The C++ syntax for arrays is: std::vector<double> instead of double[]. It also requires you to put #include <vector> near the top of your source file. Other than that they work very similar to C-arrays.
> The Vatican has given its blessing to the Pokémon card game, reports the Times of London. The Vatican-based satellite TV station Sat2000, which is run by the Italian Bishops' Conference, declared that the Pokémon trading card and computer game is "full of inventive imagination," has no "harmful moral side effects" and is based on the love-thy-neighbor notion of "intense friendship."
Actually I was wrong about the mashed potatoes, it's probably mashed rutabaga with some potato in it. This is a traditional Norwegian dish called smalahove. It was made by a childhood friend of my niece, and he reports that it was quite tasty.
@AlfPSteinbach Well speak of the devil. Just yesterday I accidentally ate the local specialty, which is pig's head. It was horrible, and I say that without the bias of having known what it was.
Sisig is a Kapampangan term which means "to snack on something sour". It usually refers to fruits, often unripe or half-ripe, sometimes dipped in salt and vinegar. It also refers to a method of preparing fish and meat, especially pork, which is marinated in a sour liquid such as lemon juice or vinegar, then seasoned with salt, pepper and other spices.
Sisig also refers to Sizzling sisig, a Filipino dish made from parts of pig’s head and liver, usually seasoned with calamansi and chili peppers.
Origin
The dish is said to have originated from local residents who bought unused pig heads...
The area occupied by C++ in the world of software development has grown smaller in order to give place to new languages. But that doesn't mean that C++ usage is continuously declining. It's pretty stable now.
@StackedCrooked I don't think I even agree with the first part of that. I read recently that SO careers has C++ listed as a requirement for the majority of the job postings
@StackedCrooked I definitely didn't. I went to bed about 1:30, and the kids woke me around 6. I chased them out the room and fell back to sleep until about 8. That's not enough in my book.
Do you know the parental mantra? "It's just a phase." Whatever bad befalls you through a kid, you just think "it's just a phase, it will pass, we will get over it." The truth behind that, however, is that every phase is followed by the next one. :)
I'm doing this for more than a decade now (my oldest one is a teenager), and I expect to be doing this for again as long. I'm used to not to have enough sleep.
Anyway, my revenge is that I now take out time to read an interesting blog post (and waste time here, chatting), rather than making breakfast right away. :)
@StackedCrooked Well, the thing is that I have too many kids, and producing kids takes time, so I face this phase (pun not intended, but noted) much longer than the average parent. The classic western one-or-two-child family usually has the kids out the door in under twenty years.
@StackedCrooked Oh. That would explain why I fall asleep after 20mins of reading in bed (I used to never fall asleep reading in my teens and twens), after having stayed awake staring on the monitor for too many hours.
It's fine, to say that. Everybody who's been here long enough knows that I have many kids (and that one of them is a teen). I also have no problem telling this to the regulars here (and for a newbie to stumble upon it). I just don't want it to be recorded for all eternity. I feel like this would be unfair to the kids.
Actually, this guy is great, and his advice is gorgeous.
> Most software is not sold in boxes, available on the Internet, or downloaded from the App Store. Most software is boring one-off applications in corporations, under-girding every imaginable facet of the global economy. It tracks expenses, it optimizes shipping costs, it assists the accounting department in preparing projections, it helps design new widgets, it prices insurance policies, it flags orders for manual review by the fraud department, etc etc. Software solves business problems.
I.e., jobs in the software industry are boring 90% of the time. Tell that to the many programmers dreaming of a carreer in the game industry.
> Most jobs are never available publicly, just like most worthwhile candidates are not available publicly (see here). Information about the position travels at approximately the speed of beer, sometimes lubricated by email. The decisionmaker at a company knows he needs someone. He tells his friends and business contacts. One of them knows someone — family, a roommate from college, someone they met at a conference, an ex-colleague, whatever.
> Introductions are made, a meeting happens, and they achieve agreement in principle on the job offer. Then the resume/HR department/formal offer dance comes about.
@StackedCrooked It's a question of supply and demand. There's a lot of supply of graduates eager to work in the game industry. Consequently, the salary is low, incredibly overtime the standard, and the code is horrible, because most of us here can run circles around the average game industry developer.
Ha, @Fred will not like that: "Academia is not like the real world."
> The prof in charge of my research project offered me a spot in his lab, a tuition waiver, and a whole $12,000 dollars as a stipend if I would commit 4~6 years to him. That’s a great deal if, and only if, you have recently immigrated from a low-wage country and need someone to intervene with the government to get you a visa.
> If you really like the atmosphere at universities, that is cool. Put a backpack on and you can walk into any building at any university in the United States any time you want. Backpacks are a lot cheaper than working in academia. You can lead the life of the mind in industry, too — and enjoy less politics and better pay. You can even get published in journals, if that floats your boat.
About working at a startup:
> The high-percentage outcome is you work really hard for the next couple of years, fail ingloriously, and then be jobless and looking to get into another startup.
@sbi I do "like the atmosphere at universities", and yeah I know the money isn't that great. That's why I work outside from time to time. As I do now with my C course :)
@StackedCrooked Almost all game companies have a hard time hiring real good programmers. That is because they do not provide the conditions to attract real good programmers. If you are good, why would you sign a contract with a wslave owner?
@FredOverflow You mean you consider teaching C as being "outside of academia"? :) Please tell me you intended to make a joke.
More about working at startups:
> if you want to work on cutting-edge technology but also want to see your kids at 5:30 PM, you can work on cutting-edge technology at many, many, many megacorps.
@sbi I currently found out that one person in my Japanese classes works as a developer for that game company I did an internship for. I don't know how long he has been working there, but currently he still seems enthusiastic about his job :D
It is slavery though. I noticed that when doing the internship.
@sbi I dunno... I like the idea of teaching much more than grinding on a code base with variously skilled colleagues under time pressure to achieve a vaguely specified goal.
@FredOverflow I like teaching, too, which is why, over the last decade, I have again and again taught. And I don't like grinding away under time pressure either. I tend to avoid that, but every few months, there inevitably is a time... Oh, and I never ever worked for a big company., The biggest I worked fro had 100 employees, 30% of which were developers. (Software was their business, though.)
I also never wrote a boring business app for an accounting department. So in a sense I managed to make my way around those 90% of boring jobs.
But then I am also not a dev head or something, despite being old enough for it. But I choose that. I always valued time with the kids and sanity higher than a career.
> Some of the best programmers I know are pathologically incapable of carrying on a conversation. People disproportionately a) wouldn’t want to work with them or b) will underestimate their value-creation ability because they gain insight into that ability through conversation and the person just doesn’t implement that protocol.
@sbi I find that my conversational skills improve after not programming for a while. It's as if being involved in a programming task steals brain-cells away from the conversational part of the brain.
> All business decisions are ultimately made by one or a handful of multi-cellular organisms closely related to chimpanzees, not by rules or by algorithms: People are people. Social grooming is a really important skill. People will often back suggestions by friends because they are friends, even when other suggestions might actually be better. People will often be favoritably disposed to people they have broken bread with.
> The motto and sales point of Salesforce is “No Software”, which conveys to their actual customers “You know those programmers you have working on your internal systems? If you used Salesforce, you could fire half of them and pocket part of the difference in your bonus.” (There’s nothing wrong with this, by the way. You’re in the business of unemploying people. If you think that is unfair, go back to school and study something that doesn’t matter.)
Well, I'm through and while I do not agree with everything, it's a great posting. IMNSHO a must-read for CS graduates. Anna pointed it out:
Excellent blog post by the author of Bingo Card Creator: Don't Call Yourself a Programmer http://www.kalzumeus.com/2011/10/28/dont-call-yourself-a-programmer/
@sbi I like that it's not too condescending like most "you were a big job in academia, prepare to be crushed by The Real World" blog posts that seem to take joy in frightening fresh graduates. This one seems to really go out of its way to be useful.
@LucDanton Yeah. As I said, while I don't agree to everything, I think he achieved his goal to write a README.TXT for CS students about to enter the industry.
@FredOverflow That would be a bad C++ programmer who doesn't get awed by a good pun.
@RMartinhoFernandes You know, it's not like he's perfect, there's a lot of smaller errors in the text, but this seems like he's failed in making an important point.
@TuralTeyyuboglu If I were you, I'd go looking for mods in the meta tavern.
I have two vector<object_of_class_a_1> and vector<object_of_class_a_2> , is there is any efficient way to determine whether object_x_of_class_a belongs to both vectors or not? (rather than using find in both vectors) ?
If the course is really committed to C, I think it should. Idiomatic cleanup with goto is very helpful imo, at the very least for understanding preexisting code.
I'm gaining appreciation for C's minimal approach to genericity. Yeah, it's not beautiful and you have to cast everywhere, but it's simple, and it works!