@sehe Fire is always exciting the first time you see it. I've blown my fair share of stuff up. (For anyone listening in, this was all done while I was under 10 years of age).
If you want to "high-level" it as "it's a quicksort with more specific intro-sort like tweaks" that doesn't quite make it the same/old hat/irrelevant or what not. Just something /you/ wouldn't want to spend that time on.
@Shoe Yeah, I want to try it. LastPass for Android actually works very well for me. Even integrates with Firefox. It's the desktop versions that's really horrible.
actually my last hour of work today was unproductive because I got caught in a conversation with a coworker that changed halfway through from an update on what I was doing to how stupid the road system is here
> Le ministre de l’Intérieur a dû quitter son poste mardi, au lendemain des révélations sur les emplois à répétition de ses filles comme collaboratrices parlementaires lorsqu’il était député.
Interior minister resigns the next day after beign revealed that he employed his daughters (24 times) as assistants
I still enjoy asking people "aren't you afraid that the Sun will expand and destroy the Earth?" to which they usually respond with "nah, I'll be long dead by then", and I look at them in the eye "well, yes".
The human paradox of both fearing death yet accepting it.
@AlexCerry it's more that you wander in, ask questions without really participating, and just now pinged someone twice despite them not engaging you at all
I have here responded to the joke by pinging him back, further elaborating on the joke by pinging him by name in a message that would already ping him as a response to a message he wrote
Again, it is important to note that this is as a joke between people who know one another, and that the pinging here should not be taken as an example of what to do when you know no one here
@AlexCerry @AlexCerry I don't quite remember. What does this message sound like?
> It is argued that C++17 is expressive enough for a simple library definition, as opposed to a keyword (however uglified). An additional small fix is suggested to allow std::byte to embody an aliasing property for access to arbitrary object representations. Taken altogether, std::byte is just as “builtin” as if it was designated by dedicated keyword (which would have to be ugly or incur source breaking changes.); an illustration of C++’s expressive power.
And now, you know why people have spent the last several days telling you to stop randomly pinging them, as well. So now that you understand what their complaint is, you know to stop. :)
@AlexCerry ah, but why would you want a single message to ping you twice, when the purpose of the ping is to tell you that you have a message that you should read?
it is not two messages that you should read, but one.
@jaggedSpire My meaning. I already send message one time. But message came. retry/timeout something like that. And then i click retry. Then i send 2nd time. But sometime retry send first time.
@jaggedSpire No i think problem is i am using vpn.
@AlexCerry In that case, I would delete the second message, and then apologize to the person you pinged for the second ping. But not with a ping. Simply put their name in the message, do not precede it with an @, and leave it.
you don't need to ping people to attract attention to a question you posted in chat
if someone would find it interesting to entertain they'll respond regardless
or move it to the dedicated chat room and then respond there.
(you are supposed to post questions in the dedicated question chat room)
If you ping someone who would not be interested in your question anyway, they'll get annoyed.
You have already experienced this on multiple occasions.
so the appropriate thing to do is either:
a) state you have a question so people know to go into the question room to see what it is, and post it there.
b) post your question here, and do not be surprised when it is forcibly moved to the question room or ignored.
again, pinging people who are not clearly engaged in a conversation with you, or who are not participating in a conversation you are joining is considered rude.
so don't do that regardless
Thank you for reading this whole monstrous thing, and for being a fairly good sport about it even though I have not been exceedingly nice through all of it
which company i doing internship i apply there as a c++ programmer. But after 6 month. They say currently have no c++ project. now you are going to do project in c# what should i do?
@AlexCerry I'm quite terrible at career advice, but C# seems like a good language to know. It's nice to expand your horizons by learning more languages and it lets you think about problems in new ways.
That's certainly why I stayed at the company that swapped my C++ project for a C# one :V
also the promise that they'd switch them back when they got someone who actually enjoyed UI work
@jaggedSpire Problem is not to learning c#. problem is i need to work with android programmer using svn software. But that guy really very bad behavior.
@SpongyFruitcake seems like I'm getting off the UI job once the UI for phase I is complete. Fortunately that's seeming like the next couple weeks because I'm at the "Let's add doodads and find bugs" phase of things
if you change your name to "Little angry celery" I will be so terribly amused
C# has vastly lower compilation times, partly because of its simpler type system.
It also has fewer strange corner-cases
it's easier to find the definition of a templated (generic actually, they're slightly different) type, because there can only be one definition for the generic type.
@jaggedSpire ...but mostly because it has an actual module system instead of headers (I've done some testing with VS' new module support--it can make a huge difference in template-heavy code).
@jaggedSpire It's a little hard to be sure yet--I certainly haven't tried to do real comparisons of compile time for equivalent code under C++ vs. C#. But, C++ with modules can definitely compile quite a bit faster than without anyway.
@jaggedSpire Oh, I momentarily forgot that you're not in Colorado now. My apologies.
@CaptainGiraffe there are various new improvements to introsort described in the paper, and if you scroll down to the benchmarks you can see that they work, too
Fuck. I just spent the last five hours trying to get a RAID backplane working on a Blackblaze storage server, building one of these guys is a lot harder than expected because the kit doesn't include all the parts like screws or power cables. Also the RAID controllers are all "unsupported" by the manufacturer, also can't tell if the drivers installed correctly on Windows.
The Norco 24 drive servers I built were easy. To get a higher density, 60 drives, you need to assemble the case. Its not going well. And I probably won't be able to get Windows on them.
That's... kinda spamming, since you're advertising now.
@SpongyFruitcake You seemed made the jump from this apparent gaffe (that I linked) to "Gross security incompetence". I don't think that's very related.