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11:00 PM
As I said earlier: nobody gives a shit. Get a job, hold to it for 2 or 3 years, then use that experience to get elsewhere.
 
Got it.
 
user142019
@beta0x64 that’s fast.
 
@beta0x64 Where in the world did you come up with that?
 
@Zoidberg'-- time flies when you have a winged time machine
@JerryCoffin I just know that algorithm analysis is a capstone course...
 
user142019
11:04 PM
@beta0x64 what a terrible pun.
 
@beta0x64 How would that imply anything about "open source devotion"?
 
@Zoidberg'-- you punks couldn't handle my puntual pungent puns
@JerryCoffin I would think that someone who contributes to open source projects can probably write code that is worthy of merging and also has to communicate with people already writing it
 
@beta0x64 Maybe -- but I wouldn't bet a whole lot on it. First of all, quite a few open source projects will accept nearly anything they can get (some can be picky, but most aren't, at least very). Second, some people can write good code, and even communicate reasonably remotely, but in person turn out to be nearly impossible to deal with at all.
 
@beta0x64 1. Open source does not indicate quality. While there are some real cool projects going on, some oss projects just creep the hell out of me. 2. Participating doesn't indicate coding. You can also improve the documentation, which will often be merged thankfully.
 
@JerryCoffin so what would you see as indicating interpersonal skills and programming aptitude when it's on a resume?
 
11:10 PM
@beta0x64 Difficult to pick up from a resume -- that's where interviewing really means a lot.
 
Word. People can tell you shit in their resume, but in the interview one can really check whether you actually know what you're doing.
 
A lot is asking relatively open-ended, semi-ambiguous questions that require them to ask some questions in return and actually talk about things, not just an in-person version of "A, B, C, D, none of the above".
One thing I frequently did was printed out some semi-decent (but neither great nor terrible) code and asked them to review and critique. Was probably the single most educational part of quite a few interviews I did.
 
@beta0x64 Having open source stuff on your resume doesn't help per se, no interviewer looks at it and says "oh, they've done open source, that's good". However, some will go and look at the code you've written for the project and what you've posted to public mailing lists
 
Well, gotta run for a while again. Catch y'all later.
 
If your stuff's good and you come across well on public mailing lists, it can mean a lot. It's a lot easier to fake being a reasonable person in an interview than it is when you're doing real stuff.
 
11:15 PM
I understand
 
Life would be way funnier if everything made farting noises.
 
Xeo
@JohannesSchaub-litb Shouldn't a scoped enum suffice?
 
@Xeo hmm
can you give an example?
can't have "7" scoped in "Key" :)
 
user1182183
gosh, I srsly need to make a decision which I think I already made and it's life-influencing ;F
 
user1182183
I srsly hate that
 
Xeo
@JohannesSchaub-litb Nvm, doesn't work. :( Still detects duplicate values.
 
user1182183
11:34 PM
if everything goes as "planned" I will leave this shitty house in 9 months -.-' and will break all contact to family and members. Grrr
 
user142019
@JohannesSchaub-litb a request from the future? Let me check that time machine out.
 
@JohannesSchaub-litb do you think there's any scope for abuse of such a feature, or potential for it to hide legitimate bugs?
I can imagine copy/pasting my case statements, forgetting to change one and having it compile anyway w/ the proposal
 
user142019
Enable compiler warnings for it.
 
your "something" class template partial specialization is broken. You want to deduce a "nullptr_t*", but you provide a "nullptr_t". When you want deduce a non-type value, the type of the value parameter used for deduction must exactly match the one of the non-type template argument that was passed in. In your case, the passed in argument has type "nullptr_t*". — Johannes Schaub - litb 42 secs ago
please consider reviewing
@je4d hmm, perhaps. :)
 
user142019
@JohannesSchaub-litb Warning: template masturbation can lead to a lot of type seduction.
 
11:51 PM
@JohannesSchaub-litb +1'd, when I worked out what you saying. I don't get why you're talking about deduction, there's only specialization at play as far as i can see
 
@je4d you are right. I missed that
I shall now undo my downvote
 
user142019
 
user142019
777 views, it’s my lucky day.
 
i thought somehow it's a partial specialization. bed time!
 
@JohannesSchaub-litb yeah, he said in a comment that it's partial but it's not. It's still an invalid specialization though
 
11:53 PM
ah wait. his comment even says "partial specialization". that's odd lol
@je4d looks valid to me
but the comment is indeed wrong.
 
user142019
How can I sort questions by number of views on SO?
 
and the specialization doesn't seem to make any sense. but that's another matter
 
@JohannesSchaub-litb isn't the type of nullptr nullptr_t, not nullptr_t* ?
 
@je4d yes it is
but you can still do nullptr_t *x = nullptr;
even if it doesn't make sense at all
 
Xeo
lol
nullptr-ception
 
11:56 PM
@JohannesSchaub-litb gotcha, then I see how it's a valid, if nonsensical, specialization
 
Hey guys, I am trying to use a static member variable in a class which basically has all inline methods (so no cpp) , how do i define the static member variable without the compiler freaking out about multiple redefinitions ?
 
@je4d note that in a template-argument you can pass "nullptr" to a "T*", but not "0" or "NULL"
perhaps that was his point. i have no idea. it's a bad example IMHO because he provided no explanation
 
@JohannesSchaub-litb quite
 
user142019
I’ve never even read and tried the answer I accepted on my 52k views question.
 
Xeo
lol?
 
user142019
11:57 PM
I was working on a project and I needed the solution, but before the first answers appeared I had already abandoned the project. xD
 
Xeo
heh
 

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