I think I should take some of my own medicine and write some units tests ¬_¬ but that means I am going to need to find out some correct matrix maths first :(
@andrea The problem was that you posted something (WinForms) most users here are totally uninterested in, and few know anything about. And that atop of drive-by linking.
find the right delegate... that's the point.. I'm new to that, previously I have developping c++ Console appligation without delegate, so I'm new to them
@sbi Don't know what the most surprising element is. Contenders: I'm not a creep (huh?) honest (or was it... I'm not ...honest?) But, I decided the thing that gave it away as blatant sarcasm was I'm shutting up now
Considering a non-garbage-collected memory management technique from an equivalent era as the garbage collectors in use in current popular systems, such as C++'s RAII. Given this approach, then the cost of not using automated garbage collection is minimal, and GC introduces plenty of it's own pro...
@CatPlusPlus Hm, maybe because C++ can be learnt, while equations need to be understood? There's no inherent reason why C++ is the way it is, so there's ultimately nothing deep about it.
@KerrekSB I'm not entirely certain but I think it can also go by catamorphism. I'd have to think a bit to see if a cata is more general than a fold or if they're the same.
I think it was something to do with the fact that you can break up the range into subranges and apply the same operation to the result of the reduce of the subranges...
> @DeadMG, it is not a COMBINATOR at all, and it does not produce a closure. I do not care about the output, I'm only interested in the semantics. You failed to prove that a low level language is capable if implementing a semantics I've requested, which in turn proves that I'm right. – SK-logic 6 mins ago
@Pubby I don't think they can be more useful than they can in C++.
In Haskell, fix is pretty much just a curiosity. But there's a monadic version, mfix (which is not quite the same) that is useful to implement the mdo syntax.
@CatPlusPlus how do you determine that? Unless you have a time machine, it's kind of tricky to determine what you would have learned on your own if you hadn't been a CS student
but if you hadn't attended those lectures, been faced with those tests, and spent time around those CS people, you have no way of determining what you would have learned
Also, when I was in 6th grade, half of my class figured that "I don't need to learn equations. it has no practical value". It's a bit of a fallacy to let the student decide what has, and doesn't have, practical value
@CatPlusPlus oh, so not only do you know what you would have learned if your life had been different. You also know what you'll remember 2 years from now? ;)
@jalf I know that virtually everything I learned in (British high school) was worthless, and I see no reason to conclude that my degree is any different.
I also know that, effectively, it isn't even in the same damn field as what I intend to do with my life
@CatPlusPlus what stuff? Most knowledge has a way of seeping in unnoticed. How many drivers can explicitly remember specifics from their driving lessons?
Anyway, I'm sure there are truly worthless degree programs, but (1) I'd never trust the student to determine whether what he's learning is valuable, because students have a long, proud track record of misjudging precisely that, and (2) simply being enrolled at university, having to pass tests, and attending lectures tends to make you learn things on your own, things that the lecturer didn't mention, but which you'd never have learned on your own if you hadn't been a student
and (3) In every field, and at every level of school, whether it's a prestigious university or 3rd grade, you learn things without realizing it, and if you ask yourself "am I learning anything useful", the answer will always seem like a "no". You'll only get a valid answer to the question years later, when it's no longer relevant. ;)
@RMartinhoFernandes so? As long as it resembles a real assembly language, it's still relevant. And even if it isn't, how does that invalidate what you learned?
@DeadMG many of those optimizations depends on being able to look at your code and understanding precisely what it does. Which may involve looking at the asm :)
well, there's a reason that MSVC x64 doesn't support inline assembly, and it's because there's little reason to use it instead of, say, a compiler intrinsic
@sbi No, they didn't have it. I got a new one by Reynolds instead. Plus a pretty advanced chicken-based meal at my fav cafe. I'm not sure what the slices of orange were for.
I mean, obviously you need it to implement a compiler
but more importantly, assembly is the kind of thing where I'd study it as a special-purpose "when I need it" kind of thing, not as a general-purpose thing
@DeadMG No, the reason is that (1) the MSVC team is living in a delusional dream world, (2) when people need to write assembly, they can still do it in a separate file, and (3) that is about writing asm, not reading it, which is much more commonly useful
@DeadMG It's been very useful to me. But then we're back to the point that it's not about whether what they taught you is useful, but whether you, yourself, are capable of applying what you know
I have had several situations where the only way I could debug something was by reading and understanding assembly language. Job security, since most youngsters can't do it any more. :-)
@DeadMG you needed to be able to read assembly. Obviously, where you learned it from is less significant. But it strongly implies that "learning some assembly is useful", which was my claim
@DeadMG so why did you object to my claim that if you've learned asm as part of your studies, then the claim that you have learned nothnig useful is false?
because if I crack out my disassembler and it contains x86 assembly, then I need to know x86 assembly, and all the MIPS assembly I've done isn't going to help
and if I'm a C# programmer and I ildasm something, then I'm going to need to know CLI, not x86 or JVM