> When the get(int) method is called with an index greater than the size of the list, the list will automatically grow in size and return a new object from the specified AbstractSingletonSingletonFactoryFactory.
@user1435323 Because I can't write proper code without them? I have to use the most verbose possible workaround. It is so verbose it makes you wish you never decided to write a functional interface in the first place.
@TonyTheLion Here I thought it was: school (in general): Force people whose only reasons for living are to move, be curious, and make noise, to stay still, be quiet, and ignore all learning except what the school board thought was important.
I hate; Java, Clearcase, IE, JavaScript, PHP, C#, shitty internal websites that only work with IE, people sending my files so I can see changes rather then using source control, people who litter, people expecting answers when they come into this room, the fact that gluten is in so many foods, having to wash up
@thecoshman Same exact situation with me. GF's not bad with limited gluten, but eat lots => major migraines. And her family's italian, so she's been raised on pasta 8 days a week.
Gluten free pasta is fairly easy, not a great selection but at least it works as a good replacement. It's things like pizza and beer that are the worst
@TonyTheLion To be fair, usually I've found that parents tend to resort to "Because I said so" logic, which obviously most kids will inherently disagree with. :P
> foo.cpp:9:49: error: narrowing conversion of 'std::forward<int>((* & values#1))' from 'int' to 'std::array<double, 3u>::value_type {aka double}' inside { } [-Wnarrowing]
Also, I love how GCC introduces stuff I didn't type, like that "take address and immediately dereference" crap.
I need a better example. This one just won't work.
> from an integer type or unscoped enumeration type to a floating-point type, except where the source is a constant expression and the actual value after conversion will fit into the target type and will produce the original value when converted back to the original type
@ScottW Oh my. There's a female here, and you guys either talk about porn, boobs, or ask her whether she will cook for you. It's gonna end very badly with you guys, I tellya.
@KillianDS yeah, cat pulled the changes I made into his repo. His demo's where working on linux, though a few of my more recent changes might have broken a few things
@sbi I am automatically generating a visitor using inheritance. The principle is: class_0 inherits from class_1 which inherits from class 2 and so on. each class declares a 'visit' function, on type per class. I want the most derived class to have all these functions
@R. Martinho Yes, but the last 'using' in the inheritance tree reference a function that does not exist. But maybe it will work if I add a dummy method in the base class
@CatPlusPlus Funny. I came in this morning around 8:30 and there was a coworker that normally comes in at 11 (and is supposed to be on vacation this week, no less). Turns out the guy actually came in at work at midnight.
@RMartinhoFernandes The rest is worth reading too -- but out of date. A modern version would definitely heap some scorn on anything that uses a virtual machine.
@DiscreteGenius The usual place is in your editor after typing them in. ;-)
I'm looking to extract some information from a series of equations with AND, XOR and NOT. I've already covered all of the easy parts using various boolean identities, so I'm looking to now determine if there are any non-obvious sources of information.
Right now, I've got this simultaneous equati...
@ScottW There is a funny quote which states that Closures are a language feature made popular by the fact that Java doesn't have it or something. Unfortunately, I can't find the link anymore, it was very entertaining.