@Ell I've never worked as a consultant and I don't think I'd want to. My only advice would ever be "Your software is terrible, throw it in the bin and find yourself something better to do."
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Maybe a safeguard against timezone woes? If you always report times in eBay time, you don't run the risk of reporting the wrong time because it rained in Argentina.
> Concurrency is the next major revolution in how we write software. Different experts still have different opinions on whether it will be bigger than OO, but that kind of conversation is best left to pundits. For technologists, the interesting thing is that concurrency is of the same order as OO both in the (expected) scale of the revolution and in the complexity and learning curve of the technology.
@FredOverflow maybe they don't supply the free lunch any more after a health check? I could not but notice the magpies in the parks are at least 20% fatter than the wild ones in remote areas because they get free handouts from human
cause I saw "Made further changes to EV_CLEAR handling in the kqueue backend, to address other cases where the close() system call may hang on Mac OS X." in Boost 1.56 changelog
@MarcGravell well, flagging (user flags, not mod flags) has been really broken for a while now (legitimate messages get get users banned, bad messages tend to get by just fine). Better room owner access control would be really nice.
@Xeo oh wait, maybe that's where I got it in the first place :) I sometimes "deferred-open" tabs and only later do I encounter them (at which point in time I can't tell how it got opened)
@nightcracker I thought that there could be an example with ambiguous ranking of integral types, but I think I misremembered. An actual example would probably need contrived user-defined conversions/class hierarchies, or generic lambdas (but if you have generic lambdas you have a nice std::common_type so…).
The gist of it being that you find two types that don’t have a common type, but can still each be converted to one type C. Then I would expect make_array<C>(a, b) to fail, instead of doing the right thing (with a badly behaved std::common_type).
@nightcracker In C++14, yes. In C++11, I’m not sure you need to worry about those cases.
@AlexM. sumtin' like that. It's the OS crash reporting though, kinda sure it has no special casing for KeepassX, but still; I wouldn't want it sending the raw memory dump in the first place
Comparing clang 3.4.2 and gcc 4.9, which is correct for the following code?
#include <iostream>
template<typename T>
struct SelfRec {
static const int value = SelfRec<T>::value;
};
int main() {
std::cout << SelfRec<int>::value << std::endl;
return 0;
}
clang prints 0, gcc gives t...
> Everybody who learns concurrency thinks they understand it, ends up finding mysterious races they thought weren’t possible, and discovers that they didn’t actually understand it yet after all.
There is such a code, which parses a file:
#include <string>
#include <vector>
#include <sstream>
#include <fstream>
using namespace std;
std::vector<std::string> &split(const std::string &s, char delim, std::vector<std::string> &elems) {
std::stringstream ss(s);
std::string item;
...