Scientists rarely act smug. They know they might "have the right" (i.e. be forgiven for it). They just falsify your theory, or argue probability of it. I'll re-read the article later.
@sehe I see two general notions that bother me to at least some degree. The first is the basic idea that "back to nature" is best. That's not to say there's anything wrong with nature--merely that I think the pendulum has swung (so to speak) so strongly in that direction that a lot of people tend to think of "natural" as virtually synonymous with "perfect".
The second, of course, is the simple fact that it lacks anything in the way of solid evidence that this particular town really would have been hit as hard as the other towns cited if they'd tried to use other measures. Maybe they would have--but it may just as easily be that the areas that drain into/toward that town simply received less rain fall, or it fell enough differently (e.g., more slowly) that more of it soaked into the ground instead of running off.
Every lambda should have a unique unknown type.. is it guaranteed that two lambdas into the same scope have different types?
int main() {
auto l1 = [](){};
auto l2 = [](){};
static_assert(std::is_same<decltype(l1), decltype(l2)>::value == false, "Types cannot be equal!");
}
This wor...
I've written this code to check if a class type have begin function.
struct foo //a simple type to check
{
int begin(){ return 0;}
};
struct Fallback
{
int begin(){ return 0;}
};
template<typename T>
struct HasfuncBegin : T,Fallback
{
typedef char one;
typedef int two;
tem...
@TonyTheLion In that case, what could go wrong has probably already gone wrong before you got to the strcpy (i.e., it's probably already overflowed input, unless somebody was truly a complete idiot, and copied from a larger buffer to a smaller one).
@JerryCoffin Its not my code, I'm just a maintainer, and the original author decided that throwing char* (not const char*) around everywhere, without ever passing a size, and then using strcat and strcpy was a good idea
@nick She'll steal your soul when you're not looking, throw it around, stomp on it, crush your very dreams... and when she's done, she'll put it back in your body before you notice it was gone, and you'll suddenly just feel drained and tired. And she'll look at you and smile and tell you that perhaps you just need some rest, all the while with that... face.