I installed Google Picasa and the "wireless capability" (whatever that is) disappeared. No network, and using the troubleshooter it just attempted to turn on wireless capability, and failed. I had to do a system restore.
> declare p as pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to int
Hey, I am reading "Yet Another Haskell" tutorial. What does this statement mean?
"It is called lazy because
expressions which are not needed to determine the answer to a problem are not
evaluated. The opposize of lazy is strict, which is the evaluation strategry of most
common programming languages""
@LewsTherin When you say f(a + b) in C, a is added to b, and the sum is passed to f. That is called strict evaluation. In Haskell, on the other hand, the computation a + b itself is passed to f. That is called lazy evaluation. Only if f peeks at its parameter will the sum of a and b actually be computed.
@LewsTherin Everybody likes Haskell in the beginning, and by the time you hit the hard topics, you are already sucked in too deep, and you will never leave Haskell again. Har har.
@FredOverflow I hated Haskell when I learned it in school. But using functional programming style in C# made me curious as to why Haskell was so hard. My lecturer was just horribly bad at teaching.
Who first said
A monad is just a monoid in the
category of endofunctors, what's the
problem?
and on a less important note is this true and if so could you give an explanation (hopefully one that can be understood by someone who doesn't have much haskell experience).
> 1842 - Ada Lovelace writes the first program. She is hampered in her efforts by the minor inconvenience that she doesn't have any actual computers to run her code. Enterprise architects will later relearn her techniques in order to program in UML.
The number of bytes written may be less than count if, for example, there is insufficient space on the underlying physical medium, or the RLIMIT_FSIZE resource limit is encountered, or the call was interrupted by a signal handler after having written less than count bytes.
@Papergay Doesn’t matter whether you do that or not.
> 1970 - Guy Steele and Gerald Sussman create Scheme. [...] Lambdas are relegated to relative obscurity until Java makes them popular by not having them.
> 1972 - Dennis Ritchie invents a powerful gun that shoots both forward and backward simultaneously.
> 1983 - Bjarne Stroustrup bolts everything he's ever heard of onto C to create C++.
> 1986 - Brad Cox and Tom Love create Objective-C, announcing "this language has all the memory safety of C combined with all the blazing speed of Smalltalk."
> 2003 - A drunken Martin Odersky sees a Reese's Peanut Butter Cup ad featuring somebody's peanut butter getting on somebody else's chocolate and has an idea. He creates Scala, a language that unifies constructs from both object oriented and functional languages. This pisses off both groups and each promptly declares jihad.
WTF, I have been listing to Carmack's keynote for an hour now, and he just keeps on talking and talking without any supporting slides or notes or whatever. Or am I just not seeing his notes? How can one person come up with so many interesting topics off the top of his head?
possible...i mean, if you use an initialization list, the runtime can call the constructors you specify for each member rather than calling the default and then initializing again
If you're using C++, not C, the normal way to save a set of binary data would be to craft it into an std::string. The string would then be reference-counted, so you wouldn't have to worry about deallocating it - just release the reference.
new std::string(data, datalen) would perform a copy.
char* and char[] is the same type - just pointer to char or if you prefer table definition pointer to first element in array. To copy between two arrays use strcpy