well, my question is whether comments on SO that are considered inappropriate get silently deleted by moderators. Do you think it is a question worth posting?
There is this post: programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/128657/… which, if you look at how it was written before it was modified, it was written in SMS talk. And I think that someone commented "please try to write in proper english". To which I replied,...
(I think I replied...) "no, actually, try to write in English." I am almost sure I posted that comment there, and it is not there. I suppose it was deleted as inappropriate, right?
OK. I am just asking because if I knew that they get deleted I probably would not have been posting them in the first place. I imagined that if I wrote something bad, and it got deleted, I would receive a message. Okay, thank you.
Zombo.com is a website that was created in 1999, during the early days of Flash animation on the Internet. While many websites had a Flash intro that would play while the site loaded, Zombo took the concept to a humorous extreme, consisting of one long intro that never leads to any content.
It has remained largely unchanged since it was created. It is also considered, by web designers, to be one of the best sense-of-humor flash websites.
Content
Zombo.com consists of a "blank" page, a colorful title, and a Flash animation of seven colorful discs that pulsate, hinting at rotation. An a...
@RMartinhoFernandes When I actually find something I can answer well, and is obscure enough so the Me Toos don't post google results. Jon Skeet has already posted.
Here's the start of the music transcript: http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/2281712#2281712 And the chess part: http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/2281384#2281384
actually, there wasn't too much chess...
it was mainly the music that @sehe and I went on for a few hours yesterday
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh sorry. I mis-heard. I thought the requested topic was 'chess', but you meant 'sex'. Then again, it was about matrix chess which is very close to it :)
> Absolute pitch (AP), widely referred to as perfect pitch, is the ability of a person to identify or re-create a given musical note without the benefit of an external reference.
Musicians with absolute perception may experience difficulties which do not exist for other musicians. Because absolute listeners are capable of recognizing that a musical composition has been transposed from its original key, or that a pitch is being produced at a nonstandard frequency (either sharp or flat), a musician with absolute pitch may become distressed upon perceiving tones they believe to be "wrong" or hearing a piece of music "in the wrong key."
@Mysticial A single pitch does not define a key. Then again, perhaps you meant 'keyboard key'? That would be e in the 'small octave' (don't know whether that is international jargon)
@Xaade no, but if someone sings a note, the first sound I make is close, but I'm usually off by a note or so for a moment, but I can correct it very quickly. I can then match subsequent notes that are within an octive no problem
@StackedCrooked I'd probably never be able to name pitches. I'd get them all mixed up. The names. But I can repeat songs from games I played 20 years ago.
Musicians with absolute perception may experience difficulties which do not exist for other musicians. Because absolute listeners are capable of recognizing that a musical composition has been transposed from its original key, or that a pitch is being produced at a nonstandard frequency (either sharp or flat), a musician with absolute pitch may become distressed upon perceiving tones they believe to be "wrong" or hearing a piece of music "in the wrong key."
@sehe It irritates me when people speed up or slow down a song.... Especially when they slow down a song.... my mind has moved on, and they're still hanging on a note I'm done with..... annoying.
@Xaade That's interesting. Not sure whether it has to do with pitch recognition. More about the motoric cortex having a very active rememberance of the 'canonical' version of a piece of music. Let me browse you a link that will deffo interest you...
@StackedCrooked Don't know about threadsafe, but Boost Flyweight seems right up that alley. And it is sick configurable (policies, strategies, allocation, factories ; it's almost like <strike>java</strike> OMG I said it!)
@Flyweight: i'm sure it has a policy to do the COW thread-safely
@Mysticial I tested on PODs from 8 to 32 bytes, and containers between 8 and 2000 elements, vector was 12% slower for 8 elements, 30% slower for 256 elements, and 60% slower for 2000 elements. Although, vector was about 6% faster for strings.
@MooingDuck The fact that it gets worse for larger sizes means it's probably a caching issue. When you run down a BS tree, you would normally hit O( n*log(n) ) cache misses. But if you run through the same set of head-nodes over and over again, so they will stay in cache.
I'm tempted to think that should be the case for vector too - as the same elements will still be tested over and over again... but I'm not too familiar with lower_bound
@MooingDuck I'm not sure, since I've never looked at the STL implementations. There's a lot overhead for smaller sizes - so I usually don't look at the small-size datapoints.
@Mysticial I was designing a class basically as a map optimized for small sizes :( It's crazy fast to delete and add/remove, but slow for lookup oddly.
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, then stop plinking me! Or plink at more varied pitches. Perhaps you could plink me a theme and I can answer with a small fugue
Not like that. You'll only give me localized hearing loss (or worse) by over-stressing a tiny part of the membrane. Uh well. I shall lower the volume :)
@RMartinhoFernandes That is some serious conceptual composition technique. I bet a lot of 'avant garde' composition students would be happy to put that into practice, and compose a piece involving live twitter feeds, or something. Cross medial art. Audience involvement. Real potential :) (for an ephemeroptera)
@RMartinhoFernandes More or less. In general it can be devised in case the input domain is enumerable and finite (IOW, know/given ahead of time). The thing is, that given the hash function, it is possible to get a reverse mapping from hash to input
> Tl;Dr: Class implementation isn't working, posted all my source when I probably could've posted about 1/10th of this and still made sense, and would love to have someone tell me why it's not working and how bad I am.
@Xaade: A 4-track mind it is a podcast, really worth the time.
@Xaade Don't mind the sometimes hyped comments, don't expect high-brow scientific stuff. Just the way in which it documents that some brains have 'super-powers' in the realm of tracking musical 'streams' (simultaneously) is fascinating and reminds of what you said earlier
I can track multiple conversations in the same room, given I don't have any gaps in my language processing (side-effect). I often do this without being conscious of it.
I'm also visually oriented. I don't have photographic memory, but I can categorize quickly. Ironically, I have no or unstable depth perception.
The cocktail party effect describes the ability to focus one's listening attention on a single talker among a mixture of conversations and background noises, ignoring other conversations. The effect enables most people to talk in a noisy place. For example, when conversing in a noisy crowded party, most people can still listen and understand the person they are talking with, and can simultaneously ignore background noise and conversations. Nevertheless, if someone calls out their name from across the room, people will sometimes notice (the "own name effect").
The auditory system can als...
Yup if your used to 'never losing control of an information stream' then you will get upset with minor input impediments. I'd venture the guess that you are quite the control freak in what you do well, and you'd be very irritable if your ear/eyesight would be clogged (e.g. do to an ignition)?
I find it interesting that I can listen to two (or more) conversations at once in any one language. But I have a lot more trouble if they are in different languages.
@sehe actually my language processing fails often enough, that I have the side-effect of being able to piece together conversations with missing auditory information (or more easily understand heavy accents).
@Mysticial Actually, you just shift stance ever so slight often enough and you can simulate depth perception. I didn't know I was doing this until someone pointed out that I move around an aweful lot.
@Xaade That's actually how they precisely calculate distances to nearby stars. They measure the star's location against the background at different times of the year while the earth is in a different part of its orbit.
@RMartinhoFernandes I think to invoke operator-> you have to use t.operator->() except for naked pointers, where they return t;. I have yet to find away around that with my iterator adapter.
@RMartinhoFernandes MSVC's implementation is return (&*t); since it works on most iterators