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a silhouette of a person's head and shoulders, used as a default avatar

travel, meeting, snow, and broken code

Today I finally booked my travel to Brussels next month. In the afternoon I had a refreshing meeting of the faculty council. In the evening it started snowing a bit and thus I designed the following broken code:

namespace n {
    class c;
    void f(c&);
};

void f(n::c& v) {
    f(v);
}

Explain why this is broken code in C++.

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The first public openSUSE IRC team meeting was held yesterday and went - in my opinion - very well.

The first public openSUSE IRC team meeting was held yesterday and went - in my opinion - very well. These meetings will happen bi-weekly now and are a direct result of the governance discussion on the opensuse list some months ago. You find the IRC log and meeting minutes here. Some of the topics were delegated back to the mailing lists for further discussions, please participate in these discussions on the topics you're interested in.

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deducing types from code

One of the ugliest things in C++ is reading complex type names. It is even uglier to deduce types from ugly code. It gets worst if templates are involved as well. We skip templates here for a first shot. Watch the correct(!) C++ statement 0[new weird](1)()(3,"strange")((weird(*)())0,5); and try to understand the syntactic meaning. Next describe the signature of the class weird that contains one method only.

I hope you will never _write_ code like that but you most likely will _read_ similar code if you have to work with code from other people. --- This is not a joke but a horror!

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deemed to fail

On Mondays people often write broken code. Actually they do it the other days as well but this leads to the following C++ puzzle for today.

The following code is broken and any instantiation of an object of a class derived from this abstract class is deemed to fail. Explain why this is the case. Note that your first thought might be wrong!

struct broken {
    virtual void v() = 0;
    void n() { v(); }
    broken() { n(); }
};

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casting from base classes

After visiting Schwetzingen I designed the following C++ question for today:

C++ has two reasonable options to cast from a base class to a sub class. These options are the static_cast operator and the dynamic_cast operator. Explain the differences between these two operators and compare their advantages and disadvantages.

Explain why one cannot use the dynamic_cast operator to cast from a base class that does not have a virtual function.

Explain why one cannot use the static_cast operator to cast from a virtual base class.

the avatar of Flavio Castelli

QtCanvas

Finally qtcanvas classes are available for Qt 4 series

This isn’t the final version of qtcanvas, it’s only a backport of the original classes shipped with Qt3.

So what’s the difference between this qtcanvas and qt3canvas (available only through Qt3 support with Qt4)? Simple this version works with all open-source versions of Qt >= 4.1.0!!

In this way you can use qtcanvas also under windows (before it wasn’t possible with the open-source edition).

I’ve tried qtcanvas under Mac OS X Tiger, Gnu-Linux and Windows XP and they work fine.

the avatar of Flavio Castelli

Gentoo documentation checker

gen-docheck is a useful tool for the gentoo italian translation team. gen-dockeck compares the version number of english document and italian translation.

In this way you can watch the status of one or more guides, keeping the translations updated.

Features:

  • mail notification support (straight to guide’s translator or to a specified address)
  • filter guides using regular expressions

Requirements:

gen-dockeck requires:

Synopsis:

gen-docheck syntax: gen-docheck [--help] [--man] [--config configuration file] for more informations read the man page: gen-docheck --manan

Configuration file:

gen-docheck support also configuration files.

This is an example:

#mail sender
sender = gentoo_doccheck@gentoo.orgThis email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it  
#check only guides mathing these names (use "." to match all, "," to separate names)
checkonly = diskless,macos
#checkonly = .  
#send mail notify to translator
mailnotify = 0  
#send all mail notify to this address
force_mail_destination = flavio.castelli@gmail.com  
# smtp server
smtp = smtp.tiscali.it  
# debug smtp commands
smtpdebug = 0

Usage:

You can automate gen-docheck adding it to cron.

Here’s an example:

0 10 * * 0 /home/micron/gen\-docheck/gen\-docheck.pl --config /home/micron/gen\-docheck/gen\-docheck.conff

In this way you’ll run gen-docheck every sunday at 10:00 AM

Download

The code can be found inside of this git repository.

the avatar of Flavio Castelli

Howto edit multime id3 tags from command line

Goal

id3medit is a simple script for tagging all mp3/ogg files present in a directory.

Requirements:

id3medit relies on id3v2, a command-line tool for editing id3v2 tags file names must be in format: ’## - trackname.ext’. Where ## is track’s number, and ext is file’s extension (mp3 or ogg in case insensitive format)

Synopsis:

id3medit syntax is: id3medit artist album year(*) genre(*) Where * denotes optional arguments You can obtain genre identification number in this way: id3v2 -L | grep -i genre

Example

id3v2 -L | grep -i rock

   1: Classic Rock
  17: Rock
  40: Alt. Rock
  47: Instrum. Rock
  56: Southern Rock
  78: Rock & Roll
  79: Hard Rock
  81: Folk/Rock
  91: Gothic Rock
  92: Progress. Rock
  93: Psychadel. Rock
  94: Symphonic Rock 
  95: Slow Rock
 121: Punk Rock
 141: Christian Rock

Code

{% gist 2469919 %}

the avatar of James Willcox

Firefox Rules

So Firefox 1.5 is out, sporting a new canvas tag. Hopefully we will see all kinds of sweet innovative stuff using it. Here is my contribution:

Update: I also changed my little bugzilla greasemonkey script to work with Firefox 1.5. You can get that at the usual place, here.