Even at the time, however, he admitted it was less about what I actually did than the fact that somebody had previously (when I wasn't around and hadn't noticed) caused some sort of trouble, so he was on a hair trigger at the time.
@sehe From what I understood, one of which was Nooble's sock, the other was Scott W (who was since suspended network-wide and requested deletion of their SO account, not necessarily in that order)
It's usually their go-to suggestion when they themselves don't have the expertise to answer your question, so there's no point in trying to get any other response
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix IDK, typically they are trying to trade money for time. You need to convince them its either too much money, or that the thing isn't actually available. The later is most persuasive.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Sometimes they're right, but if you didn't ask, then politely say you'll look into it. If you really have to, you can talk about how sometimes you save money doing it your way.
If they are your supervisor, the money-for-time trade is entirely their call. The killer counter argument is that the thing they are trying to buy doesn't exist or is in some way not possible unless you do it yourself.
Programmers, I find, are often the same people that masochistically try to do things themselves. Often to the point of taking on projects way too big for them.
This is how most technical people became technical, so its a good thing. Unless you came from a well to do family, and could have cruised through life without hard work.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Yeah, it's a great thing because we dive into new skills and generally accomplish things other people are afraid to try. It's also bad when we end up 300% over-budget and five weeks past the deadline. As I say, the least 'hostile' response is usually "okay, I'll look into it"
@Mikhail I'm certain they won't do it right, previous workers she found for some simple tasks really deceived me... she ask to install a door that is supposed to be installed on appartments and some cheap windows... result ice getting inside the house during winter
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I think if someone doesn't get the point when I am just being straight forward, then obviously either they can convince me with a reasonable explanation of their own or they are deluded and can not accept simple fact.
Tradesman do a better job at the thing be more presentable, it will simply look better. They will also make things to have the basic functionality. But a trained engineer who is interested in the thing can do a better job functionality wise.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix also, if you don't mind me asking, do you have many failed experiments?
but she keep blaming me for work done by other people, and work that I claimed were temporary because my wife was pregnant and we had like 3 months to convert a shithole into something where we can live
but is completely ignoring things I fixed and that works like they never worked in 20 years
It was last year, things are more stable now, and I'm up for serious stuff
I was planning temporary things in that area because that region of the house is in all honesty going to fall soon or later, it's been badly built and it's just falling apart. There was no point to spend a lot of money there
knowing that I'm technically doing the repair for her house without considering all the things I do for her, I'm wondering what else can I do to earn a little of respect...
Well, I spend 1.83 USD for 4 chisel, and 4.84 for sandpaper that will last me for a while
The stones I can buy locally are around 25$ per stone
I have other stones at home but they're too coarse to get a nice cutting edge. And the grinder seems to cut way too much metal easily so by hand it gives a much better result
Hmmm... through troubleshooting my ram usage, I've learned that if you don't know the exact source of a problem most suggestions online are just placebo or cleanup of old garbage which won't actually solve the problem.
I've searched all over for an answer and I can't find any fix to my issue. I am trying to run my Selenium tests in IE11. All other browsers work fine (including Edge). A simple test as follows will cause the issue...
System.setProperty("webdriver.ie.driver.loglevel","TRACE");
System.setProperty(...
It is time for so-called professional media to stop giving space to proven charlatans. I mean you: CNN, MSNBC, Guar… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/856741258341036032
@DeanSeo I want my SFINAE to recognize a case where user passes to c-style strings as parameters
If I store the parameters to variables before passing them to my function everything works okay. But if I give those directly to the function their types become 'const char[10]' and 'const char[2]' instead of 'const char*'. std::decay_t does not help
2> INTERNAL COMPILER ERROR in 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\VC\bin\CL.exe'
2> Please choose the Technical Support command on the Visual C++
2> Help menu, or open the Technical Support help file for more information
@Michael.P Basically, this "realization" is wrong. Prime counterexamples are all the numbers involved in the equation you mention that aren't 0 or 1: the base of the natural logarithm, the imaginary unit, and the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter.
@Michael.P Here's an example, using Binet's formula: φ-ψ/sqrt(5) = 1. Does this mean that the golden ratio, its reciprocal, and the square root of five all "exist in unity"?
@SpongyFruitcake I used to have { on every newline a few monthd ago, but I'm changing that on-the-fly in cpp-sort when I change files, so there are still many inconsistencies.
Also, I've got { on a new line for function and class declarations.
> This process may include de-Googling™, which may or may not include removal of all Android devices from your person and in more severe cases, an invasive rectal exam.
@BartekBanachewicz Is this when you get an underwater rimjob?
user1804599
@RafaelCamposNunes It's pretty real:
user1804599
> This process may include de-Googling™, which may or may not include removal of all Android devices from your person and in more severe cases, an invasive rectal exam. Please come pre-lubed and memorize the asymptotes of all algorithms used within the last 2,500 years, including those used in early agriculture by agrarian Gaulish peasants.
@R.MartinhoFernandes the answer to that is somewhat esoteric and is concealed in what I suggested way back in the conversation: sum of everything in this Universe likely to be zero.
We know already that mass and energy are in fact the same thing, for instance, and if you look at other fenomenae studied one of the things that might come to mind is, as someone said: "I won't be surprised if the Big Equation binding Relativity, Quantum Mechanics and String Theory, will be some 16th century equation for a spring in a liquid". I.e. everything is intertwined, related.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So you might consider, again, as I said, if e^(i*pi) are related, and through some non-existent way can be expanded to define i in set of real numbers then it would only make perfect sense. As otherwise, without "transitional" bridge from zero->natural numbers->etc., universe would not provide a way for i to exist in the first place. It would never appear in equations and we would not know of it.
@Michael.P that just uses the exp(x) powerseries where if plug pi into only the odd powers and swap the sign on every other odd power you end up with 0
@R.MartinhoFernandes because—and I have to emphasize on it—Universe is all too likely to be zero in value, and everything that we see and are, is elaborate and stable(!) expansion of it. And if it is expanded zero, then it means that there HAS to be a primitive balancing term even for i. However, this conjecture is not restricted to mere numbers. Perfect example of this is Pi, which, if it is defined in "Universal Equation", is likely to be some kind of Maclaurin expansion.
Which is in turn undefined as finite sequence, ~because it diverges :|
@ratchetfreak I was proposing ~impossibility of solving for i in e^(i*pi)+1=0
@ratchetfreak If it was solved, then I BE DAMMED, give me a link
@ratchetfreak and yet wee see an equation, which I am tired of writing, e^(i*pi)+1=0 that shows that there is a link to provide a definition for i for set R. Thus making i<0 or i>=0 well-defined
@Michael.P correct me if I am plugging into this discussion in a wrong time and place, but this Euler equation makes sense and is usable only in certain math domains like group theory, and it is hard to operate directly in a plain algebraic way, which you are trying to do
Which in my butchered way will sound as: in any well-defined set, to provide a unificator, another definition outside of defined scope has to be introduced. Thus, a well-defined set can't be unified, because if it is unified it is not well-defined (unificator, as stated, is always outside the scope)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I use "all too likely", so picky people wouldn't say that I can't define, nor analytically prove anything. As it is a conversation, not a thesis.
@ratchetfreak more like a room for retrieving should there be a mathematician here.
@ratchetfreak because again. Would I be proving something, this conversation be very different
@R.MartinhoFernandes You know how Newton battled tangent lines? With a completely new structure which was not previously defined -> limits. That should clarify it for you
@R.MartinhoFernandes Set, in this context, is not a mathematical term. Imagine you have electricity and magnetism, well defined things. Electromagnetism is a unificator. Although I cannot explicitly point to it, I'm sure, even on wiki, you will find something that makes direct unison of these fields impossible. So, again, it is likely, that Maxwell used something "out of the box" - a.k.a something previously undefined for either of these fields. That something might well be dubbed Maxwell Equations.
@R.MartinhoFernandes it wouldn't if there was a dependant variable in that equation.
Gee, man, if you're going to write something that sounds like a mathematical theorem, don't use well-known mathematical terms like "set" to mean something entirely different that doesn't even make sense when taking "set" as a layman's term.
Anyway, attempts at making maths some kind of divine construct have been made before. Maths are perfect, right? They can't possibly have been made by us imperfect humans. Well, they're "perfect" because we conveniently took out all the rules that would have broken it.
@EtiennedeMartel I already stated to another lad, would it be that plain, the mathematics would not provide insight into the future, or otherwise undiscovered things.
@EtiennedeMartel you know what that quote stands for? It's when Albert put an exression which made no physical meaning, but perfect mathematical sense. ~70 years later Dark Matter and Dark Energy discovered - being accountable for that expression
As it is implied by the title I want to know what is the class of the class name in C++? for example:
class baseClass {
//class definition
};
what is the class of baseClass?