Argos (/ˈɑːrɡɒs, -ɡəs/; Modern Greek: Άργος [ˈarɣos]; Ancient Greek: Ἄργος [árɡos]) is a city and a former municipality, former bishopric and present Latin Catholic titular see in Argolis, Peloponnese, Greece.
Since the 2011 local government reform it has been part of the municipality Argos-Mykines, of which it is a municipal unit. It is 11 kilometres (7 miles) from Nafplion, which was its historic harbour. A settlement of great antiquity, Argos has been continuously inhabited as at least a substantial village for the past 7,000 years. The city is a member of the Most Ancient European Towns Network...
> A settlement of great antiquity, Argos has been continuously inhabited as at least a substantial village for the past 7,000 years.
There are dozens of similarly old continuously inhabited settlements in the area, and note that to work as a counterargument, they only need to have existed at that point and do not need to have survived like these.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not revelant here but I liked this trivia bit I read earlier this week:
> Did you know that in the 14th century the city of Timbuktu in West Africa was five times bigger than the city of London, and was the richest city in the world? src
Up until the late 19th century, the population of cities increased primarily through immigration, because birth rates were not enough to offset the death rates.
Hello, I am having issues with conceptualizing a function for my program. I am attempting to create a function which returns a list of char* strings (file names contained in an archive) to a DLL caller. Can I simply make a function "char** fileList()"? This function would create a char* names = new(char*[fileCount]) and set each index = to a const char* string. Or should I do some return by value method where I hand copy every character and return?
Recently at work I searched the Unity Dash for gedit and there were explicit pictures in the search result. The picture shows in "Reference" field when I search "gedit" only..
It was very embarrassing to see those files in the list in front of my coworkers.
How can I prevent such incidents from...
Assume a much slower rate, say 6 times per 900 years, with 5,000 people In 700 BC: 833 in 1600 BC, 139 in 2500 BC, 23 in 3400 BC, 3.8 in 4300 BC, 0.64 in 5200 BC
@sehe Since what passes for "London" these days wasn't actually a thing before the 16th century, I find that statement a bit disingenuous. It could refer to the City of London, but that's misleading because that's not the same entity as the city of London (note capitalization). It could refer to London, but then it's nonsensical because London didn't exist in the 14th century.
I'm sure you could make the same statement using another large Medieval European city and it would be fine, though.
@TorbenC It's odd for you. But not if you were here more often. You'd realize we do this because we tended to get swamped with help vampires if we don't create the barrier
When your first message is literally "Hello, here's a question", it is entirely logical to assume you didn't read the rules.
> now the usual reaction is “go away”.
> it seems you have to earn your “right to ask” in the Lounge by becoming part of that community. If you don’t have time for that, or don’t care for that, then go on Stack Overflow instead.
"Hello, here's a question" is the antithesis of that.
If you had just done... exactly what the "rules" state and basically ignored the question... Hey I would have left without another word. Instead you jumped to the conclusion I hadn't read them.
@TorbenC and you didn't know we primarily occupy ourselves on this chat with solving the problems of estimating the population growth with fourier laguerre functions and uncertainty principles (automated in C++ programs of course)??
> Before you continue, keep this in mind. You can skip all this fuss and go ask your question on the main site, at any time, because that’s what that site is all about.
@TorbenC So you 1) read the rules which discourage non-regulars from asking questions, 2) expected to get circle jerked and therefore 3) decided it was better to ask here than on SO. Logical
Ok so im working on my own DirectX framework all tutorials about making a DirectX framework are old and use deprecated stuff so i just made my own one , though i took somethings from the old tutorials and updated them to work with the new Windows 8.1 SDK
and here comes The problem , i get errors ...
Data structure alignment is the way data is arranged and accessed in computer memory. It consists of two separate but related issues: data alignment and data structure padding. When a modern computer reads from or writes to a memory address, it will do this in word sized chunks (e.g. 4 byte chunks on a 32-bit system) or larger. Data alignment means putting the data at a memory address equal to some multiple of the word size, which increases the system's performance due to the way the CPU handles memory. To align the data, it may be necessary to insert some meaningless bytes between the end of the...
@rubenvb weird, clang gives me error: operation on 'i' may be undefined [-Werror=sequence-point] twice and error: 'i' is used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=uninitialized] once
I am developing a Chip-8 emulator. I have no idea how do it. I just can't understand it. I require some detailed examples. Or is creating a Chip-8 emulator hard? This is my first time learning emulation basics.
@StackedCrooked @sbi's code is making use of it. We split a handle type into a POD base with the data and a derived type with all the value semantics of the handle (copies are costly). When we store that into a container we slice off the non-POD part. Then the container gets copied around (no moves) and none of those costly copies happen since what is left is a POD. Eventually it is time to get the things out of the container, and that's when it reattaches the POD part into a full handle.
I'm pretty new to cmake, and read a few tutorials on how to use it, and wrote some complicated 50 lines CMake script in order to make a program for 3 different compilers. This probably concludes all my knowledge in cmake.
Now my problem is that I have some source code, whose folder I don't want ...
@Puppy I don't remember all the details, and it was years ago. We spent a whole afternoon trying to get a decent design and this is what we came up with.
@Puppy we have a swap for the whole container IIRC, but swapping a bunch of elements instead of just copying the POD part? Is that really an optimization?
yeah, but then you don't have an awful hack design where you have slicing and you randomly drop correct copy semantics because they're too expensive and then just hope that you got it right
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's what the replacing the container thing means. The reallocation can be reframed in terms of swaps instead of copies, which can benefit shitloads of classes in lots more cases.
e.g. if you can construct a clone_ptr or shared_ptr from a unique_ptr, you’re choosing a particular meaning for copies
if I were to design a handful of smart pointers from scratch I’d pay attention to that, and having a base for some of them would be something on my mind
ditto containers and the 'simplest' of containers i.e. non-reallocatable slice of memory
@melak47 I'm not smiling at all. Nobody's answered my question, and I have to go to work and have some code written in only an hour and a half. Isn't this a code writing service?
> To get started with silicon you need the compiler Clang++ on your system (g++ fails at compiling silicon and I do not have access to other compilers).
IMO one of the great strengths of C++ is interoperability
if your library/framework does not support GCC it's p much useless