Root beer is a carbonated, sweetened beverage, originally made using the root of a sassafras plant (or the bark of a sassafras tree) as the primary flavor. Root beer, popularized in North America, comes in two forms: alcoholic and soft drink. The historical root beer was analogous to small beer in that the process provided a drink with a very low alcohol content. Although roots are used as the source of many soft drinks in many countries throughout the world (and even alcoholic beverages/beers), the name root beer is rarely used outside North America and the Philippines. Most other countr...
What I meant was, open Eclipse, fumble through the menus looking for the plugin manager (it is there, of that I'm sure), and install the plugin from there.
And speaking of Gnome 3 and Oneiric being not perfect, I think I have performance issues under Gnome Shell that I don't have with Unity. I didn't try very long though. (Plus, AMD.)
Mine wasn't really about performance, except GIMP was using excessive memory and I had to kill it, performance was fine. But e.g. I couldn't write a dvd because app reported it was 2.2 only which is not at all. I installed another software and did it.
@LewsTherin You could try installing it in the Eclipse installation directory. I personally don't like the idea of dumping stuff on /usr by hand, but it probably won't cause harm.
@StackedCrooked For better or for worse Gnome 2 will not continue forward though. AFAIK despite all the bickering Gnome 3 is still where the development is at.
@RMartinhoFernandes Looking at it for 5 minutes tops, it looks like it's trying to break away from the 'desktop - menu bar - windows' view of things. The kind of radical change that will always upset a large part of the crowd.
I'm a college student majoring in computer engineering. I'm doing a c++ project in my comp sci class with 3 other people. Instead of zipping up our code and sending it to each other, what's the best software I can use for version control. I live on campus so setting up a server might be a problem...
Hey guys, what would be the best way to read a file and know when the end of line occurs? Because thing "file >> type" format just runs through it regardless of end of line
Although typing just 'haskell' doesn't seem to bring up the package, apparently you need the exact name 'haskell-platform' in the search bar. That's silly.
@oorosco it depends on the folks who will maintain the code. if you are student learning c++, use 'at', since it will help you find indexing errors fast. if you are experienced, however, then you know how to use proper checked versions of standard lib, and you know how to prevent indexing errors, so then [] is more clear and also more efficient.
@oorosco it doesn't help me so much. but it does help a novice. because it is guaranteed to perform a range check and throw a standard exception if the index is out of bounds.
someone over at facebook encouraged me to write about unicode in ms-windows c++ programming. I think the linked document is about 1/3 or 1/4 finished. But it occurred to me that I could get early feedback here! Yours!
please do comment
even if comment is like "hey that's meaningless" or "i don't understand" or "chapter & verse of relevant standard, please" or whatever
Meanwhile, can anyone tell me if Boost.Fusion works ok with variadic templates in GCC? What with that "can't expand templates into fixed parameter lists" bug.
template<template<typename...> class Template, typename... A> struct workaround { typedef typename Template<A...>::type type; }; is a possibility.
e.g. if you can't use typename boost::fusion::result_of::whatever<A...>::type you can use typename workaround<boost::fusion::result_of::whatever, A...>::type
When it's not using a metafunction it's a bit more painful as you have to use variadic templates and/or specializations.
Now that you mention it, I'm going out of my way to get libcxx working which would mean in turn clang would work in C++0x mode. But since I use initializer lists...
Short version is: that vim indexer plugin thing is too painful to use.
@LucDanton Dunno, I haven't tried them on Linux yet. I'm running Windows until I get a decent router. It doesn't like Windows much, but it likes Linux even less.
No problem, found some nice documentation. Also apparently installing haskell-platform put stuff into ~/.cabal and by default cabal do local installs. However ~/.cabal was owned by root, go figure.
Apparently the stuff is not put into the path by default. Not entirely unreasonable.
regarding correctness i'm most concerned about the claim of only dealing with utf-8 in modern *nix. my experience with *nix is very old, latest from middle 1990's when i got *nix workstation in my office. i played around with it, it had lots of character encoding issues (and as i recall, there was no standardization yet on utf-8)
@AlfPSteinbach To the best of my knowledge (which isn't much, as I tend to keep system-specific stuff at arms length), the encoding of nix-like systems are tied to the locale. Practically everyone switched to utf-8 locales but you can switch that at will. Did that help?
And let me try to switch to a non-unicode locale to substantiate my claims.
I installed a Western locale (en_US.iso88591), switch my terminal to that as input, set the locale to Western, did cat ééééé >stuff. Then back to UTF-8 (both terminal and locale).
Also man pages are borked in Latin-1, to give you an idea of how practical it is to switch to non-utf8. Still, I hear there are localized nixes that stick to non-Unicode.
@Alf I otherwise didn't read much of your document (can't say I'm really into system-specific programming, much less Windows). Except for that last page where more fails, whoah.
I was really impressed when I learned how localization works on Posix. For once there's something that doesn't seem to be burdened by backward compatibility.