> (**) The fundamental problem here is not so much technical as it is cultural. NASA management seems to have the curious and obviously false belief that the fact you didn't fall off a cliff yesterday is proof that it is safe to walk even closer to the edge tomorrow, even if you're not precisely clear on where the edge is. That is actually an algorithm for ensuring that you always walk off a cliff. The truly awful thing is that they walked off the same cliff in the same way twice.
I've read <fstream> predates <exception>. Ignoring the fact that excpetions on fstream aren't very informative, it follows my doubt:
It's possible to enable exceptions on file streams using the exception() method.
ifstream stream;
stream.exceptions(ifstream::failbit | ifstream::badb...
@sbi The problem with a utopia is that who ensures it is a utopia? How do you ensure everyone has perfect health? Whereas the scale by which traditional America weighs a good life is if a person is able to provide for themselves and expand their wealth (which includes health) without reaching a road-block (infringement of rights). Which means, Americans value self-sustenance. Or at least they used to. Using that mindset, it's easier to understand why they fear government intervention.
the compiler probably figures that moving it from a FPU stack register or the stack where it'll be for the cout call isn't worth the cost for just four floats
@Xaade You know, I've lived in the US for half a year, and traveled for another quarter year before that, so I flatter myself believing that I know a thing or to above what the average European knows about American thinking.
Still, even in this light, "my house is bigger than yours; oh, and it's cheaper, too" is a hilarious attempt to explain why someone believes their life is better than mine. Of course, it's also very American.
@sbi And my point was that, yeah from the commenter this was a little closed-minded. But the implications of the deep impression from which this comment spurs is little more important. The author believes that his life is better because he doesn't feel constrained to Europe's political notions. He represents this in his mind with self-ownership, or my house is bigger.
I wouldn't have a bigger house if I had to live in your society, because I'd be limited. I thought the implied subconscious thought was more than a little obvious. Although I guess your point remains that the American connected the social limits to size of house was shallow.
I haven't met one European that has come to here to work and likes America more than his parent Country :) In fact, they stay more often than not in America and don't go back to their parent Country.
@0A0D Note that I never said we are better. (Nor has anyone else, actually. But I hadn't even said that our life is better, what the others were saying.)
I hate my life. Now I have to learn how to use the windows API for serial communications... jesus. Buggy Legacy software should just self-destroy and delete itself completely, no source left anywhere
@Xaade You know, I have seen my share of US politics, and, as a European, I'm probably at least as happy there's an ocean between that and me as are you the other way around.
@sbi Don't confuse politics in my comments. I'm very disappointed in the political climate in America. Reasonable solutions aren't found. Solutions that satisfy vote quotas are. And people with their individual interests don't seem to vote enough to protect equal protection under law.
user457812
I'm an internet creationist - god created the arpanet and it was good, then some douche with a beard took a few too many bytes of his Apple and it was all ruined.
@sbi if you read more of that article I sent you, apparently CERN was involved in TCP/IP and there was considerable resistance to transitioning to TCP/IP in Europe at the time.
23 is a 1998 German film about a young hacker Karl Koch, who died on 23 May 1989, a presumed suicide. It was directed by Hans-Christian Schmid, who also participated in screenwriting. The title derives from the protagonist's obsession with the number 23, a phenomenon often described as apophenia. Although the film was well received by critics and audiences, its accuracy has been vocally disputed by some witnesses to the real-life events on which it was based. Schmid subsequently co-authored a book that tells the story of the making of 23 and also details the differences between the movie ...
This is really two questions, noted below:
Currently I have some public internal helper structs (strictly used to pass data around as one object), during construction of an instance of the class I attempted to use initialization lists instead of assignment, but the compiler complained about the ...
@DeadMG You keep a stack of tokens. You get a token and push it to the stack (shift). You look at the stack and see if you can make a replacement (reduce), e.g, if there is TYPE ID EQUALS EXPRESSION at the top, you can replace that by VARIABLE-DEF. There a shift-reduce parser.
and that's also mostly true for curly braces- as long as you're not a type or a namespace, then it would be the same, whether you're bracing a for, a while, an if, or a function
in non-trivial programs, I'll have hundreds or thousands of them, or more
admittedly, some granularity adjusting may well need to take place
@LucDanton Keeping my final comment in mind, a // is used when you're defining its equivalent of a shell script. Commands without that execute immediately. Or something like that. Or maybe something completely different -- like I said, it's really been a long time...
Doing a bit of checking, it looks like I remembered incorrectly -- lines without the // are for defining data inline. Keep in mind that this all goes back to 80-column punch cards, so having a card deck that included a set of commands to execute, source code to your program, and data to process, all intertwined together was (at least originally) perfectly normal.
@LucDanton Good point. If you want to play with a horrible mainframe system, you should really download DTCyber, which emulates a Control Data machine. At least it's not nearly as horrible of a system as an IBM (but then, I'm biased -- my first real programming was on a Control Data running NOS). [Edit: I've given a more direct link]