Well, to continue my story. I found with Code Search an application that used the same plugin. However, it always explicity called the 'remove from path' function before the 'add to path' function. Apparently this was a workaround that prevented the corruption. All thanks to Google Code Search!
Alas, Dennis Ritchie is no longer with us.
But I don't see a Dennis Ritchie quote on Stack Overflow. Why is this so?
I think he deserves it. Out of 100 programmers (Stack Overflow's audience last time I checked), I expect all of them to know.
Not a rant, just an opinion.
@LewsTherin I have around 5 Mbps DSL as well. I find it a bit on the slow side though. Cable woudl be much faster. But cable internet is not available in my apartment because they are using an amplifier that doesn't allow bidirectional traffic.
@vivek why doomed , you know cubbi here on SO? , he was also a chemistry guy , but now he is very great programmer ( coded troll system of US , seven states )
The following fails to compile on VC++8.0 complier with an error (I haven't tried it on the latest visual studio complier yet.)
error C2440: 'return' : cannot convert from 'const char *' to 'const
char (&)[6]'
template <typename T>
inline T const& compare (T const& a, T ...
It is just ints =/ ints are usually just sorted up or down.
Am I the only one thinking operator < (pair a, pair b) ( return a.first<b.first; } is a very odd thing to be in the standard? To me it is almost like operator < (complex j, complex k) { return j.x < k.x ; }
Thanks MooingDuck for making me aware of the operator in the first place.
Am I the only one thinking operator < (pair a, pair b) ( return a.first<b.first; } is a very odd thing to be in the standard? To me it is almost like operator < (complex j, complex k) { return j.x < k.x ; } (Flagged for repeating)
(I just found that by googling to support my latest FB status message CONTROVERSIAL theory that the modern female rounded breast developed as we started walking on 2s, in order to leverage the complex hardwired male recognition of fem butt)
oh, war story: i once "simplified" the Java event handling by using introspection to automate things. easier to use but extremely inefficent and impossible to understand. don't.
Am I the only one thinking operator < (pair a, pair b) ( return a.first<b.first; } is a very odd thing to be in the standard? To me it is almost like operator < (complex j, complex k) { return j.x < k.x ; } (Flagged for repeating, third strike!)
@Lews it's just an odd syntax for writing a new class, consider public class MyActionStuffDoer implements ActionListener{ public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent ae){ .. stuff } }
@LucDanton @ If we have Complex a, b. if ( a < b ) is not meaningful. But thats my point, pair and complex are similar enough that pair should not enjoy that
@AlfPSteinbach I sent this guy and email once. I found that his strategy resulted in a chronic state of stress and guilt. He replied, I'll see if I can find it.
@LucD sry I only put the first part of the condition in here. gnu says of course return __x.first < __y.first || (!(__y.first < __x.first) && __x.second < __y.second); } .
If you call that lexical ordering fine, I wouldn't call that lexical by any shot.