you said it yourself, hiring is about excellence. By induction, that means that the people you already hired are excellent. Do you want to waste the time of excellent people on something other than what they got hired to do? ;)
Point is that if you approach it naively, it'll literally take months of your time to find a single good programmer. That aint gonna fly... You need some way to optimize the process, preferably without sacrificing the quality so you still end up hiring excellent people
heck, if time was not an issue, you'd simply go through the phone book, calling everyone in it one by one, and finding out if they're a programmer, if they're any good, and if they're looking for a job. ;)
@Chimera Others would argue that it's considerably more important. Ultimately, you really need both on your team, though not necessarily in the same person.
lets say you have a std::complex<double> array[N];
how would you set all -inf and inf values to 0 in a for loop?
std::isinf won't work for me the compiler predates C++11
at bigger company's you get either some idiot in HR who doesn't really know anything or some one from management that you can sound right and they will agree with you
@LeandroPezzente anyway, I'm not saying you should use recruiters. Again, I think they're a waste of time. I'm jsut saying that the problem they're trying to solve is very real
@Chimera Oddly, most of the best coders I've met were also some of the easiest to work with. Most of the arrogant types struck me as only slightly above average (at best).
@LeandroPezzente Sometimes. Others, however, seemed to be the types who jumped on every new thing that came along, and any language you could find more than two people who knew it at all was obviously passe, boring and worthy of nothing but complete disdain.
@LeandroPezzente of course not. But "a degree in CS" tends to be used as an early screening. If you have a lot of candidates, you might feel that you can afford to do some very coarse screening, and throw away all the ones without a degree. Even though some of them might be extremely good
@jalf I don't have a degree, but I think I was lucky in getting my first job, because I was able to demonstrate my skills, and from that point on my experience was always enough. I fully realize some doors will never be open to me though ( without a degree ).
@Chimera Yeah... Of course the degree shouldn't matter. If you're as good as a guy who has a degree, there's no reason why they should prefer him over you. But a lot of people do use it as a criteria, mainly because it simplifies the task of hiring, I guess
@jalf I totally agree with you , but then again , I am very Idealistic about the subject as you already saw : Peer-review , Excellence Factors and Knowledge Proving are all Academics "must be".
@jalf I understand that. I think the only reason I was able to make is that I've been able to prove I've the capability to learn new skills when my employer needed me to.
@LeandroPezzente Thing is for me, I understand what needs to be done to solve a problem, and I understand the terminology, but my fundamentals algebra/trig etc always let me down.
You dont need to thinks about oranges or bananas , you dont even have to think about the actual type , only about the abstract supertypes. So you can code pretty largely reusable code.
@StackedCrooked You do love Functional Programming Paradigm like F# , Haskell , LIsp and Groovie , dont you ?
IMO , you can use it to build more complex generic abstract View Controls , but aside that I dont really think a combo box would be very usefull as a Warcraft Armor.
Can you imagine trying to figure out a #define BAD_NAME_UNRELATED_TO_STRINGIFY(x) %:x someone gives you to use if you don't know about digraphs? That would honestly be a nightmare, and pointless as well, seeing as how there is a # on the define.
I mean when i say if(cin>>i) what is the logic that determines if the stream operation returns true or false. The same goes with getline and assigment.
And what are the operations that i can use as a condition?
@MohamedAhmedNabil, It returns the stream, which is convertible (via a bool conversion operator in C++11 or void* before) to bool, so yes.
Looking at a reference tells you it returns std::istream &, which is the base class for std::ifstream. In fact, the read function itself is part of std::istream.
And then std::istream inherits from std::ios, which has the bool or void* conversion.
@MohamedAhmedNabil, As for how the compilers know what to do, C++ has a standard that got updated with C++11. It describes exactly what the features are and exactly how a conforming compiler should implement them.
For example, it mandates that std::string::length be a constant-time operation, which means the length of the string needs to be stored, not calculated inside the function.
@Rapptz, Ever tried WPF? I'm not going to spend too much time with WinForms before moving to that. It seems to be a better-received one, and I think the C#/.NET book I'm reading covers it.
If it isn't in those 1700 pages, I'm sure it's in one of the three other books.
You can try a toilet analogy. Flushing every time a new one drops into the bowl is time-consuming and a waste of time. So you save it all up and flush it once at the end. Or you can call flush() to do it manually somewhere in the middle. — Mysticial57 secs ago
If I had to guess, the word flush comes from exactly what you'd flush in real-life.
So let's try a toilet analogy:
Flushing every time a new on drops into the bowl is very time-consuming and a complete waste of water. That's a big problem today where everyone's trying to be environmentally frie...
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everyone.
I'm having a problem with a C++ program involving two dimensional arrays.
As part of the program I have to use a function which accepts as parameters two tables and adds them, returning another table.
I figured I could do something like this:
int** addTables(int ** table1, int ** ta...
Sometimes these questions make me feel like I'm doing something wrong.. I've never used a double pointer before. It just has no use for me as far as I know.
// I'll make it my homework is to figure out how to implement this.
std::array<T, N + 1> concat(const T&, const std::array<T, N>&);
std::array<T, N + 1> concat(const std::array<T, N> &, const T&);
No it won't compile.
You need to fix it like so:
int a[10][5];
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
{
for (int j = 0; j < 5; j++)
{
cout << a[i][j];
}
}
And make sure that the array actually contains something as it is currently empty.
well that i knew but i attended an job interview and the same question was asked to me and i replied the same then he asked me does this statement makes any sense , how to cout i already know it!!!! — Nitish Aggarwal1 min ago
lol
How am I supposed to reply to that, I don't even know
As Joel points out in Stack Overflow podcast #34, in C Programming Language (aka: K & R), there is mention of this property of arrays in C: a[5] == 5[a]
Joel says that it's because of pointer arithmetic but I still don't understand. Why does a[5] == 5[a] ?
Edit: The accepted answer is great...
I think I need some, too. I was testing int *i = new int[2,2];but put int i[2,2]; and claimed it wouldn't compile. Too bad coffee isn't the best at 1:10 am.