@Rapptz Let me put it another way: we use std::array<int, 42>, not std::array<int[42]>. So why should we use std::function<Ret(Args...)> and not std::function<Ret, Args...>?
@sehe fun quote from Allison: "At the close of the third meeting in July 1990 the Library Working Group emerged with more specific direction: 1) standardize the stream classes, 2) define mechanisms to support language features such as the new and delete operators and exceptions,"
"3) define the relationship between the standard C library and the C++ library, and 4) define a standard string class. Working group members sometimes call this list the "Blood in the Streets Manifesto" to indicate what might happen if we fail."
To give an indication of bitset popularity: "in June 1991 I volunteered to review the libraries which a number of vendors had submitted to the committee. All submissions offered at least one string class and a number of container classes, such as lists, vectors, queues, stacks, and sets. Many vendors' libraries also supported bit sets."
@sehe I think I read from Stepanov somewhere that he almost had to cry when Stroustrup eliminated 2/3 of this original STL proposal, I never found the original implementation, but I guess it contained much of the iota/heap kinda algorithms that were added in C++11
@StackedCrooked And yes, since (apparently) the source is fixed distance (making the feedback wavelenght -> pitch ~constant) it's just a notch filter away :)
@Puppy hourglass: first you squeeze everything into C API (char* instead of string, T* instead of vector etc.) , then you unwrap evertyhing again on the receiving end
//Code sanitized to protect the foolish.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Web.UI;
namespace Mobile.Web.Control
{
/// <summary>
/// Class used to work around Richard being a fucking idiot
/// </summary>
/// <...