'British accent' is usually taken to mean non-American, classic 'Oxford' English. The fact that parts of the UK speak in strange grunting utterances that can only be understood locally does not diminish the generally accepted usage.
@MartinJames Looking at it more broadly: one person's speech is almost always distinguishable from any other person's. As such, "X accent" (where X typically refers to some region that may or may not be a country) refers to a family of accents commonly used by people living in that region, and generally distinguishable from the accents used by people living in other regions. It's perfectly reasonable to view them at nearly any desired level of granularity.
Even though different Brits speak with different accents, it's still pretty easy to distinguish (for example) native Brits from natives of Canada, Australia, etc. As such, even though finer gradations are entirely possible, "British accent" is just as valid a grouping as "Oxford", "Cockney", etc.
@MartinJames A few languages (e.g., French) are specifically defined, and a departure from the official definition is not part of that language. In many other cases, however, (with English as a particularly good example) it's essentially impossible to give a clear definition of what is or is not part of a particular language.
@JerryCoffin There’s more than one authority on the French language though. There’s one for French as spoken in France, but so are there for other places.
@LucDanton Fair enough--point wasn't that all French is defined by a single authority, but that at least one authority has been established, but for English no such authority exists.
The number one difference I see in the English-speaking world is that there’s a large number that huffs and puffs when corrected and go on diatribes about prescription vs description linguistics, which I’m fairly sure misappropriates the latter.
E.g. dictionaries are still used, manual of styles are used as references (and they often enough address issues such as spelling). Conversely in France l’Académie is routinely mocked and ignored.
It’s my contention that there’s the same amount of authority, but that it’s spread differently :v
And I don’t want to convey the idea that disagreements with the Académie is reserved to laypeople. There are political parties that go against the prescribed usage, e.g. for some forms of address (madame la ministre vs madame le ministre) because they feel it’s important.
@LucDanton It may well be. It's a little difficult for an outsider like me to even guess how much weight decisions from l’Académie really carry. Nonetheless, I think there's a real difference between an authority that's sometimes ignored and a complete lack of anything that has any claim to being the final authority at all.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit For those who understand electronics, that's actually quite reasonable. It's likely to be much like the flash unit on a typical camera: a set of batteries charge a capacitor. When the unit is fired, the capacitor is discharged through the emitter to release lots of energy over a short period of time. Then the actual energy source (batteries in a flash, probably something else in TNG) recharge the capacitor (and keep it charged whenever not in use).
What should I write to ping flood a web using C#?
...If C# doesn't make posible to do this, what other posibilities to saturate a web are?
Look at THIS to know more about what I am talking...
@JerryCoffin I used to share that view, and I had troubles understanding what the point of description linguistics was. I shifted my view with the following: suppose I claim that the following (and obviously nonsense) phrase is correct English, ‘curséd they they yellow by at bea’. What merit does the claim have if I’m not able to communicate with anyone else with such a ‘language’? That’s where description clicked for me.
I.e. you don’t just document what any one individual thinks is correct or is not (you could document any nonsense then), but what groups of individual value as correct or not between themselves. In a sense the ultimate authority is whether your point comes across to other speakers or not.
@LucDanton (It's also worth considering whether your point will come across to an audience larger than the one you're addressing in the here and now, since records are a thing. Nobody wants to have to translate mankind's entire corpus every 5 days because we don't agree to at least vaguely stick to a published grammar in the medium term.)
And then I don’t know what prescription is beyond description with a little red tape over it. I suppose that means I’m not a prescriptionist anymore :v
@LucDanton Maybe. I'd liken it to C++ though. We all know no compiler ever has (or probably ever will) implement the C++ standard perfectly (and even for a simpler standard, the same remains true). Nonetheless, having a specification for what all compilers should do strikes me as valuable.
Yeah, it is valuable practically speaking. E.g. the administration can go on doing its job and any objection leveled at their use of French they can redirect it to the Académie. Good analogy really.
Damn-short solution, I could fit it in a comment:
#include<stdio.h>
main(N,L,B)
{
N=114067,L=B=N&1;
while(N>>=1)B=(L=(N&1)?L+1:0)>B?L:B;
return !printf("%d",B);
}
Live demo link.
Folks, is there a good/standard text for 2D CAD algorithms? I'm asking this, because in the near future I may be tasked with implementing certain design rule checking (DRC) for 2D dxf files.
Meh - Anne's friend keeps ringing up about random stuff 'cos she 'can't use a computer'. That's fine when Anne is actually in. If she's not, I get the queries about soddin' ponies:
Class 20c www.tacklockers.com 1m Novice Championship
> Execution of '/etc/init.d/elasticsearch start' returned 1: Could not find any executable java binary. Please install java in your PATH or set JAVA_HOME
@Abyx haha true, but it's the opinion about the tool in general that matters, I dunno in an open chat like this if the person telling it matters anyways