Oh yeah, and I kicked him off the room's owner list. IMNSHO, anyone who isn't mature enough to speak up openly if he objects to a message posted, and rather flags it, should not be a room owner. (And someone who isn't here often enough to not to know how much out of hand flagging got here, recently, shouldn't be either.)
I have to split up parts of my app into dlls.
I have an unhandled exception event in my Application main, and I'm throwing exceptions in my other DLL to test an exception dump process.
Problem is that it can catch custom exceptions ONLY when they are thrown within a constructor.
I'm assuming m...
well, SDL events are all kinds of events, and I want to handle key events differently from, say, quit events. now I could have a main loop and dispatch between the different kinds, but I thought there was maybe some nicer way
@CatPlusPlus That's my exact thought. Maybe I should really just have two event managers, one for key events and one for general events, and dispatch between the two
Though I came to hate the word "manager". It feels like I need a manager for everything sometimes and I just don't like it somehow. :|
Provide QUALITY books and an approximate skill level. Add a short blurb/description about each book that you have personally read/benefited from. Feel free to debate quality, headings, etc. Books that meet the criteria will be added to the list. Books that have reviews by the Association of C an...
So, @Cat, to get back to my SDL event problem thingy.. just have a handler (my new word for manager) for every event type group and have a dispatcher assign the events accordingly?
@AlfPSteinbach Especially numbers. The one thing I miss about PL/I is fixed-point numbers. C++ operator overloading does handle that one reasonably well though.
Setun () was a balanced ternary computer developed in 1958 at Moscow State University. The device was built under the lead of Sergei Sobolev and Nikolay Brusentsov. It was the only modern ternary computer, using three-valued ternary logic instead of two-valued binary logic prevalent in computers before and after Setun's conception. The computer was built to fulfill the needs of the Moscow State University and was manufactured at the Kazan Mathematical plant. Fifty computers were built and production was then halted in 1965. In the period between 1965 and 1970, a regular binary computer w...
@LewsTherin When bit shifting you can only divide by 2 (right shift) or multiply by 2 (left shift). That's why right shifting 24 by 4 produces 1, (24 / 16). You want to get 2 and 4 which means you want to do base 10 math, for which you must divide by 10 and modulo 10 for the results
I don't have grease monkey anymore :(, not compatible with FF 8 beta
One way to automatically distinguish between the case Tim mentioned, of identifying a user that is poisoning the well with bad answers and dealing out well-deserved downvotes, vs revenge voting, would be to check for correlation between those votes and those cast by users with high reputation in ...
It's as if we all can't stand the notion that we might be wrong; that there's a better answer; that we're not as smart as we thought. I say, the more readily you accept corrections (with due course), the smarter you are!
We are also averse to questioning what is presented as given. The other day, my classmate pulled me aside and asked, "Why do you question everything [our teacher] says?"