@bitmask ? who made that distinction? If I crack enough bricks in your building, security is involved. If I crack the right one, security may be involved at a single brick.
Hey, thought I'd pop in here and ask y'all something. Anybody remember the name of the presentation by a certain person (whose name I forgot) who was demonstrating software that would run with live editing? He showed a couple of example including canvas, arrays, and circuits. I'm just at a loss, and I'd love to watch it again.
@DeadMG I got the impression that lisp was unique that it didn't require reinterpreting the entire function, and just had a few lines inserted, but I'm very unsure about that.
@sudormrf smalltalk, squeak, factor, csharp REPL... many beasts can do this. You have to have a given datapoint to find related info (either know the technology, asking the the name or vice versa)...
@RMartinhoFernandes Down here, 'Tunnel Vision' is used to describe a psychological effect much associated with Cognitive Dissonance (the inability to consider alternatives after investing effort in one option)
@DeadMG I knew one fps that would guess who your target was and "nudge" your shots toward them (server side) depending on lag. It made lag tolerable (but not overpowered, you still missed less with a good connection)
In that sense, Tunnel Vision is normal. It is as normal as cognitive dissonance, which is inevitable. Avoiding Tunnel Vision takes discipline and analytical powers.
Tunnel vision (Also known as "Kalnienk Vision") is the loss of peripheral vision with retention of central vision, resulting in a constricted circular tunnel-like field of vision.
Medical / biological causes
Tunnel Vision is the loss of peripheral vision, normally due to a Retinal problem.
Tunnel vision can be caused by:
* Blood loss (hypovolemia)
* Alcohol consumption causes tunnel vision. In addition, the vision becomes blurred or double since eye muscles lose their precision causing them to be unable to focus on the same object.
* Retinitis pigmentosa, a disease of the eye.
* Sust...
On the psychological effect, I'd say: learn what added value is. Added value is almost never to persevere in a certain direction, but to be able to reecognize mistakes and signal them.
Leaern to 'kill your darlings' - throw away code, at least once a day and you'll find out how this makes you (a) more productive (b) more valuable (as an employee)
@bitmask I do recognize it, but I don't let it come to that. I recognize the pre-phase, and would call it 'over-concentration'. In fact, I've learned to label it 'lack of focus', which it is. 'over-concentration' is a misnomer.
@DeadMG I meant, having the units do things that you would order them to do anyway (in high action situations) such as focus firing priority or low health targets.
Whenever you get 'zoomed in' just so much that you don't consciously check what you're doing, or you aren't able ('free') to think of alternatives, or whether it is time for a break, it is, well.... time for a break
@DeadMG one I had considered was a stack-based thing, last 2 seconds of actions are kept in a stack, if a command comes in, it's inserted at the right place in the stack and everything since is updated. If it's more than 2s late, just put it as far back as possible. very processor heavy though.
@LearningC text structures, mainly. Strings of characters, known as tokens, which are subsequently interpreted by a preprocessor and various compiler passes.
@RMartinhoFernandes Give the order a timestamp to be executed. Then set that timestamp to be like, more than the current time + highest ping, so it's guaranteed to get to the other players before it's due to be executed.
@LearningC that's a little more complicated. Effectively, data_el is the type of the struct. There's a lot of history behind why, but it's unimportant.
@MooingDuck I would, too. But the question is so basic then, that I dismissed it as a viable assumption. Learning C is around here for about 2 months (without checking) so I rate him to know the very basics.
@LearningC better in what way? It works for both C and C++, but C++ coders tend to not like it. It's confusing because it's different than what we're used to seeing.
@MooingDuck that's one. I'd call it a pattern. Not sure it is a very practical pattern in practice. Have you ever written io manipulators, preserved stream state, handled parse errors on operator>> etc.? Not a nice job (TM)
Let say in the file is like this BQN Aguadilla, Puerto Rico\n How would I get BQN into airports.code and Aguadilla, Puerto Rico into airports.location?
@LearningC That depends. Again, you need to be more explicit. If a single line chat doesn't encourage you, there are larger text boxes more inviting to more text here:
Ok in English can I do this for all while not EOF , for all i, airports[i].code = fscanf until I see __ double space, and for all airports[i].location fscanf until \n?
@daknokt I suppose my issue with them is that they're not much more capable than dumb scanf. I mean they're much better to work with, but they still suck at actual parsing.
@JonPurdy Do you have any recommendations for implementing stack language interpreters in C++? I've been using Boost Variant and virtual but I wasn't sure if that was the way to go.
@MooingDuck There, fixed it so the compiler would eat it. Also fixed a bug in case there weren't two input fields per line: http://ideone.com/X0GRx (now with live input/output)
X { airport: 'Airport 1', location: 'SomeLocation' }
X { airport: 'NoLocation', location: '' }
X { airport: '', location: 'UnnamedAirportLocation' }
@LearningC C is a simpler language (IMO), but it is so much harder to accomplish anything! Right up there with legos being simpler than wood and nails, but try building a house of legos! (It's been done. once.)