diff options
| author | Geoff Liu <hi@geoffliu.me> | 2016-02-15 14:33:23 -0500 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Geoff Liu <hi@geoffliu.me> | 2016-02-15 14:33:23 -0500 | 
| commit | 1d562740f3d3b68fbb51a45f66ae6b60eee7b2de (patch) | |
| tree | 5e4b180d56c3c6609ac132ea8f0a42feb5807034 | |
| parent | d40a48f29ad8839eb65b393052ff830f503435e4 (diff) | |
Remove a section from c++, fixes #2130
| -rw-r--r-- | c++.html.markdown | 32 | 
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 24 deletions
| diff --git a/c++.html.markdown b/c++.html.markdown index a59b4db8..a02e7e5b 100644 --- a/c++.html.markdown +++ b/c++.html.markdown @@ -330,7 +330,7 @@ ECarTypes GetPreferredCarType()  }  // As of C++11 there is an easy way to assign a type to the enum which can be -// useful in serialization of data and converting enums back-and-forth between  +// useful in serialization of data and converting enums back-and-forth between  // the desired type and their respective constants  enum ECarTypes : uint8_t  { @@ -352,7 +352,7 @@ void WritePreferredCarTypeToFile(ECarTypes InputCarType)  }  // On the other hand you may not want enums to be accidentally cast to an integer -// type or to other enums so it is instead possible to create an enum class which  +// type or to other enums so it is instead possible to create an enum class which  // won't be implicitly converted  enum class ECarTypes : uint8_t  { @@ -468,7 +468,7 @@ int main() {  // Inheritance:  // This class inherits everything public and protected from the Dog class -// as well as private but may not directly access private members/methods  +// as well as private but may not directly access private members/methods  // without a public or protected method for doing so  class OwnedDog : public Dog { @@ -825,10 +825,10 @@ fooMap.find(Foo(1)); //true  ///////////////////////////////////////  // lambdas are a convenient way of defining an anonymous function -// object right at the location where it is invoked or passed as  +// object right at the location where it is invoked or passed as  // an argument to a function. -// For example, consider sorting a vector of pairs using the second  +// For example, consider sorting a vector of pairs using the second  // value of the pair  vector<pair<int, int> > tester; @@ -856,7 +856,7 @@ sort(tester.begin(), tester.end(), [](const pair<int, int>& lhs, const pair<int,  vector<int> dog_ids;  // number_of_dogs = 3;  for(int i = 0; i < 3; i++) { -	dog_ids.push_back(i);   +	dog_ids.push_back(i);  }  int weight[3] = {30, 50, 10}; @@ -940,29 +940,13 @@ Foo f1;  f1 = f2; -// How to truly clear a container: -class Foo { ... }; -vector<Foo> v; -for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i) -  v.push_back(Foo()); - -// Following line sets size of v to 0, but destructors don't get called -// and resources aren't released! -v.clear(); -v.push_back(Foo());  // New value is copied into the first Foo we inserted - -// Truly destroys all values in v. See section about temporary objects for -// explanation of why this works. -v.swap(vector<Foo>()); - -  ///////////////////////////////////////  // Tuples (C++11 and above)  ///////////////////////////////////////  #include<tuple> -// Conceptually, Tuples are similar to  old data structures (C-like structs) but instead of having named data members ,  +// Conceptually, Tuples are similar to  old data structures (C-like structs) but instead of having named data members ,  // its elements are accessed by their order in the tuple.  // We start with constructing a tuple. @@ -995,7 +979,7 @@ cout << tuple_size<decltype(third)>::value << "\n"; // prints: 3  // tuple_cat concatenates the elements of all the tuples in the same order.  auto concatenated_tuple = tuple_cat(first, second, third); -// concatenated_tuple becomes = (10, 'A', 1e9, 15, 11, 'A' ,3.14141)  +// concatenated_tuple becomes = (10, 'A', 1e9, 15, 11, 'A' ,3.14141)  cout << get<0>(concatenated_tuple) << "\n"; // prints: 10  cout << get<3>(concatenated_tuple) << "\n"; // prints: 15 | 
