I've used fltk professionally. That was a very aesthetically painful library to use, so much so that we implemented our own view window in open gl. aesthetically painful in both it's widgets and the code it generates. Qt is much cleaner, and easier, however it's a billion times more heavy weight. It's each to their own really, use what your comfortable using.
@Mikhail the one redeeming quality about FLTK it is how light it truly is. On data acquisition systems the more drive space you can allow for data acquisition the happier your customers will be with your product. So using a light weight library for your gui work makes sense in that space.
it's not that it's not a capable api. It's just about 15 years behind times, and the code it generates will make you stare at it for a few minutes before you can visually parse the darn stuff to make manual edits , such as adding your own custom widgets to it
@sehe "Neerlandici hebben met verslagenheid gereageerd op het nieuws van de recentelijk overleden tijd. De tempus kwam om het leven door een ongelukkige naamval van de overtreffende trap."
I'd guess this is so rare that it doesn't matter anyway
My main point is that the standard library and boost libraries (which are arguably the most popular libraries out there) set up the standard that snake_case should be used
Using your own convention for whatever reason is the equivalent of using snake_case in Haskell. It just makes very little sense.
@johnathon that's an absolutely uninteresting fact to rant about. There are more people who know algebra than how to repair a car engine. Does that mean that's also esoteric? nope
@Ven that's a very old statement. Most people who know how to repair a car engine also know algebra. It's one of those things that's rather required to repair one professionally, and excluding third world countries is thought to every student that graduates compulsory school, what is not compulsory is programming, but it should be.
Cooperative education (or co-operative education) is a structured method of combining classroom-based education with practical work experience. A cooperative education experience, commonly known as a "co-op", provides academic credit for structured job experience. Cooperative education is taking on new importance in helping young people to make the school-to-work transition. Cooperative learning falls under the umbrella of work-integrated learning (alongside internships, service learning and clinical placements) but is distinct as it alternates a school term with a work term in a structured manner...
@ven move past causality and causation, focus on realism, and understand that we are moving towards a world wide vacuum of IT talent. In the next 20 years we will likely see a 1000% increase in the demand for application developers, with no education backing to go along with it, at least not everywhere in every country, there's isolated steps taken to address the issue , but there needs to be more done
I'm imagining some guy's resume: September 2001 - July 2016 - Suicide Bomber at Al-Qaeda Successfully conducted 17 suicide bombings and killed a total of 5000 people. Voted most feared terrorist in the world.
@Morwenn I once got a guy kind of angry with me, until I explained what I thought was funny. He was a black guy who't played football in college, and during some game some bigoted asshole had made a racial slur, but he didn't feel insulted (at the time) because he didn't understand it. I found the idea of trying to be an asshole but failing to be utterly hilarious.
@sehe I saw several videos on youtube showing Vim+Tmux workflow - it looks like disintegrated. Emacs has builtin shells and terminal - it is more convenient than external one, IMO. Vim could also benefit from terminal integration (like NeoVim already does).
@JerryCoffin To be fair I don't know, but I guess the worst that can happen is they kick me out. (I highly doubt this will happen). There has been talk about giving existing EU residents automatic right to stay, so I'm assuming that is what will happen. The current effect is the pound having fallen, which means buying pounds is cheaper.
@sehe For instance there are several options in Emacs - one is heavy full terminal, with need to switch between keyboard modes "within Terminal"/"in Emacs". Second one is basically shell like teleprinter - you can scroll up, etc, but it does not support heavy ncurses-like TUI.
@TonyTheLion I'd assumed you were paid in pounds, but if you're paid in Euros, yeah, I guess you effectively just got a (fairly substantial) pay raise.
@sehe The big win for integration of terminal is clipboard support, support for macros, snippets, etc. Also you don't have to switch between two different window managers (Vim / Tmux).
These guys are trying to resurrect Xerox Alto machine (which had early GUI innovation), showing hardware debugging process, memory sniffing, old disk drives etc:
something about that though, makes me think it's illegal.
Microsoft bought the rights to that a long time ago. I don't know for certain but it wouldn't be something I'd see them just relinquishing voluntarily.
@johnathon There are some languages with Russian keywords, var/func names, comments - I understand them but they look awkward. I guess native English speakers feel something similar when they read regular code with "for"/abbrevs/etc.
@Evgeny no. When i write code i write my comments, variable names, and functions in English.
@EvgenyPanasyuk its only if i get a hold of code written by a non English speaker does confusion potentially ensue. All depends on if I'm familiar with their language or not... or.. how good of a job google translate does on their text.
:) It was rather obvious. I assume it's been going on for a bit and you feel you need to decide on commitment, apparently? (First thing to ask: do you? Have you asked person in question?)
@sehe I'm fairly decided on commitment and we have discussed this already. I'm just questioning why it I'm so attracted to someone who shares little to no interests with me.
She likes to travel, I don't care. She likes metal, I like everything but metal. I like to eat everything, she doesn't eat vegetables and fruits. I like to drink, she doesn't at all.
Well, if it is of any consolation, I don't think we share much interests. There's just an understanding. The understanding might actually include that we love being free to do our own stuff. But we know we share values so we can run a life together
@johnathon Perhaps this is just question of habit. I mean, I see code in Russian very rarely - perhaps that's why it feels awkward. For example, when I do not use spaces for a long time like for(int i=0;i!=n;++i) - it does not look weird, but if I am using code with spaces for(int i = 0; i != n; ++i) and then look into code without - then it is annoying.
@Shoe Those are differences we certainly don't have. My wife likes social happenings, and I don't really. That's the worst of it. We're both probably equally homely (averse to traveling) and don't drink etc.
I'm sorry. That was likely not what you were looking for.
So, it's about knowing what is important to you. I guess for me the most important thing is about financial attitude(s) and thoughts about child rearing
I like to think that we pull each other towards the best for each other. Like, she unintentionally makes me drink less, and I make her smoke less. She pushes me to travel and I push her to eat more healthy in the long run.
@Shoe It matters only on the earliest stages, like first dates. After these stages you will find out whenever you do fit together by characters - and after this it does not really matter on what topics you are talking or not talking at all.
It's actually a fun game. To make "unwarranted" jokes in coded language. Daughter is a little too bright, so she catches on. And sometimes we cater to it, just so she can join in on some lighthearted fun :)