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2:00 AM
shes not a mod
 
@BartekBanachewicz sorry. he
 
@BartekBanachewicz Well... lightness I guess. They look about the same as old rooms at a glance.
 
didnt know
 
user1357851
@JABFreeware and that's angelina jolie in his avatar
 
2:01 AM
Here is a situation where the word "they" is useful :D
 
Well Lounge always had its own rules
 
well good night guys! @BartekBanachewicz @Pawnguy7
 
Gn.
So, back to chunks
They are stored on a map, each of them has fixed size
 
Yea, I dropped in because I referenced this room in a comment. Figured I'd drop in and make sure it was still about C#'s little brother.
 
how tall currentlly?
 
2:03 AM
err, older brother.
You know, in the same way siblings can come from the same parents yet act nothing alike.
 
Hi @george
We are totally doing C++. nothing weird.
@Pawnguy7 16x16x16
 
@BartekBanachewicz Ah. How tall do you plan to make them, eventually. I am still uncertain why the 128-256 change was made.
Also... apparently, in C#, you cannot access static members with nonstatic members. To bad. Perhaps that is good design, I wouldn't know.
 
I don't know C# at all
 
Like Java, I guess. Give or take.
 
How big? Depends. I will have to profile it.
 
2:09 AM
Also... I kind of wish VS, when using run/debug, actually built it if they didn't match. Instead, I run the code and say "Hm, I thought that would fix it." Which it did. I just had to rebuild, THEN run.
Or maybe that is just the C# part of it.
 
Hello all
 
You new?
 
Hi
@Pawnguy7 there is an option for that
 
I must have the lowest rep of all on chat, I am sure of it.
 
Well you don't have much answers out there
 
user1357851
2:12 AM
@GeorgeStocker C++ is C#'s grandparent
 
Most of them are above me, it seems.
 
Maybe this isn't the appropriate forum, but I'm interested in venturing into the world of embedded programming. I'm a python developer by trade, but I'm serious about learning the appropriate language for such things. i'm curious to hear from some c++ folks about whether C or C++ the preferred language for such things. Any thoughts on the subject?
 
The ones that aren't, I am just to slow. You know the ones I mean.
I don't know a thing about embedded, but I had thought it was more of a C thing.
 
user1357851
Conception of Java is by C++, C# is like a child of Java, thus makes C++ the grandma of C#
 
C++ is a great language for embedded
 
2:13 AM
See? I was wrong :D
 
C is a terrible language IMHO
 
I'm more of an OOP mindset. Would you elaborate, Bartek?
 
So yeah, it's a no-brainer @That1Guy
 
No idea, but from what I have heard, C is better for such things, namely because (A), there is likely a compiler, and (B), slightly smaller due to no abstraction.
Who knows if you retain your sanity, of course.
 
C++ has compilers for pretty much every embedded platform out there
 
2:15 AM
@Pawnguy7 Is C not abstracted to Assembly before binary?
 
Also, C++ is far from a typical OOP, it focuses on generics
But yeah, it supports a concept of "object"
 
@That1Guy Sorry, I don't know what you mean. I meant, with C++'s abstractions, it, I heard, no idea here, adds a bit extra on top, I guess.
 
Correct me if I'm wrong (I admit complete newb-ness in this area), but isn't C++ essentially 'transalted' into Assembly before compliation?
compilation*
 
You would need to add that extra bit in C by yourself, so if you are not creating something that would fit in a few dozen lines of code, the resulting binary will be more or less similar
No, compilation is converting the source code into machine code or assembly.
 
@Bartek Isn't Assembly a means of translating human-readable code into machine code? Forgive me, but like I said, I'm a Python programmer =P
Or, I should say...an intermediary language or sorts? (my terminology may be way off)
 
2:21 AM
@That1Guy Assembly is a very thin abstraction over machine code
 
And C is a more thicker abstraction over assembly :D
I am not certain if compilers compile directly to machine code or assembly, though.
 
Each assembly instruction corresponds to one CPU operation
 
Ah, I see. So in terms of efficiency, C is preferred over C++ for embedded programming whereas C++ may provide lesser development time? Is that a correct assumption?
 
@Pawnguy7 They mostly use some sort of intermediate language, which is usually compiled directly to machine code
@That1Guy No. C++ can be as fast as C or faster.
 
ack, Mystical's not here
any of you hardcore performance guys?
 
2:24 AM
If your desired platform supports C++, it will nearly always be a better choice
 
I was saying that, as I heard it, using the OOP abstractiosn in C++ could make it a bit slower than a purely functional approach.
 
I have a +19 rated question that no one has been able to answer at stackoverflow.com/questions/15554565/…
 
C is not functional, Haskell and others are
 
I mean... procedural. Sorry.
 
That's mostly related to virtual functnsi
I am going to sleep
 
2:26 AM
@StephenLin And it's a good question that nobody knows how to answer. :)
 
I think you are right.
 
@Pawnguy7 pattern matches on discriminated unions is usually faster than virtual functions
 
Anyway, I would think - at least for me - development will be much easier - and, hence, faster - using C++.
 
@Mysticial oh there you are, so you don't know either?
 
@Mysticial I am sure you know.
 
2:26 AM
@Mysticial i've seen your prior posts
 
And guess what my answer would be?
 
magic number?
 
Is 0^m 1 0^m a regular language?
 
@StephenLin nope :)
 
assembly?
 
2:27 AM
try again. :)
 
err
why don't you just answer it then
i would probably accept
 
It wouldn't answer the question.
 
I would say the answer would be "it doesnt matter"
 
well, if my approach is wrong, then it would
 
If I ran into your situation (and I have before actually), I would write my own memcpy().
 
2:28 AM
@Jueecy Are regular languages the ones that can be recognized by FSM?
 
And specialize it for the situation.
 
that's assembly, no?
 
Oh, that might work too
 
that's an option, i know, i'm just trying to stay portable
 
No, not st all @stephen
 
2:29 AM
@StephenLin Nope. Just very careful use of intrinsics combined with manual optimizations like loop-unrolling and such
 
hmm
 
Anyway sleeeep
 
@StephenLin Portability and performance are self-conflicting. You need to draw a line somewhere.
 
so why's that not an answer?
 
@Borgleader, I'm afraid you'll have to tell me what FSM means because in Italian the abbreviations are different
 
2:29 AM
@Jueecy Finite State Machine
 
I know, I'm just trying my best
GCC is dumb
it ought to be able to do this
 
Well, thanks to all of you good people! You've made me realize I should take a step back and seriously weigh the pros and cons of C vs C++ for embedded programming. I'm glad I didn't rush into anything, haha! Have a good one!
 
isn't not hard, theoretically...it's just loop unswitching! and it's an intrinsic! it knows exactly what cases matter and what don't
 
For several reasons actually:
1. I'm not actually answering the question. I'm avoiding it completely.
2. I'm suggesting that you reinvent the wheel. Which you should never do unless you think you can do better. (And I'll get downvoted for that.)
 
@Borgleader, yup, languages are usually found to be regular via the pumping lemma
 
2:30 AM
well, i appreciate the advice
the wheel is broken though
 
exit()
 
so it deserves to be reinvented (or gcc should be patched...i work on clang so i could possibly patch it there if they have the same issue)
 
err...its too late, sorry
 
@Jueecy Did you mean irregular? In any case. I'd say the pumping lemma applies in that in that infinite amount of 0s on either side > finite number of states in the machine.
Andddddd with that, I'm off to bed.
 
@StephenLin It would better be done with better compiler hints. But I think this type of micro-optimization isn't "significant enough" to be worthwhile to the compiler writers.
 
2:32 AM
@Borgleader, so it's irregular?
 
@Mystical I don't know, I'm a big fan of specialization optimizations...basically 90% of template usage is designed just to force specialization
 
@Jueecy Not entirely sure, a) I'm tired, b) its been a while since I done this.
 
@Borgleader, don't worry mate :)
 
By "significant enough", I don't mean a poor improvement. But the cases where it does make a huge difference are probably so rare that they won't bother with it. Not to mention that the user needs to be trained to use such hints.
 
the compiler ought to do more of that itself rather than pushing it all to this Turing-complete metalayer
so how does the standard lib do it?
i haven't looked, but it uses memcpy too, right?
 
2:34 AM
@StephenLin Same here, but this is one of the cases, where I will tell the compiler to fuck off and take things into my own hands. :P
@StephenLin I believe it does.
So it will also run into the same overheads if the compiler doesn't manually special case for them.
 
it probably does
magic number or something
i might just find out what std::copy does and copy it (for gcc at least)
le sigh
 
@StephenLin For POD types, it probably just calls memcpy(), but applies specialization to remove all the alignment checks.
For non POD types, it obviously needs to call copy constructors.
 
even on small arrays though?
that aren't compile-time constant sized?
i can't believe they would eat this penalty like this
they have to avoid it somehow
 
@StephenLin A big part of the overhead in memcpy() and family is the alignment checks. Followed by the loop-rollling clean up. If the datatypes are known, then the alignment checks are gone or simplified.
 
people do call std::copy() within inner loops after all
ok
maybe there are hints i can use then
thanks
 
2:39 AM
The loop-unrolling cleanup stuff is harder to get rid of.
2 messages moved to bin
So if I know that my arrays will be a multiple of something. I can unroll and not deal with clean up.
That's something that the compiler usually can't do.
 
hmm, i'll write my own specialized loop memcpy then
it shouldn't be too hard
 
It's tricky though.
 
well, i can just copy the compiler
but i'd be overfitting
 
Tricky as in, make sure you're actually gaining on the compiler.
 
to my own specs
well, i can just figure out what it's doing in the constant sized case
for small arrays
 
2:41 AM
If the compiler doesn't inline the memcpy(), then it's likely calling the fully generic one with tons of overhead.
 
and do that when i know it's small
 
user1357851
@Mysticial you remind me of xeo and I am not sure that's a good thing
 
well, it's definitely inlined
 
For small arrays, go ahead try write your ow memcpy - inlined in place.
It's be just a simple loop.
The compiler might even unroll it for you. Or it may convert it back to a memcpy.
 
yeah, but that basically reduces to magic numbering again
 
2:42 AM
(which I've seen happen before)
 
i can find the best behavior for my system
but i don't know what variables matter
 
You basically have to hack around with it until you're either satisfied or you give up.
 
like processor word size, etc.
@Telkitty still don't believe me on the blue-eyed islanders, btw? :)
@Telkitty it's ok, if you don't want to get into it
@Telkitty the a-ha at the end is worth it though
 
@StephenLin Go with 64-bit integer blocks if the alignment is at least as great as that. If you're aggressive enough, try SSE. But I warn that the existing memcpy() probably will use SSE anyway - but with all the overhead. So if you wanna get rid of the overhead and do it yourself. Be ready to get your hands dirty.
 
user1357851
@StephenLin I believe in no-eyed islander, and there are plenty of them on this lounge
 
2:44 AM
@Telkitty very deep
@Mystical well, I take any excuse I can for reducing clock cycles...this is an OSS library with lots of varied usage so no one can complain that anything is premature
since everything ends up being used in someone's inner loop
it'll be fun :)
 
@StephenLin haha. You're among the rare ones out there. :) I think we can get along very well.
lol
 
@Mystical, by the way, you should read my proposal at stackoverflow.com/questions/15148425/…
 
One of the rare "bottom-up" programmers.
 
it's basically an automatic pseudo-templating optimization for eliminating repeated dynamic dispatch
i.e. templates, but accessible at runtime
i might fork clang to try it out (i'm doing other research actually on clang, this is a bit lower down in priority)
 
With optimizations enabled int copy = *((int*)source); and memcpy(&copy, source, sizeof(copy)) generates the same assembly code.
 
2:48 AM
templates and class specializations are a bit beyond my are of C++...
 
@Mysticial It's not that complicated really.
 
@StackedCrooked are you talking to me? apparently that's only true if size is compile-time constant
 
@StephenLin Of course.
 
ok
just making sure
 
But if the size is only known at run-time, then how would you write your own memcpy more efficient?
 
2:49 AM
it's a loop
you unswitch the size checks
outside the loop
calling the specialized memcpy() within each separate loop for each relevant size/alignment/whatever range
 
unswitch the size checks?
 
yeah, pulling a switch outside of a loop
(essentially a switch)
so you repeat the loop for every case
rather than switching inside the loop
 
@StackedCrooked Depending on the # of bytes copied, you use a different algorithm.
 
it's not that hard
compilers do this
 
But if you know the size will be small ahead of time, you can skip that check and go straight to the small size algorithm.
 
2:51 AM
i'm just surprised it doesn't happen for a built-in intrinsic
 
It's a common problem you run into when using generic functions for small things. The overhead builds up.
 
that's why you specialize (and that's why there's so much template metaprogramming...it's to cover the compiler's ass)
 
@StephenLin I actually do it with macros and preprocessor. But that's because I'm allergic to templates. :P
 
a decent compiler ought to be able to do 75% of what people do manually with templates
hah, don't trust the compiler do you?:)
 
So like: if (alignment(dst) == sizeof(uint64_t)) { copy in units of uint64_t }
Or not?
 
2:53 AM
have to control it down to the token level? :)
 
@StephenLin In a lot of cases I don't. :)
The code I write runs at the same speed on Windows with MSVC and Linux with GCC. That's how much it says that I don't trust the damn compiler.
 
@StackedCrooked something like that, but in my case mostly worrying about total size
 
At least when it comes to things where performance matters.
For things where it doesn't, I don't even notice if I forget to turn on optimizations.
 
you don't use default flags with MSVC do you? they don't even do SSE by default since it's not a win32 requirement until Windows 8 AFAIK
 
@StephenLin It doesn't make a bit of difference in most of the code I write anyways.
 
2:55 AM
ok, just curious
 
That's because anything that's performance critical - ... well... I've probably already vectorized it manually myself.
 
ok, but you don't target generic windows then
this is for your own binaries?
 
The only thing that does matter is how well the compiler can schedule the SSE intrinsics that I write.
 
we release windows binaries prebuilt
 
@StephenLin I have a messy system of CPU dispatching.
 
2:56 AM
so for 32-bit that means lowest common denominator XP
ahh
is it runtime polymorphic code?
 
@StephenLin No it isn't. It's a completely separate binary.
 
or parallel specalizations, or something else?
 
A different binary for different targets.
 
ok
i suppose that's the best way to do it if you can get away with it
 
Yeah I try to keep everything separate. And not cram everything into a single binary.
It makes it less modular and messier to add new things and remove old ones.
As with any multi-target HPC app, there's a lot of bloat with having a version of code for every target.
Coming up with ways to reduces that redundancy it quite literally - part of my Masters thesis.
 
2:59 AM
you could jit with llvm
i suppose you don't trust jits either though :D
 
@StephenLin I actually have little experience with them.
I use Java and such. But all the performance stuff is all in C or C++.
 
ok, me neither, but i'm probably going to get into it
 
So while I use JITs, I don't care for their performance.
@Mysticial: Wow, I have been programming a decade longer than you have been alive. Perhaps you would like to reconsider claiming your knowledge and experience as a basis for argument. — Eric Postpischil 1 min ago
^^ seems like I've pissed someone off... lol
 
my 10-year plan is to write a JITted scripting language that natively understands C++ templates
10-year because i'm not in a hurry
(it's not the main priority, just an idea)
 
interesting
 
3:06 AM
i mean, python performance is dismal because everything goes through generic code
pypy is better but once you step outside of it everything has to go through some runtime polymorphic interface to some c code (essentially dynamic dispatch with function pointers, one way or another)
you need a scripting language that will natively generate specialized code on the fly to avoid run-time polymorphism overhead
 
Speaking of which, why isn't Python JITed yet? (or at least partially JITed)
 
for your HPC stuff I'm sure you handroll everything everything, so it doesn't matter
pypy is
they tried adding an LLVM-based jitter to CPython (Unladen Swallow)
but it got killed by Google (the backers of the project)
i don't think Guido was a fan
 
user1357851
@Mysticial you have only pissed one person off recently? That's hard to believe. I think you are doing a better job with your annoyance
 
user1357851
but that's just a personal opinion
 
@Mystical is the other guy's argument is that when you specifically write SSE instructions, the compiler is not guaranteed to spit them out as SSE instructions?
oh i guess it's SSE-like intrinsics
::shrug::
 
3:12 AM
@StephenLin Yeah. I'm saying that I've never seen it happen. And it's unlikely to happen..
If anything, MS if probably trying to keep a backdoor open to future optimizations.
IMO, it's pretty ridiculous to let a backdoor like that. Which is why I'm questioning it. Because the OP is not going go the first person to rely on such behavior. And if MS changes it in the future, they will break code.
 
@Mysticial yeah NaNs are pretty fundamental, and its kind of defeats the purpose of having them if they're going to make all operations undefined
 
So from a purely practical perspective, it's perfectly fine to take it for granted. If MS breaks in the future, you yell at them.
 
0
Q: windows 7 64-bit on 32-bit processors

pablo teslaGood evening, one day a client asked me to install windows 7 64 bit on a 32 bit pc you take 8 gigs of ram, the thing was that was installed, all right up there, when it began, with drivers and everything installed, re walking slow, the client is not happy the house leads to a piece, there is the ...

 
otherwise you have to check everything for errors (i.e. NaNs) all the time, which is exactly what NaN is supposed to avoid requiring
 
You can't follow everything to the word and expect to get anything done. This guy here is probably a perfectionist.
 
3:14 AM
^ WTF.
 
wow
usually I give people the benefit of the doubt (non-native English speakers)
 
hey, can anyone give me a list of some things i should learn for a CS interview? to better prepare?
 
but I don't even know what to think about that
CS or programming?
there's a difference
 
@StephenLin The English isn't even the issue here IMO.
 
In what sense?
 
3:16 AM
Usually I can pick up what the OP is asking for even with broken English.
 
is it for a programming job? or, like, a cs graduate school interview?
not that much overlap between the two
well, depends on the job i guess
 
programming gig
not a school interview
my problem is i'm basically a "figure it out if i don't know it on google" kind of guy so there's a lot i don't necessarily know cold
so i am not sure what fundamentals i should just hard-memorize
 
is it c++?
you should read the c++faq if it's c++
 
python and java i think but java is close enough to C++
 
err, not really
i mean, learning C++ details without knowing the Java differences will probably confuse you more than just learning the Java version
 
3:28 AM
i'd like to learn all of them ideally (python/java/C++/etc)
 
@StephenLin That'd be a good comment to add to that question. But I'm staying out. This guy is clearly pissed off at me. And it's only going to end in a flame war if I respond to him.
 
but i guess i just don't know what all i'd need to learn to be able to handle most of the basic tech questions they could throw at me
e.g. i just memorized a bunch of sorts i never use (merge, insertion, selection, bubble, quicksort, etc)
 
it depends on who you're interviewing with...if it's a top shop then it'll probably be mostly brainteasers and algorithms and less language-specific specific
if it's not such a top shop they'll probably ask more like, specific language questions like what does this code do, what does this keyword mean, etc.
 
top shop, but it'll still require knowing basics
 
@StephenLin In one of my phone interviews, they slammed me with pedantic C and C++ questions.
 
user1357851
3:36 AM
@StephenLin lol still going on with your interview questions
 
It was kinda ridiculous actually...
 
i'm great with brainteasers; shit with stupid technical questions that i normally google
 
@Mysticial Did they ask you questions about things even the C++ standards committee have long protracted discussions about? :-P
 
@Telkitty you're the one that brought up brainteasers...i don't like them myself actually
 
@Insilico almost...
needless to say, I didn't get the job.
 
3:38 AM
@Telkitty I prefer language questions but actually deep ones
 
I remember reading a long thread on std::swap() and something about ADL whose participants were known C++ experts. That was an interesting read.
 
I want to be hired for my skills in performance. Not for memorizing the C++ standard.
 
@Telkitty so I'm not really saying the "top shop" approach is better, just that it is what it is
@Mysticial yeah, but completely abstract brainteasers (the opposite extreme) are no good either
 
@Mysticial Who the hell memorizes the C++ standard. There's a reason why the search feature in PDF readers exists.
 
so can nobody help me with this? :P
 
@AgainstASicilian trying to, not really psychic though
 
@Mysticial Of course, I forget. :-P
 
@AgainstASicilian trying to give general good advice rather than specific bad advice
 
@Insilico :)
 
@StephenLin Well let's say you wanted to quiz me on basic algorithms/data structures/implementations that someone applying to a top shop should know -- what might come to mind?
e.g. "I can't believe you call yourself good at C++ when you don't even know how to __________"
whatever ______________ is, I need to learn
 
user1357851
3:41 AM
@Mysticial you have a thing for/against rep whore/whoring, being a rep whore yourself and I don't think you realised that
 
@AgainstASicilian at that point it's not reciting a specific algorithm but coming up with one on the fly
 
@AgainstASicilian so you need to practice methods of coming up with algorithms, like dynamic programming, etc.
@AgainstASicilian depends how "top" you mean though
@AgainstASicilian generally the higher in the food chain you are, the more they assume you know the basics already (or they would have weeded you out already) so they focus on applying things on the fly
 
Does anybody know how to enable optimization on a per file basis in Visual Studios like we do in gcc when we tell it to compile a .cpp with different settings?
 
@Mikhail You want to do this at the source level or at the command-line level?
 
3:43 AM
@Insilico I could write a program for that easy -- if i%3==0 and i%5==0 print fizzbuzz, else if i%3==0 print fizz, else if i%5==0 print buzz
 
@AgainstASicilian One thing the best tend to work fairly hard at is questions people are unlikely to be able to memorize ahead of time. Just for example, they'll come up with an idea for a basic algorithm (e.g., sorting or searching) that isn't in any of the books, and ask you to figure out the details necessary to make it work, possibly analyze its complexity, etc.
 
@Mikhail You should be able to right-click on an individual file in your project and select Properties, then change the "Optimization" settings just for that file.
 
@AgainstASicilian Congratulations, you're not a crap programmer! (caveat: I actually haven't checked your work. :-P)
 
XD
@JerryCoffin That is what I don't know how to study for, though. I only know "general" ideas about how to analyze runtime (e.g. well I run this many nested for loops and call these recursions so it runs in O(N^shit) time or O(N^decent) time)
 
@AgainstASicilian You don't. You keep practicing at algorithms until it becomes almost a second language.
 
3:45 AM
right but which algorithms should i be studying
i feel like i am flying blind
 
@AgainstASicilian PRACTICE ALL THE ALGORITHMS. :-P
 
@AgainstASicilian the CLR algorithms book is good
 
user1357851
@JerryCoffin for the hard brainteasers, are there best answers - because there are usually number of ways to solve them
 
@AgainstASicilian I kid, of course. A good way to start is to look at algorithm books. Those at least give you some structure and framework to look at.
 
3:47 AM
@StephenLin I've tried my hardest to read that book and I keep putting it down every time
 
(authors initials, not common language runtime)
 
i really dislike the writing style and way it explains things
 
maybe try Project Euler problems
 
@Derek worked like a charm thanks!
 
3:47 AM
(I haven't tried them myself, but it seems good practice if you learn by practice better than from textbooks)
 
I'm actually a fairly high-level PE solver
 
@Telkitty At least from what I've seen, most are less interested in the answer you give than in hearing about how you approach the problem.
 
@JerryCoffin Most of the time the interviewers don't care about my thought process if I don't actually get near the answer
 
@JerryCoffin Google's guidelines for tech interviews might help - it's a good basic list of the algorithms and concepts you need to get through an interview there: steve-yegge.blogspot.com.au/2008/03/get-that-job-at-google.html
 
user1357851
@JerryCoffin do you have any favourite questions?
 
user1357851
3:49 AM
I should be coding but I can't seem to concentrate @ moment
 
@JerryCoffin Sorry, replied to the wrong comment, that was for @AgainstASicilian
 
@AgainstASicilian Yeah, getting at least reasonably close to a decent answer does tend to help. Even if you go way off-track, most will try to give you a little nudge in the right direction.
 
I just get so nervous in interviews; I can do the hard stuff but not the easy stuff
but overall i am slow
 
hah, SICP
 
give me a problem and i will get the right answer eventually, but i can't guarantee i can talk through it as i am solving it and in fast time
 
3:50 AM
i remember scheme
 
hei lads and lassies
 
omg the parentheses
imagine linux kernel written in scheme and ending with 40 lines of )))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
 
@Telkitty Back when I interviewed people, I tended to print out a 100 line (or so) piece of something, and ask them to talk about it -- anything from algorithms to coding style to whether they could see any obvious bugs once they'd figured out what it should do.
 
user1357851
@JerryCoffin that's more subjective, like maybe you just happen to like the person, then you tend to give the answers more favourite marks
 
@JerryCoffin I would love to interview with you
 
3:54 AM
@JerryCoffin What's a sample question you might ask?
 
user1357851
Steve Jobs is Cicade? His profile sounds close enough
 
@Telkitty So it is -- but I agree with Samuel Clemens: any damned fool can have the facts. I want to know about opinions. I'm like a drill sergeant -- I don't discriminate; I hate everybody equally. Seriously, I do usually have at least a few specific points picked out that they should find (e.g., specific bugs and/or limitations in the code). At the same time, being able to work in a team matters a lot.
@AgainstASicilian "Tell me what you think of this."
 
@Telkitty, it's important that people working together see eye to eye on technical issues, even if they're subjective ones
 

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