
Nitpicking again.
In paragraph 4 of the cpp_bin_float tutorial, you astutely note
that "providing an allocator
as the final template parameter
causes cpp_bin_float to dynamically allocate the memory it needs"
But the allocator type is no longer the *final* template parameter,
since exponent types and ranges have been added as template
parameters.
So... is it the 3rd parameter, the 4th-to-last parameter...?
Whatever, but it's not the last.
Groovy big numbers!
Sincerely, Chris.
On Monday, October 21, 2013 9:38 PM, Christopher Kormanyos
The typedefs mentioned, however, are for decimal types such as cpp_dec_float_50 (radix-10, base 10). A modification of the preliminary documentation seems to be in order.
Done, thanks, John. PS thought you were supposed to be gone fishing?? ;-)
Yes, but I'm back now. I exaggerated the return date, just
in case of any big troubles with travel or return to work.
Caught some great scenery and king salmon up to 40 pounds.
cpp_bin_float is looking good to me! And I will keep working
with it and report anything significant.
Sincerely, Chris.
On Monday, October 21, 2013 2:27 PM, John Maddock
The typedefs mentioned, however, are for decimal types such as cpp_dec_float_50 (radix-10, base 10). A modification of the preliminary documentation seems to be in order.
Done, thanks, John. PS thought you were supposed to be gone fishing?? ;-) _______________________________________________ Unsubscribe & other changes: http://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost