@rubenvb You're allowed to alias with anything with char, because everything is supposed to be bytes underneath. But you're not supposed to read any meaning from those bytes.
the thing with the "common initial sequence" in the union with two struct object members would ordinarily be an aliasing violation. but the standard makes an exeption to the aliasing rules for unions
@Als Concurrency in Action is good, but with a narrow focus on concurrency. There's also the C++ Standard Library by Josuttis, but I don't own that one, so I can't comment.
The following code goes into an infinite loop on GCC:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main(){
int i = 0x10000000;
int c = 0;
do{
c++;
i += i;
cout << i << endl;
}while (i > 0);
cout << c << endl;
ret...
I was implementing exponentiation by squaring - which requires that you read from the top-most bit and down. So I would shift it by one, and check that top bit by comparison with 0 (negative = set, positive = not set)
Then I woke up the following morning repcapped and with the "Good Answer" badge...
I don't remember whether I was first to answer that. Both my and Gregory Pakosz's answers were posted at 9:01. So might also get the Enlightened badge on it... lol
I wanted to go into IC manufacturing technologies, and some of that industry (and research) is in Japan. So I decided to learn Japanese.
Well, of course that had nothing to do with conversational Japanese, which incidentally all my classmates picked up right away because they were Anime fans.
Anyone have any thoughts (besides it's windows) as to why visual studio won't start up? I don't even get a splash screen, and the log shows no errors...
@DeadMG It's a tricky brain thing that's not programming or maths and if you're careful about which language you can optimise the percentage of the world's population you're able to communicate with significantly
Japanese people are worse at learning languages than Anglophones. Their numerous claims that Japanese can't be translated or is the most unique language need a grain of salt.
@awoodland There's nothing "tricky" about it. My brain is hardwired to do language. It's just a question of memorizing a different set of glyphs and sticking them together in a slightly different order.
@TomW I'm pretty sure that the Arab world was the center in terms of human society, at least until the Europeans started inventing things like usable guns, the printing press, industrial revolution, computers, scientific method, shit like that
and in the sense of 'building things that stay up' and 'making plants grow where they're supposed to' and 'making sure people remember things', the basics of building a civilisation, they did
"Alburquerque is a town in the province of Badajoz in Spain. It has 5,600 inhabitants. It is very close to the border with Portugal and was an ancient dominion of the kings of this country. The name comes from the Arabic Abu al-Qurq', which means "father of the cork [oak]"."
I seem to remember reading that the Mongol invasion came to a quite abrupt halt about the time they hit maybe Hungary or some other place with detailed knowledge of metal casting
The of 1274 and 1281 were major military efforts undertaken by Kublai Khan to conquer the Japanese islands after the submission of Goryeo (Korea) to vassaldom. Despite their ultimate failure, the invasion attempts are of macrohistorical importance, because they set a limit on Mongol expansion, and rank as nation-defining events in Japanese history. The Japanese were successful, in part because the Mongols lost up to 75% of their troops and supplies both times on the ocean as a result of major storms. The invasions are referred to in many works of fiction, and are the earliest events fo...
@DeadMG en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_firearm "Firearms were invented in the 12th century in China" "The direct ancestor of the firearm is the fire-lance, a gunpowder-filled tube attached to the end of a spear and used as a flamethrower;" "The earliest depiction of a gun is... 12th century... figure carrying a vase-shaped bombard with flames and a cannonball coming out of it." "The oldest surviving gun, made of bronze, has been dated to 1288 [in China]"
and yes, the Chinese made them of metal, but I can't verify they did that first.
@DeadMG I agree with that, but you were the one who claimed the Chinese "didn't make guns out of [gunpowder]", and that "the Europeans made the first guns"
@SamDeHaan I'm aware how much he likes to argue, but in this case, I have objective evidence, and am willing to pursue the debate. I'm not studid enough to debate with DeadMG about subjective things
@JohannesSchaublitb I'm calm, I think DeadMG is as well.
@MooingDuck See, there's the error. It's not a debate. He's not providing objective evidence, just saying 'nuh-uh!'. You can't win on his level, and he won't play on your level. Just gets boring to watch.
@MooingDuck No, I think you're being utterly meaningless. It's like suggesting that you can do OOP or functional in assembly. Sure, technically you could, but that doesn't make it have a point.
Smoking in Japan is much less restricted than in many other nations, and Japan accounts for much of the tobacco consumption in Asia. Nearly 30 million people smoke in Japan, making the country one of the world's largest tobacco markets. Japan is one of the last industrialized nations in the world where adult smoking is still widespread; statistics show Japanese men smoke at one of the highest rates in the world in 2002. this is the lowest recorded figure since Japan Tobacco began surveying in 1965.
History
Until 1985, the tobacco industry was a government-run monopoly; the government of...
Hey, @Cat, you should update the newbie hints to link to the new question guidelines (there's an entry about asking questions). I would have done so myself, but it appears I don't have the rights to do it.
This is what I do: I create a new QDialog, addSubWindow() it to a MDI area, then close it (Esc, close()). It doesn't disappear, only all its controls disappear. Anyone knows that behavior?