@StackedCrooked Let's say you're going to sort a file that's a couple of terabytes. You start by reading in as much data as you can fit into memory. You sort that, and write it out to a file. Then you read another chunk and write it to the next file, and so on until all the data is in sorted chunks. You then open all those files, read a record from each, write the smallest of those records to the output file, read another record from that file, and repeat until EOF on all the intermediate files.
> It is also possible to request a speciļ¬c minimum OpenGL version, multisampling anti-aliasing, an accumulation buffer, stereo rendering and more by using the glfwOpenWindowHint function
@StackedCrooked Not common, but one I've wished for in the past (ended up having to use pointers to the istreams, for no particularly good reason except that there was no workable alternative).
@CatPlusPlus It is something I've wished for, and even considered working on. There are enough use cases that I think it's a fairly hard problem to solve very well for everybody who needs it.
Don't underestimate cross-platform development. I am playing a port of Dragon Age on my Mac. It mysteriously slows down in one part of the game. It does not have this behavior on Windows. Issues like that can occur and are hard to predict.
@CatPlusPlus This is where tools Jenkins are useful. If you commit on one platform the code gets automatically checked out and recompiled on the different platforms. Build errors for different platforms become visible quickly.
@JerryCoffin If you use virtualize OS X internally to automate builds and stuff I don't expect much trouble from Apple layers since they won't know. But yes, it isn't 'correct'.
@DeadMG When I was a student I bought my components at the cheapest shops and assembled my PC myself. Now I've become lazy and just bought an all in one package. Also because my monitor was broken so I needed both a pc and a monitor.
@JerryCoffin I'm not really aware of the prices of the components currently. But I think that iMac is not unreasonably overpriced. See store.apple.com/us/configure/MC814LL/… for a high-end model.