Fair enough, I do love being contrarian
I think you missed the whole point of my comment 😂. Regardless, the time spent compiling a small snippet of code is completely negligible. In the end, both #if 0
and if (false)
have their complimentary uses.
The problem is everyone disagrees on what part of C++ is good… Some like C+classes. Some like intense meta programming and some like functional programming and all are valid C++ that people advocate for.
If (false) is good because it is compiled so it doesn’t get stale.
Asphalt is definitely a carbon sink though since it’s a petroleum product!
Even in C this is possible. Just wrap the float or whatever in a struct and all implicit conversions will be gone.
API from a call that accepted integer values between 0 and 32767 (minimum and maximum wheel speeds) to one that accepted float values between 0.0 and 1.0.
This would cause alarm bells to ring in my head for sure. If I did something like that I would make a new type that was definitely not implicitly castable to or from the old type. Definitely not a raw integer or float type.
You can safely swim in the pool of an operational reactor
Besides the acute lead poisoning from being shot apparently.
Atomic instructions are quite slow and if they run a lot… Rust has two types of reference counted pointer for that reason. One that has atomic reference counting for multithreaded code and one non-atomic for single threaded. Reference counting is usually overkill in the first place and can be a sign that your code doesn’t have proper ownership.
It’s because they don’t put work on them.