@IharobAlAsimi Disagree. while(t-->0) clearly states the logic: t goes to 0. I personally would prefer something like while (t --> 0), but this obviously has better readability than while (t-- > 0) — alexeykuzmin03 mins ago
@BartekBanachewicz I just looked it up. That's a Really Nice Idea™ of yours. However, have I ever mentioned how I am stuck in C++03 land? No? I thought I had. Well, anyway, I am, and std::iota() is C++11. :-/
@BartekBanachewicz std::iota() would be more convenient, because it assigns ++value, whereas std::generate() assigns generator(), which I need to map to mean ++it, and this is clumsy without lambda functions. Mhmm. Not sure this would be any improvement over the manual loop then.
@Rerito for one the constructor isn't user defined so aggregate initialization applies, and for the other it is, so aggregate initialization doesn't apply, so C{} is a compilation failure
Well, I could write iota myself and put it into our toolbox. There already are a few other algorithms that weren't available for C++03, but are in later versions of the standard.
@sbi I think that's the route I'd take. That reminds me: I should write up a short paper on adding iota_n to the standard. Never quite understood why it wasn't there.
@BartekBanachewicz When one looks at the number of things that have been added in the past 6 years, you're the one who starts looking like a chimpanzee.
I believe that the existing EU residents will have their rights guaranteed when we receive a reciprocal guarantee from the EU.
but since the EU won't make that guarantee before negotiating starts, we can't make ours right now either
@R.MartinhoFernandes I do not see how the amendments asking for a referendum or Parliamentary approval on a final deal could have been implemented, since there is no mechanism for such approval under Article 50 as far as I am aware- once you trigger it, you're out.
I think that they will have no choice but to close the border
just another example of how Brexiteers did not really consider what it is they were asking for
although I also believe that the EU firmly shares the blame for this situation, if memory serves they were basically unwilling to negotiate things that were politically pretty bad here, e.g. free movement
I don't believe that migration is a big contributor but it's undeniable that quite a bit of our infrastructure is failing, especially health, and limiting migration might have helped a little.
@sbi Personally I feel like the aging population is probably the biggest factor, and migrating new healthcare workers is essential for us, but people like to blame migrants anyway.
@BartekBanachewicz Because housing is one of the fundamental human rights. Just like health, no violence, etc. – all of which need to be provided by the society, because the free market does not provide them. And societies are organized into states, with governments running the daily business.
@Puppy No, it wouldn't. Look, immigrant never were any of your problems, except for that they were used as scapegoats. (I know that because it's the same here.)
@sbi Well there are some housings on the free market. So it might not provide enough of them, but then raising prices should stem creation of more, cheaper ventures, no?
@BartekBanachewicz We are, literally, talking about a society where that failed. I am living in another one. And you keep repeating this neoliberal trickle-down nonsense that failed.
@BartekBanachewicz The principal reason why it failed is because local people won't support converting land used for existing things into new housing developments.
@BartekBanachewicz That fails for the same reason capitalism fails on all society issues: feeding the poor, protecting the helpless, not contaminating the environment...
@BartekBanachewicz How can people pull themselves out of the problem of not being able to afford housing if they cannot work? And the distance to jobs is the main factor for housing costs in Western countries nowadays.
@BartekBanachewicz People usually want to live close to where they can get a job, and where they can stay close to their families or friends. The former is particularly important because knowing to fish isn't enough; you're going to need a fishing rod.
@BartekBanachewicz That explains your neoliberal attitude. It's always those who never had any problems who do not understand that there are people who, not necessarily due to their own fault, have it much harder.
(Well, you then will have to shine your shoes yourself, and cut your own hair, etc., but who cares about that when they can ridicule people doing less well than they do?)
@BartekBanachewicz Nice. Doing a quick calculation, I'd have to be paid about $670,000/year for my current rent to be only 6% of my gross income (and around a million/year for it to be 6% of net income).
@BartekBanachewicz Think what you will. What you say here is neo-liberal nonsense, and if you say so in public, you risk being called a neo-liberal. If you do not like that, you might want to re-think your attitude.
@JerryCoffin It was slightly unfair, since it's not technically rent but just costs of living, but it wouldn't be that much more if I was actually renting. Less developed countries tend to lean that way
as someone in our profession, the more to the east you are, the easier it is to buy a flat and the harder it is to buy a car, and vice versa to the west
@BartekBanachewicz I didn't have enough money to buy a car in >15 years. A Mac? I have a rotten 10 year old PC, which doesn't even boot. I never owned anything but PCs I made myself from 3rd-hand parts.
@JerryCoffin Well, my money to spend on books, cinema, theater, eating out, etc. is rather limited, to say the least. I doubt he is as limited financially as I am.