I failed the second question, where the "human" answer would say John is "left of the tree", a tree that's not visible in the question page (at least on my machine, Firefox)
stackoverflow.com/questions/7458857/… - Why are people closing this as subjective? It clearly isn't. "Why is the earth round?" is not a subjective question, and neither is this one.
I voted to reopen the question. No-one has provided the relevant technical information yet, neither for this question nor the apparent duplicate, and I was just about to do that. It is lamentable that SO by design discourages discussion, but worse, that by its very nature does not support technical questions and answers outside a very narrow conformists' strip of land.
Ah, I will probably have to post my own question AND answer about it.
Then it doesn't matter if the kids close it; only if a moderator removes it.
@SoapBox very often on SO, answers are technically incorrect. and downright dangerous to follow. it is not a good idea to blindly follow, but yes, most people prefer that.
@AlfPSteinbach Thats what -1 and comments are for. But to have a 'discussion thread' would, I think, often just be a distraction. Also a moderation nightmare.... True discussion is a completely separate goal from question answering.
@SoapBox Well, I can perhaps help to reduce your fears about this. I'm one of the moderators of [comp.lang.c++.moderated]. We don't have the nightmare you fear. In short, your hypotheses are wrong. It's a good idea to look at facts before hypothesizing.
@SoapBox The question of why a group of people did something is frequently answerable. For example, almost every single decision made in the Mercurial project has a public discussion associated with it. And I would assume that most important discussions regarding the C++ standard also do. It's an eminently answerable question, and does not require debate.
Also, the question it was a duplicate of somehow escaped being closed, despite the fact it is, in essence, an exact duplicate. The one it duplicated never received even a single vote to close. One suspects an irrational fear of the word 'Why'.
@SoapBox yes, SO has a lot more users. usenet is almost dead, for a variety of reasons. on the other hand, the quality is extremely much higher in the moderated usenet groups, with the people who defined the language and the practices, participating.
@AlfPSteinbach Lol :D. But seriously. I actually did make a working interpreter. Check it out.
@AlfPSteinbach Is it working right? I actually am making an interpreter for another language, this was just a small subset of it for feedback and testing.
@IntermediateHacker It's very Norwegian. There's a recipe in the VG newspaper. You may perhaps be able to make sense of a Google Translate translation?
but yeah, I'm holding out hope that they'll make some decent library-only wrappers for WinRT stuff in v2.0 or something
The language extensions make sense for some use cases (although it's pretty obvious the VC++ team doesn't have the resources to maintain the the additional compiler complexity), and you can always drop down to the (so far, basically undocumented) underlying COM, but I'd like to see an intermediate layer
to make it as easy as possible in ISO C++
I think the new GUI stuff makes some sense. They needed a way to make a clean break, in order to support tablets and ARM cpus
so a new API and a different UI makes sense to enable that
and then it's a nice bonus that it's also available to "plain" x86 windows
@IntermediateHacker If you're writing a program that needs this kind of user interaction usually one is already using some kind of lib to manage input/ouput so I'm surprised you're not doing that.
@IntermediateHacker Then yes, you'd need a library to go above and beyond C/C++ limited I/O. Come to think of it, I've heard good things from ncurses for terminal stuff, although I have not used it myself (also I don't know how portable it is).
@IntermediateHacker - I'd try and minimise unexpected behaviour for your users. If your users are likely to expect it to be case sensitive then I'd go with that
@awoodland ok then. though I have a few doubts and hesitations...
@Everyone One more question. Should an interpreted scripting language necessarily have a GUI toolkit in its std lib? Like Python's Tkinter and Lua's wxLua
@IntermediateHacker "My recent interest is in creating Parsers and Interpreters (inspired by Herbert Schildt's C Interpreter [1989] and various Recursive Descent Parser variants"
@JohannesSchaublitb i've got tons of herb and scott and bertrand books but i really hate reading books now , never could get chance to read any except Effective
Wow. We had an election today in Berlin, and it seems the Die Piraten just got an estimated ~8.5% of votes, and will have about a dozen seats in the next Berlin parliament. That is a very impressive result.
@MrAnubis Most of the times, you can just do textual replacement to understand recursion (unless there are side effects, of course).
> Das Grundsatzprogramm proklamiert, dass aus Sicht der Piratenpartei Deutschland im Zuge der Digitalen Revolution aller Lebensbereiche durch eine allesdurchdringende Vernetzung der Gegenstände des Alltages, die Allgegenwärtigkeit rechnergestützter Informationsverarbeitung und die Entwicklung hin zur Verwertbarkeit von Informationen im Web durch Computer die Würde und die Freiheit des Menschen in erhöhtem Maße gefährdet würden
@FredOverflow "The party supports the preservation of current civil rights in telephony and on the Internet.... It also opposes artificial monopolies and various measures of surveillance of citizens. The party favors the civil right to information privacy and reforms of copyright, education, computer science and genetic patents."
"It promotes in particular an enhanced transparency of government by implementing open source governance and providing for APIs to allow for electronic inspection and monitoring of government operations by the citizen." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirate_Party_Germany#Party_Platform