Speaking of which, maybe we should update the tag wiki. It's inaccurate now, especially regarding the compiler version bundled. (Not that it should lose it's general style/idea.)
> After a couple of years working with this fast and portable C/C++ IDE, I've decided to give it an update. That's because the compiler was getting ancient, and it contained a few bugs here and there.
@RMartinhoFernandes Me neither. But then I learned to use NC early on (on CPM, mind you), and since the days of Win95 I almost exclusively use TotalCommander. F3 for view, F4 for edit, F5 for copy, F6 for move, F7 for create folder, F8 for delete. Not that that would make any sense, but I have been using it for more than 25 years.
@RMartinhoFernandes We can throw any phrase at you that had been said somewhere between two days and half a year ago and you'll come up with who said when in which context.
> I used to work with Brian - about 230 pounds of pure software geek. He had a full beard like Grizzly Adams. Baths and showers were not on his list of important things to do.
> Once we flew him to the client site to help solve a pesky problem. I reminded him to dress for the occasion. I greeted him at the front lobby and was shocked to see him with a collared shirt that had never been ironed, and his tie TIED DIRECTLY TO HIS NECK! Not under the collar, just wrapped around his neck. When I mentioned it to him he said "if that's my only problem then we're in good shape".
> suit: n. 1. Ugly and uncomfortable ‘business clothing’ often worn by non-hackers. Invariably worn with a ‘tie’, a strangulation device that partially cuts off the blood supply to the brain. It is thought that this explains much about the behavior of suit-wearers. Compare droid.
> 2. A person who habitually wears suits, as distinct from a techie or hacker. See pointy-haired, burble, management, Stupids, SNAFU principle, PHB, and brain-damaged.