@Xeo So I just tried to watch some Anime, but I realized I don't have my .mkv player installed. It's been almost a week since I've switched computers. That's how far behind I've fallen because of all the moving.
there’s std::is_constructible and there’s std::is_trivially_constructible, but there is std::is_trivially_copyable and no std::is_copyable because the last two would not be related like the first two are
@SpongyFruitcake normally the std::is_trivially_* traits are queries for 'can that type do *, but in a trivial manner'. the difference is that std::is_trivially_copyable is a query for trivially copyable concept which does not just mean 'can be copied but in a trivial manner'
in an alternate reality it could perhaps be called std::is_bit_blastable and we would have bit blastable = trivially copyable + trivially destructible
@Aaron3468 That depends. On one hand, Comcast isn't the best. On the other hand, Cox is worse (at least, I haven't been nearly as happy with it). Actually, the best I've dealt with was a little outfit in Colorado called Falcon Broadband. Used them for years and literally the only time I had an outage was when a backhoe down the street from me cut a cable--and then they called me less than 5 minutes after the cut, let me know somebody was on the way to fix it, and discounted for the outage.
I'd love if most places were like that ._. We don't usually get outages, but the 2 or 3 times we did, none of the providers went to any lengths on our behalf.
I love the dorm-style internet. Just plug and play. No need to fuck with ISPs. And that's what I have now at my new place. Internet included in the HOA fee. I can pay extra if want faster speeds, but 6 MB/s is plenty for me. I'm not exactly someone who downloads BluRays on impulse and needs to watch it immediately.
American Born Chinese is a graphic novel by Gene Luen Yang. Released in 2006 by First Second Books, it was a finalist for the 2006 National Book Awards in the category of Young People's Literature. It won the 2007 Michael L. Printz Award, the 2007 Eisner Award for Best Graphic Album: New, the Publishers Weekly Comics Week Best Comic of the Year, the San Francisco Chronicle Best Book of the Year, the 2006/2007 Best Book Award from The Chinese American Librarians Association, and Amazon.com Best Graphic Novel/Comic of the Year. It also made the Booklist Top Ten Graphic Novel for Youth, the NPR Holiday...
@JennaSloan In grad school, we were bandwidth capped to 2 GB/day. But that cap didn't apply for inner-campus traffic. So if a torrent picked up someone else on campus, not only would it be ridiculously fast, it didn't count towards the 2 GB/day limit.
Given that the school had like 30k students, there was a high likelihood of picking up someone on campus for the really big torrents.
When all else fails, the student offices aren't bandwidth capped. So you can download there, then transfer to the dorm. The internal transfer doesn't count towards the cap.
@LucDanton I fondly remember high school where I once put in a geology exam that the alps used to be an ocean and hence "were probably a terrible spot for skiing"
Funny how a couple million years can completely change how you go on holidays somewhere.
I got the 1800X so I didn't get the stock cooler. But I bought a 1700 for a friend as a B-day present. And while we were putting it together, I was like - holy shit. That stock cooler is so - eye candy.
IOW, AMD got people excited over a fucking stock cooler.
If you keeping watching them, there have been a few times in the past 2 weeks where there were some slower 2133 MHz kits that went under $100/16 GB stick.
But they sell out within hours.
The more I look at it now, the 8 x 16GB 3300 MHz set that I got for $800 was a complete steal.
@LucDanton From my experience, little. Because even when I buy multiple sticks as smaller kits (like 2 sets of 2 x 16GB), I buy them at the same time at the same place. And they end up in the same memory batch anyway.
I read a tweet today that said:
It's funny when Java users complain about type erasure, which is the only thing Java got right, while ignoring all the things it got wrong.
Thus my question is:
Are there benefits from Java's type erasure? What are the technical or programming style bene...
@rightfold One major is that you have to have constraints at the declaration and semantic compile errors in the definition. Which C++ doesn't have until concepts
So, the crap I built gives me a bunch of increasing numbers from 0 to 2*Pi. I need to pick 4 numbers from this massive list so that the spacing between them is 0.5*Pi.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think this also applies to fundamental computer algorithms. I.e binary search is something that was discovered rather than invented.
@Ell You just shifted the question to "are points real?", which is just an instance of the bigger "are mathematical entities real?" question which is an old philosophical debate.
@VermillionAzure Not sure we're on the same page. So, lets say I need four points, spaced by four units. Given this sequence [0,4,5,6,7,8,12], I might choose the indecies at 0,4,8,12. In this case the sequence is small, and the there is no error. I'm wondering what happens when you have a bunch of values, and you need a bunch of samples.
Among the problems here is that you don't know the value at the index, so you can't magically jump to the correct position.
@VermillionAzure So, my current approach is like that but without explicitly binning the data. I find the first value greater than the threshold and search within a small region. Now this won't yield the global optimal solution, because you can for example shift the whole selection.
@Mikhail Alternatively, you could possibly do the problem with bins and binary search but if you want an algorithm that works, the one I gave looks like it should work to me. Are you looking for something that works or best possible performance?
What you proposed wasn't that bad, but there is no reasons to explicitly bin, and like my approach it won't necessarily give you the global optimal. What I was curious about is if somebody knew the name of the problem...
@Mikhail I was expecting "evenly spaced subsequence" or similar; googling doesn't yield much, but it might be that just there isn't a lot written about it.
@VermillionAzure The problem formulation doesn't need to change. FFT is the solution, not the problem.
@R.MartinhoFernandes He's looking for a specific interval within a specific range. If you modulo the discrete values by 0.5pi and then search for the repetition of the modulo values 4 times, he's good.
This is because you can accumulate all of the values in the array into a map that counts the count of repeated modulo values in one sweep. If I didn't have the map, I'd have to iterate N times, yes. But the map changes that.
I mean, you start from an arbitrary value, search until you find something 0.5pi greater, then search for the next one that is over 1.0pi greater, then find another one that is 1.5pi greater. Check the associated error, and start from the next point... Some heuristics make this a little faster (ie, you kinda now where the next point will be) due to the previous result...
with type erasure you have to have definition time semantic checking which in turn requires declaration-time constraints so that usage can look at just the declaration to know whether a parameter is valid. (unless you defer it all to run time with reflection)
@VermillionAzure but it's still too easy to write something that looks correct but makes no semantic sense
@VermillionAzure You can do e.g. perfect hashing, but finding the hash function is probably going to cost more than just solving the problem (and still cost something like O(2^mantissa) space).
@ratchetfreak That's not what you're arguing. You're arguing it's not possible in C++, and it is because templates are Turing-complete. So it's possible. The convenience of it is the disputable part.
In computer science, an associative array, map, symbol table, or dictionary is an abstract data type composed of a collection of (key, value) pairs, such that each possible key appears at most once in the collection.
Operations associated with this data type allow:
the addition of a pair to the collection
the removal of a pair from the collection
the modification of an existing pair
the lookup of a value associated with a particular key
The dictionary problem is a classic computer science problem: the task of designing a data structure that maintains a set of data during 'search', 'delete', and...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fine then. The data structure I want is specifically a direct-address table, as stated in Introduction to Algorithms, 3rd edition, Cormen et. al., Section 11.1.
@VermillionAzure The real problem is that the goal isn't to find the first sequence that is increasing, but rather the best sequence. So, after each bin fills up, you gotta check its error score.
@VermillionAzure If you just want 4 numbers you don't need to use any kind of map or anything like that. You just keep adding numbers and record when you got over a threshold. That is O(n). How to choose the best numbers is a little harder.
Not sure what the complexity of finding a perfect hash is, but I'm guessing superlinear.
@VermillionAzure Note that it's only impractical under the assumption of discrete floats. With arbitrary precision floats it is worse, as the array has infinite size.
@VermillionAzure just because a language is turing complete doesn't mean that it can get the data it needs, semantic checking of a template definition based on template parameter constraints requires access to the actual definition. Can you get that in C++ templates?