Yes, it is probably a weird question, but I tried a lot, and I started to think that maybe is impossible to overload this template function properly:
#include <iterator>
class Foo
{
private:
const int arr[5] = {10, 20, 30, 40, 50};
public:
const int* begin() const { return arr; }
friend auto std::begin<>(const Foo &f) -> decltype(f.begin());
}
It always throw the same error (in GCC 12.2.0):
main.cxx:10:13: error: template-id ‘begin<>’ for ‘const int* std::begin<>(const Foo&)’ does not match any template declaration
I just wanna know if is possible do things like this. Thanks.
This post is not related other previously published posts. But I want to know your opinions.
This debate does not focus on "which technology is better" or "which has better support", rather it focuses on which of these two technologies seems more acceptable in terms of privacy policy and user information management (on his respective toolchain, compiler, etc).
There are no "news", but I'm worried about this business actually. I'm in knowledge that post already exists but I'm not clear at all.
Resuming: Google is trying to add telemetry to Go's toolchain (such as .NET and Dart/Flutter). It also added the GOPROXY
environment variable that uses the Google's Go proxy to... Just collect more user data?
I'm a pretty beginner Go dev, but I'd like a toolchain without these telemetry or at least some instruction of how to opt out this thing.
Sorry for repost, but I don't find enough information in any other place. :(
Okay, it may sound like a personal issue, but I disagree with the privacy practices in developer tools. And I'm not talking about VSCode issue, but about other more elemental development tools. For example, the privacy policy of npmjs.com, pkg.go.dev (Google's privacy policy lol), hub.docker.com, and these public registries for developers, have some questionable privacy practices as well.
I wanna know your opinions about.
Yeah, I'm sure this is a pretty newbie question, but here I go:
What ammount of telemetry have Flutter by default? And there is a way to deactivate it? I wanna learn this technology to develop some Mobile Applications, but I'm (honestly) worried about this, because you know, Google dirty techniques, etc.
@RuikkaaPrus
@lemmy.ml