul Watson wrote: more idiotic prejudice based on language choice eh Hey, hey, hey! This is SoapBox. Why are political, religious and sexual prejudices better than programming ones? I have no opinion on gay marriages or affirmative action (whatever that is), so I am excluded from SoapBox? More programming rants to the people. :cool:


                            My programming blahblahblah blog. If you ever find anything useful here, please let me know to remove it.

                            P Offline
                            P Offline
                            Paul Watson
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            Just ranting right back at ya. Give me what you can! :P regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Christopher Duncan wrote: "I always knew that somewhere deep inside that likable, Save the Whales kinda guy there lurked the heart of a troublemaker..." Crikey! ain't life grand?

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • P peterchen

                              Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

                              // deprecated, don't use:
                              // for(int i=0; i

                              I tell you what: unless I can write

                              count_if(container, element > 0)

                              I stick with my loops.

                              Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

                              I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

                              The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

                              It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

                              What can go wrong in a loop?

                              • you forget to increment
                              • you are off by one
                              • you invalidate the container or the iterator

                              The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

                              How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

                              Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

                              J Offline
                              J Offline
                              Jeff Bogan
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              Yeah that's my impression, too. This seems to be complexity for complexity's sake, or possibly just to distance itself from anything obvious non-STL. ----------------------------- All truth passes through 3 stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • P paulb

                                for loops are way too readable, the whole purpose of STL and especially Boost is to enable the production of completely unreadable code that will utterly confuse the slack-jawed imbecile who only knows C# and is asked to maintain my C++ code. I plan to leave behind a legacy that will cause tears of frustration and untold misery in the so-called "programmers" of tommorrow.

                                I Offline
                                I Offline
                                Ian Darling
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                paulb wrote: for loops are way too readable Not if you do something like this :-D

                                #include <iostream>
                                using namespace std;
                                int arr[] = {3, 4, 2, 5, 1, 9, 0, 8, 7, 6 };
                                for(int i=((signed)sizeof(arr)/-(signed)sizeof(arr[0]));cout<
                                

                                * * * Ian Darling [The world is a thing of utter inordinate complexity ... that such complexity can arise ... out of such simplicity ... is the most fabulous extraordinary idea ... once you get some kind of inkling of how that might have happened - it's just wonderful ... the opportunity to spend 70 or 80 years of your life in such a universe is time well spent as far as I am concerned](http://www.edge.org/documents/adams_index.html) - Douglas Adams

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • P peterchen

                                  Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

                                  // deprecated, don't use:
                                  // for(int i=0; i

                                  I tell you what: unless I can write

                                  count_if(container, element > 0)

                                  I stick with my loops.

                                  Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

                                  I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

                                  The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

                                  It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

                                  What can go wrong in a loop?

                                  • you forget to increment
                                  • you are off by one
                                  • you invalidate the container or the iterator

                                  The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

                                  How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

                                  Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

                                  P Offline
                                  P Offline
                                  palbano
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  Could not agree more.

                                  "No matter where you go, there your are." - Buckaroo Banzai

                                  -pete

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • P Paul Watson

                                    >Most VB C# programmers :mad: Let us not start more idiotic prejudice based on language choice eh. regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Christopher Duncan wrote: "I always knew that somewhere deep inside that likable, Save the Whales kinda guy there lurked the heart of a troublemaker..." Crikey! ain't life grand?

                                    P Offline
                                    P Offline
                                    peterchen
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    you say this only because you are at that VeeBee end of the stick. ;P


                                    we are here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is Vonnegut jr.
                                    sighist || Agile Programming | doxygen

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • M Marc Clifton

                                      peterchen wrote: What can go wrong in a loop? Well, apparently it was a loop that brought CP to its knees a few weeks ago. :-D Marc Microsoft MVP, Visual C# MyXaml MyXaml Blog Hunt The Wumpus RealDevs.Net

                                      P Offline
                                      P Offline
                                      peterchen
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      That's a point. :)


                                      we are here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is Vonnegut jr.
                                      sighist || Agile Programming | doxygen

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • P Paul Watson

                                        Then you forget the ++i;... regards, Paul Watson Bluegrass South Africa Christopher Duncan wrote: "I always knew that somewhere deep inside that likable, Save the Whales kinda guy there lurked the heart of a troublemaker..." Crikey! ain't life grand?

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                                        Jorgen Sigvardsson
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        Not if you make a habit of writing the loop including the increment before you write any other code. Sure, it has happened, but it's not that often, and it's quite easy to find the problem. -- Denn du bist, was du isst! Und ihr wisst, was es ist! Es ist mein Teil...?

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                                        • P peterchen

                                          Just read Andrew parkers nice boost intro. One sentence triggered a "prtogramiming question", with a line of thought better suited to this board: minimising the amount of times that users have to write their own loops Hello? Are we programmers or what? Look the framework we have to build to minimise (not remove, just "minimise") writing loops: iterators. const. unidirectional. bidirectional. reverse iterators. const or not. iterator adaptor. functors. binders. composers. bind. function. lambda library. anything I forgot? most likely. We need to templatize like hell, bending the compiler to a point where we are happy it makes it through our code alive - and when not, we don't dare ask for sensible error messages. To avoid what?

                                          // deprecated, don't use:
                                          // for(int i=0; i

                                          I tell you what: unless I can write

                                          count_if(container, element > 0)

                                          I stick with my loops.

                                          Where does this fear come from? It looks like everybody is ooohing and aaahing the marvelous insights into the human being Dr Freud opened up for all of us, wondering how we could live without it so long, before noticing that he's a serious whacko who needs some true job instead of a leather couch.

                                          I suspect one of the guys who miffed up the STL was seriously loopophobic. maybe his wife left him because of a loop. Maybe his child died in his arms because he was off by one. Maybe he saw his sister nekkid in the woods when he was five. We don't know. But he had something going. What would be necessary to eliminate loops? At least most of them? Mark them evil?

                                          The recent round of job interviews - complete with "write some code please": the majority rather try to remember an omnious function they once heard of (or just make one up that doesn't exist), instead of touching a for loop.

                                          It's a loop, for god's sake. It's not a bear trap, it's not the infamous goto-spaghetti mess, it's not a terrorist nuke we have to keep out of our code whatever sacrifice of sanity is necessary.

                                          What can go wrong in a loop?

                                          • you forget to increment
                                          • you are off by one
                                          • you invalidate the container or the iterator

                                          The first requires some discipline, the second some basic calculus training, and the third heaven forbid thinking! whoo!

                                          How many algorithms can you think of using a loop? Ten? Tenthousand? Guys, generalize looping, not the algorithm.

                                          Introducing a generic container iteration syntax ("a container to be iterable must have b

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                                          mef526
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          I couldn't agree more. Get a copy of Lint, Use it, and don't worry about the STL marketing hype.

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