I have 2 text fields, I was wondering why the 2nd text did not show up, thought there might be something to do with layout_toRightOf ... took me an whole hour - turns out the I used android:layout_width="match_parent" for the 1st field ...
I have a if field containt a simple expression I can't find out what is causing the issue, the statement is produced no matter what figure is used
if (pos != string::npos)
{
mystring.erase (0,10);
{
int n...
I think it may have something to do with big companies trying to create loyalty among clients, the more the client seems to be at the center of attention, the more likely it is he'll stick to the company "forever"
i searched in internet and i found some solution but i don't want to change my hole code !
i want to search in vector<my_class *> for different object , so i wrote this , but not work.
static vector <attendant *> attendant_vec;
template<typename V3C,typename __R3t_v4l_of_func__>
int binary_se...
> (The word “referrer” has been misspelled in the RFC as well as in most implementations to the point that it has become standard usage and is considered correct terminology)
Hm, I need a good name for the exception that will be thrown when trying to reach an off-link IPv6 when no router is present in the local network. I have "RouterRequired" for now..
@CatPlusPlus the costs are high. We will need additional hardware dedicated to tunneling for a long time. It's not only ISPs. IPv4 is used everywhere in industry
AND BTW despite of what one my think industry is like 10 years behind
it's an impossible problem. There was no way to ensure compatibility. All IPv4hardware is going to choke if you send non-IPv4 packets. It doesn't matter how expensive or difficult an upgrade is, or how many people rely on it. The option of not breaking compatibiltiy was never there.
@jalf @jalf imagine ipv6 packets as ipv4 packets with additional data. This additional data if recognized can be used to route traffic more precisely. If not it would work just like multicast address for two or more hosts.
It's not only possible, but quite easy to implement.
@doc I see two problems with your fallback scheme. First, how does IPv4 hardware know to look at the "additional data" to figure out that "oh, there's something here that isn't plain IPv4. I should do a multicast"?
protip: when you come up with a "quite easy to implement" solution to a problem that hundreds of engineers have spent the better part of 20 years on, then most likely your solution will not work