@Mysticial I dunno. There's a theory that societies mature. The "Christian countries" (Europe, NA, etc.) spent time killing not only others but in lots of internal fighting centuries ago. That's slowly reached a state of semi-calm. The Islamic countries are (arguably) following a similar pattern, but about six centuries behind.
@JerryCoffin That's (probably) because they have a common enemy - the radical Islam ideology. Once there's no common enemy, there's no reason to unite anymore. And everybody goes back to war.
@Abyx Haven't really read the Bible much, have you? The main difference is that (most) Christians ignore the more barbaric parts of the Bible and its laws about how people should live, concentrating instead on the parts they find palatable. I have, on several occasions, had quite a bit of fun pulling Christian's chains by telling them I was following the requirements of the Bible (without pointing out that the things I said I was doing actually came from the Bible).
Christianity is about "love" and "good" deed which lead to good afterlife. Like burning witches or crusades. Islam is about dominance. Jihad (war) ends only when all infidels are subjugated. During the war all means are fine.
@JerryCoffin You probably mean the pre-J.Christ parts of the Bible, which are kinda deprecated.
@Abyx In both cases, the holy books contain enough vague, ambiguous, self-contradictory, etc., requirements that just about anybody can pick out what they want it to be about, and find justification for the position they've decided to take.
@Abyx Kinda deprecated meaning (just as I already said) that people ignore it because they think it's barbaric. As far as what's in the Bible itself, there's a handful of passages where Jesus contradicts fairly specific bits of "the old law"--but only a few bits and pieces. The rest is ignored because people want to.
@Abyx You surely haven't read much of the Bible. Large parts of the old testament are devoted to stories of God killing infidels on behalf of his chosen people, helping them to fulfill his command to "fill the earth and dominate it."
I am currently studying the programming topic of type binding. I understand that type binding is the association between a variable and a type and that there are 2 types of type binding. Static type binding (type binding that occurs during compile time) and Dynamic type binding (type binding that...
"The only thing you should be looking at when performing big-O analysis is loops." Really? So in your world recursion doesn't affect complexity? Traveling salesman and towers of Hanoi are now O(1). Back up this assertion, and you've just proven that P = NP. Congratulations. You're assured a prominent place in the history of computer science. — Jerry Coffin43 secs ago
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int diff(int x, int y)
{
int result;
result = x - y;
}
int main()
{
int num1 = 50;
int num2 = 3;
int result = 0;
result = diff( num1, num2);
cout << result;
return 0;
}
Does C++ by default return the last calculation or something?
> However, the type (n : Level) → Set n, which is a valid Agda expression, does not belong to any universe. Indeed, the expression denotes a function mapping levels to universes, so if it had a type, it should be something like Level → Universe, where Universe is the collection of all universes.
> But since the elements of Universe are types, Universe is itself a universe, so we have Universe : Universe. This leads to circularity and inconsistency. In other words, just as we cannot have a set of all sets, we also can’t have a universe of all universes.
I like that circularity!
> As a consequence, although the expression (n : Level) → Set n is a type, it does not have a type.
This is inconsistent.
Frankly I can't really imagine an actual problem caused by Russell's paradox in a typeof(type) = type typesystem.
The way I see it, if you don't ignore the Russell's paradox, you'll always end up at a point where there's some inconsistency that makes my life miserable, like types in C++ not having a type, or the aforementioned (n : Level) -> Set n not having a type.
The latter is probably not going to bite me as soon as the former, but still. :P
Design question(s). Should I make "UTF-16 w/ BOM" a separate encoding from "UTF-16", or should I have encode_with_bom/decode_with_bom functions instead? If "UTF-16 w/BOM" is a distinct encoding, should it have max width 2 or 3 (2 implies that the BOM is emitted on its own, which requires a flush_encoding_state function to emit the last code unit; 3 implies that the BOM is emitted together with the first code point instead)?
Yet more horrendous state machine transitions, but that's something I've just given up on trying to make non-horrendous. I have learned to love the bomb.
Also, despite me sometimes voicing concern over the need to see whether a thing in C++ is a template or not, I don't really have that kind of problems for Vapor, and function foo(bar : SomeTypeclass); will declare a thing that can be both runtime- and compile-time-polymorphic on the type of bar.
(Assuming there's no operations that require more knowledge about its type.)
But I really haven't gotten down to how exactly the syntax will work out.
I want to first get some basic working thing that I can experiment with.
Then you can all be expected to get pinged to look at bikeshed branches. :P
@Abyx Because the semantics of being the output of text encoding are the only ones I care about. Scenarios where you use streams of bytes with different meanings I don't care.
If compression and encryption can be exposed as output iterators, I don't need an input range. It's trivial to write an output iterator that forwards the output.
The iterators become messy as they need to cache the code units for each code point, and track when they have all been iterated over and when a new code point needs to be encoded into that cache, etc.
Okay, does returning this Range thing require dynalloc? If yes, that's something you can avoid with the OutputIterator version (but I guess you knew that already, so I guess it does not)
@PatrickM'Bongo Each iterator holds one of those partial_arrays with all the code units for one code point and an index to track where in the array it is, along with an iterator to the underlying range. When the index overflows the array, it encodes the next code point into that partial_array and resets position to 0.
@ratchetfreak Now god forbid you drop the assumption that the input is well-formed.
And there are other problems this approach brings. I've ranted about them some years back when I was implementing them. No need to go over it again; while the transformation is something a computer can do (so yeah, straightforward in a sense), the effort is incomparable to the triviality of output iterators.
I still have to investigate where the problem of exponential iterator size can be mitigated by sentinels, but it is my understanding that it is one of the problems they solve.
@Luc Richard est développeur GCC, et bine tranquillement son petit potager. Mais voilà qu'on dérange Richard, qui s'exclame alors : "J'aimerais qu'on me laisser Biener !".
If compression and encryption can be exposed as output iterators, I don't need an input range. It's trivial to write an output iterator that forwards the output.
I was looking at this edit to the AngularJS documentation, and to me it looks like a question. I rejected the edit, saying it was a question. Should I take any other actions? When I looked at the user's profile who made this edit, I saw that this was his/her first action on SO, ever since the acc...
@Lalaland they still exist and they are coroutines, so "creating a coroutine will create a [...] stack" isn't necessarily true, which is what I said. :P