Private members aren’t actively blocked from external access; they’re passively marked “Access prohibited”.
That means that rather than being unable to find the members of a class, C programmers simply can’t pick up on the signals telling them that they’re not wanted.
Linux user here. What’s a friend?
Another contributor who doesn’t have wildly differing political ideals from your own, I think?
Bots?
I searched the web and found this article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friends
Hey Siri, go to sleep.
It’s a class that’s allowed to access another class’s private members. Obviously Linus doesn’t have any, because he codes in C.
Private members aren’t actively blocked from external access; they’re passively marked “Access prohibited”.
That means that rather than being unable to find the members of a class, C programmers simply can’t pick up on the signals telling them that they’re not wanted.
(Fellow C programmers: I’m joking. :D)
i think you are mistaking
friendswith theboyfriendsclassIt’s a second user account on your machine. Of course, you don’t put them in the sudoers file.
That would be reported.
Friends don’t let friends be root.
It’s a user group
Friend here, what’s a linux?