Hello; I'm James McNellis, and I've recently joined the Visual C++ team as a libraries developer. My first encounter with the C++/CX language extensions was early last year, while implementing some code generation features for the Visual Studio 2012 XAML designer. I started off by hunting for some example code, and it suffices to say that I was a bit surprised with what I first saw. My ini…
@Mysticial He's been there for a while (a year?). He was working on Expression Blend (if memory serves) but a month ago or so ago transferred so he's now working on Visual Studio.
Catchphrases and concepts that spread from person to person are known as memes, which, courtesy the Internet, can now explode across the Earth like a highly contagious virus (hence "going viral"). As with their real-life counterparts, some infectious diseases are global (pandemic), while others a...
You don't have to drink the same beer he's drinking, especially considering that to do that you'd have to drink it after he drunk it. Don't do that. I would surmise that at that point it's just piss.
@DeadMG Actually, it wasn't. I don't know too much about economics, but from what I know about it, he paid for getting out of the depression by borrowed money. If it wasn't for the war dominating the German economics anyway, he would have got Germany into more serious financial trouble. Of course, many in the generation of my grandparents only remember that he provided jobs, not how and why.
@sbi Really? I thought he did it in good part because he refused to pay the hideous reparations that the Allies demanded (not unreasonably) and also because, as a dictator, he basically ordered the economy to recover by assigning people jobs and such things.
@DeadMG Cutting reparation payments was another factor. But the jobs people were assigned to were jobs like building autobahns — which was done in preparation for a war — and outright building war machinery. People tend to forget that.
It is a proper book: it has pages, a title, is sold in bookstores, etc. And no: reading about c++11 isn't a waste of time. If your office doesn't adopt c++11 within a year, staying there would be a waste of your time (in my humble opinion) — sehe32 secs ago
@DeadMG So, do you really think? Would you lend money to someone who hadn't paid you back the last time he borrowed from you, because they'd spend it all and hadn't anything left to pay back? Lending money is based on trust — namely, on trust that you will get your money back. Everything else is risk investment.
Or worse, the ones that loan money for a title to your car trust the fact that you won't be able to pay it back on time. That is how they make money, in fact.
@DeadMG what the hell? people don't lend money to be nice, they do it to make money. That is what interest is, it's a way of getting money out of lending money
What we're seeing is an evolution of government and state. The government over the last 50 years has spent money they didn't have knowing that in the future, that money would be there. Now the future is now, and the money isn't here because there has been an economical decline.
So spending money like there will be money in the future is folly, but it is the only system that has worked up until now
Hence, countries like Greece are trying to pull up on a 747 going 700 miles per hour heading towards the ground and hoping they can pull up in time
The economical engine of such countries is still moving in the wrong direction, as if by inertia
yeah, they have pushed for a very fast economic growth, that has inevitably collapsed. Would we have been better to have a prolonged slow economic growth? That's a big question that is beyond me
That's what a house in Munich looks like after a WWII bomb could neither be disarmed nor carried away, and had to be blown up in place. The blast and the fireball surprised the experts, and damaged 17 houses, one of them badly. The shop visible in the picture just burnt out completely. Most insurance contracts have a clause excluding war damage. Those house and shop owners might never see a penny for their damage.
Those are weapons designed to wreak havoc on a big scale. That thing was a 250kg one, with a long-term chemical detonator, that could have blown up on its own any minute. Everyone in a 1000m radius was evacuated. They said afterwards they found razor-sharp bomb particles as far as 300m from the bomb — so there was quite some security left.
But you cannot blow up a bomb in the middle of a city and not expect severe damage.
@Neil Usually, when bombs cannot be disarmed in place, they are carried away and blown up on special sites designed for that. This one was too risky to carry around, though.
A spokesman of the fire fighters yesterday said the were expecting severe damage.
I would have thought they could erect some massive concert walls to try to direct the blast up... and away from buildings. may not be that practical though
one thing that really baffles me... is mine clearing in Africa... There where tanks developed with a rotating bar with flails attach that can smack the ground to detonate mines, why are they not driving along getting rid of the fuckers?
seems a lot more efficient then using humans to tentatively poke around for them
@Neil I am on about the clearing of WW mines in areas that are not at war. AFAIK most of the mine clearing is being performed by 'first world' countries, those responsible for the mines in the first place
@Neil they should be cleared, and with something like a mine clearing tank, can be done so very very quick, with very little cost, both monitory and in life
@thecoshman Well I agree with you, but apparently they don't think so
I think in WWII, at a certain point things were so bad that even after the war, energy was better spent rebuilding cities and bridges than destroy minefields
I wrote a program to print random strings. Unfortunately I opened one of the output file in gvim. Now if i use Ctrl+P, I am getting lot of junk. Is there any way to remedy this?
I'm learning new commands in VIM all the time, but I'm sure everyone learns something new once in a while. I just recently learned about this:
zz, zt, zb - position cursor at middle, top, or bottom of screen
What are some other useful or elegant commands you wish you'd learned ages ago?
@sehe Because @thecoshman already assumed ctrl + p meant printing, and since that seems to be pretty much standard across the board, ctrl + p seemed to naturally imply gvim would print as well..
Though what fun would this field be if everything did as expected? We'd be out of a job.
@VinayakGarg There are quite a number of nice "atypical" vim answers on Stack Overflow (in that they actually don't belong here). Further more you have vim.wikia.com/wiki/Vim_Tips_Wiki (Vim Tips wiki)
@Neil You were excused. Also, 'printing' has ambiguous meaning. If the program printed binary data to a terminal, that could indeed wreak havoc. CLI utility reset(1) would solve that, however.
@VinayakGarg I learnt vim in ~2 years before I became proficient. Since then, I added 10 years and I still occasionally learn 'breakthrough' new approaches. A major one has been to use :global and command-line mode pervasively. Works really really well with (implicit) marks.
Let's see, the docs for CreateWindowEx says it returns NULL on error, and you should check GetLastError for details. It returns 0 for me, but so does GetLastError. That's real helpful
I'm reading some lecture notes of my C++ lecturer and he wrote the following:
Use Indentation // OK
Never rely on operator precedence - Always use parentheses // OK
Always use a { } block - even for a single line // not OK, why ???
Const object on left side of comparison // OK
U...
The only ones I've seen always boil down to "IT FORCES ME TO INDENT", which I always reply to with "you indent anyway" and then they go "BUT I DON'T HAVE TO".
@CatPlusPlus To some extent, yes. But good editors allow you to jump between start and end of blocks by placing a cursor on the brace. I’ve yet to see this for Python blocks (although it’s of course theoretically feasible)
@CatPlusPlus But you have to do it manually, and have to remember where the block starts/ends. If the paste location happens to have the same level of indentation but you want to paste something to be more indented, this becomes difficult
because as soon as you’ve pasted your code you don’t have visual markers about the pasted range any more, so now you need to select it again to indent
@CatPlusPlus simply no. It can’t work since indentation is the only hint about how far the block goes, so Vim cannot deduce indentation level without proper indentation
@CatPlusPlus python.vim is totally broken, full stop.