Anyway, I upgraded from Win95/OSR2 to NT4, then to Win2k until they stopped making drivers for that, only very reluctantly switched to XP, and firmly clung to it through the whole Vista debacle, until I switched to Win 7 last year mainly in order to be able (with 64bit) to make use of above 3.8MB RAM. I don't plan to upgrade to Win8 anytime soon.
@DeadMG I usually sort them by date and delete anything older than the last time I booted my machine.
@CatPlusPlus Supposedly replaced, but not exactly dead (still available as a separate download). Unfortunately, the replacement is clearly inferior in quite a few ways.
@tanner If you are a C++ beginner, code as much as possible, ask as much as possible, read as much as possible. And you need a good book. Beware, there's many bad ones out there.
@DeadMG Are you trying to tell us that you, following a thrown-away recommendation in some chat, downloaded and installed an app unknown to you and immediately started it by clicking on "go", without even having a cursory look at its options before?? (Didn't you, just mins ago, boast "I'm a programmer, too!", or does my memory play tricks again?)
@MartinhoFernandes Actually, making paper is arguably good for the environment: it captures that carbon, and keeps it from being released. Oh darn - jalf beat me to it.
Is there a C++ book out there that goes through C++ from hello world to meta programing in the most technically accurate way as possible? (that is not the spec)
In any case, I have to agree with the problems due to lack of search. It depends on the kind of book though: for references, poor search is almost deadly. For things that most cover concepts, and you're going to largely read through them, it's much less of a problem.
@jalf "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Therefore, anything that's not magic is (by definitely) "insufficiently advanced technology".
@Collecter I find it depends heavily on the monitor. Before I got my current monitor I agreed vehemently. I've read several novels on this one (in portrait rotation) quite comfortably though.
@JerryCoffin The strain may not be too much, but I like holding the book in my hands. I can normally get absorbed in a story for hours on end. On a computer it is much less a continuous read for me.
@MartinhoFernandes No need to research that. It's certainly bullshit. (The CO2 is also bound in the trees, and turning them into paper wastes probably more than what's bound in the paper.)
@ÓlafurWaage I used to give a C++ course to students, doing exactly that, and I'm not aware of a book backing me up on that.
@sbi but if you have a book on your shelf, it means you've captured more CO2 than if you didn't have a book on your shelf. It's all a matter of perspective. ;)
@JerryCoffin Ha! My youngest is 4 now, and she's already old enough to sneak in and out the bedroom. After more than a decade of little children, what a relief!
@MartinhoFernandes As long as "waaayyy toooo eeeaaarlyyyy" is Ok for you... There's a lot of predetermination in that if you use a child as an alarm clock.
@Collecter If you have a good sprinkler system, it can even be put out without your doing much -- and a good spray of freezing water might help with waking you up too.
> Not the most intelligent of Pictsies, Wullie is nonetheless one of Chalk Hill Clan's best thieves, although every mission he been in charge of has been a failure. Often making suggestions like "Can we swim there?" after another has said it's too far to walk, he hasn't many good ideas, but is always trying to contribute, and 'show willin.'
@JerryCoffin Yeah, I think you were around when I came here for the first time. And I think you've been around when we first explored how things work here.
So is everyone in here a developer? And just so you know, I am not. I actually work in Engineering (buildings and stuff) as a sort of IS or IT guy but i have been trying to learn programming for years to make a career change (I think).
@JerryCoffin lol I have been hearing some horror stories about being a `developer'. Not so sure i want to make a career change after some of the stories i hear.
and it doesn't even apply to subfolders, so I can't view that
and there's this really annoying gunk on my taskbar and I can't get rid of it
and the desktop, too
it has this annoying tablet PC input thing, OK, except it knows that I have no touch input, and even when you try to close it, it just moves it somewhere else on the screen and it doesn't go away
Man do I disagree with Joel there. Back in the day when I started of learning to program. I would have never been able to go through those books and I would have then thought that I would never become a programmer. I just started with a simpler language and worked my way up from there.
@ÓlafurWaage This room is so incredibly good in coming up with so many great, unique statements, except for @Tony's fixation on sex this would make very little difference.
@sbi I have a fixation on sex? Woah, didn't know that :P
I agree with Joel for the most part but I spent almost 10 years with a procedural language and i regret the time. I wish i started with something a little more low level like C. However my skills and outlook did change when I read SICP.