I've been/am writing a baremetal HAL in c++ and the context problem is acute
Currently I use public API with global factory/single-ton. Consumers simply ask for the global "device" object in their execution context. But on the back-end everything is explicit calls and dedicated object hierarchies for every platform/device/api combination
@sehe I set it aside at the time cos I was busy, but I have some thoughts to share on your 'Aren't we at risk of reinventing a Range Library?' question if you want
@Mysticial a lot of cute girls shows, one about camping, one about going to antartica, one about having taken a year off before high school, cardcaptor sequel, a yuri show, ...
the biggest stand out show is probably darling in the franxx, it's basically an old-school Gainax show if you check who's working on it
@RobertTroipartrois we know you need to mention yourself, otherwise we might forgot all about you ... or you wouldn't get your accidentally banned as a fake sock ~_~
I think the cheers person honestly believes this is a good question and is somehow heavily invested in it.
I can see that a basic "pascal strings have their size attached" answer would be somewhat useful, but "how do these all differ in their allocation and use" is a bit too broad.
There was something similar with std::vector. The size and capacity were supposed to be placed before where the data pointer points to in order to make sizeof(std::vector<T>)==sizeof nullptr. Supposedly that was always how it was supposed to be, but that person (stepanov?) didn't know how to do it.
i am having a discussion with a fellow developer at work on a config file format which contain dates , the client wants it in YYYYMMDDHHMMSS since it is more human readable, internally it will then get converted to epoch seconds for some manipulation ,
the developer wants it to be epoch seconds in the config file itself - citing that it is CPU intensive to convert all YYYYMMDDHHMMSS to epoch seconds on startup or reload, there is like a total of 200k records . the code will have to read the date , parse it and store into a struct tm t and use mktime on it . Is this really cpu intensive ? this gets done during startup and reload which is not frequent .
@spakai If you wanted to do it properly you could benchmark both and then tell the client "You can have your YYYYMMDDHHMMSS which adds X seconds to program start and reload assuming 200k records. Are you willing to pay that?"
I noticed a little typo in the Developer Story page: "GitHub" is incorrectly capitalized as "Github".
The typo is in two places and perhaps more: If you don't have a GitHub profile linked, then it says "Github" on your Developer Story page. And when you go to edit that section, it also says "Git...
Is it ever possible that (a ==1 && a== 2 && a==3) could evaluate to true, in JavaScript?
This is interview question asked by a major tech company. It happened 2 weeks back, but I'm still trying to find the answer. I know we never write such code in our day to day job, but I'm curious.
@Mysticial what a nice demonstration of why reasoning about arbitrarily side effectful languages is borderline impossible (I still don't understand how you can write assembly on daily bases, it would make me want to strangle baby seals)
@ScarletAmaranth Definitely. Going back a few years, there would be question like that every few months (usually about JS or some other dynamically-typed language) that gets attention and goes viral.
you say definitely as you call some instruction that flips some bit in some part of the processor that makes the entire program have a completely different meaning from that point on :D
I'm not stating the obvious, I'm saying I can't help you if the line makes no sense to me either. You havent said what that line was supposed to do, all you said was "well heres some code that doesnt compile and there heres some more code that doesnt compile" — Borgleader23 secs ago
I'm saying that it has the same side-effects as c or c++, perhaps even less so
You brought up assembly in context of arbitrarily side effectful languages, I say its not arbitrarily so, its bounds by the parameters of the architecture
I am thinking we will define a state interface, then I will render the UI and probably handle most of the game logic, and then let you worry about rendering to the canvas
I have the basic intuition that the one_off helper models an infinite sequence of a, b, b, ... so it makes sense to think of range libs there
I sheepishly admit I've avoided RangeV3 very effectively until today
@BartekBanachewicz Häte
@BartekBanachewicz what magic DI wiring
@Puppy me too. And you kept sticking your toes into your PC case
And eating too much cheese
@RobertTroipartrois Oh man. That's so stylish. Shame it blows your own cover immediately
@nwp I agree. It becomes more interesting when you notice that BSTR/(D)COM(+) strings have a length prefix as well, but they point at the first char still