Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The C++ Standard Library provides several generic containers, functions to use and manipulate these containers, function objects, generic strings and streams (including interactive and file I/O), support for some language features, and functions for common tasks such as finding the square root of a number.
Most of Library Fundamentals TS I, including: [29] [30] std::string_view, a read-only non-owning reference to a character sequence or string-slice [31]; std::optional, for representing optional objects, a data type that may not always be returned by a given algorithm with support for non-return
Service provider OAuth protocol OpenID Connect Amazon: 2.0 [1] AOL: 2.0 [2] Autodesk: 1.0,2.0 [3] Apple: 2.0 [4] Yes Basecamp: 2.0 [5] No Battle.net: 2.0 [6] Bitbucket: 1.0a 2.0 [7] No bitly: 2.0 Box: 2.0 [8] ClearScore: 2.0 Cloud Foundry: 2.0 [9] Dailymotion: 2.0 draft 11 [10] Deutsche Telekom: 2.0 deviantART: 2.0 drafts 10 and 15 Discogs: 1 ...
The following is a declaration of the concept "equality_comparable" from the <concepts> header of a C++20 standard library. This concept is satisfied by any type T such that for lvalues a and b of type T, the expressions a==b and a!=b as well as the reverse b==a and b!=a compile, and their results are convertible to a type that satisfies the concept "boolean-testable":
In computer programming, a virtual method table (VMT), virtual function table, virtual call table, dispatch table, vtable, or vftable is a mechanism used in a programming language to support dynamic dispatch (or run-time method binding).
In computer programming, a subroutine (a.k.a. function) will often inform calling code about the result of its computation, by returning a value to that calling code. The data type of that value is called the function's return type.
The rule of three (also known as the law of the big three or the big three) is a rule of thumb in C++ (prior to C++11) that claims that if a class defines any of the following then it should probably explicitly define all three: [1]
In the C++ programming language, special member functions [1] are functions which the compiler will automatically generate if they are used, but not declared explicitly by the programmer.