@Yvette NSW Government has introduced legislation that will allow feral horses to remain in Kosciuszko National Park.
Then National Parks Association sent out an email asking members to lobby against it :/
I can't believe I am paying membership fees to an organization that send out paper letters to lobby against logging then ask members to support killing of animals. I am forking out the money because I want to help protecting the nature environment and animals not doing otherwise. This organization will not see a cent from me next year.
but the thing is that, money can almost always be used in somewhere else that needs it more?
Trapping horses has been experimented with since 2008, with, on average, 450 horses removed from Kosciuszko each year, at a cost of more than A$1,000 per horse.
@ratchetfreak This, IMO, is still better than to shoot the feral animals and leave the corpse in the wild because it's expensive to remove the dead body, which they do all the times so I heard.
Scavenging is both a carnivorous and a herbivorous feeding behavior in which the scavenger feeds on dead animal and plant material present in its habitat. Scavengers play an important role in the ecosystem by consuming the dead animal and plant material. Decomposers and detritivores complete this process, by consuming the remains left by scavengers.
== Etymology ==
Scavenger is an alteration of scavager, from Middle English skawager meaning "customs collector", from skawage meaning "customs", from Old North French escauwage meaning "inspection", from schauwer meaning "to inspect", of Germ...
None of the scavengers listed are from Australia ... other than flies and ants, neither of which I am fond of because they both enter houses and steal food from humans.
# You'd think quantifying with Inf or a never-satisfied Range would make for a pattern that always fails, but it
# doesn't. So we just use an improbably high limit instead to keep things tidy.
my Int $indent-limit = 1_000_000_000;
much later in the program:
my Int $level = $()<level>;
my Str $indent = ' ' x $level;
oops @Ven
you’d think it’d be easy to track but it only blew up in a particular set of circumstances
For instance, one can additively mix yellow and blue by shining yellow light together with blue light, which will result in not green but a white light.
Every day, I learn something new ... and probably totally useless :x
@TelKitty You don't have pure iron in your blood, it is chemically bonded to other atoms which makes it not magnetic. That's why even strong magnets don't hold on people at all, unless you do some fancy magnetization first.
Assume I have a class Car which inside do everything which build a car e.g. Engine, Gearbox. If I wanted to abstract these inner components into a their own classes, would I initialise those objects within the Car classes constructor OR initialise them before creating a Car instance and inject them into the Car object instantiation?
hi anyone knows enough about how output process pipe are read/buffered
I'm trying to read from a too but the output doesn't get flushed until the program ends and not when I need it.
I was wondering if there was a way to change the buffer size without changing the initial program so I could make it behave like a stream of byte instead
tl;dr; — There's a new ad type coming in the form of dynamic text that will lead users to documentation and courses offered by our clients, and ultimately community-curated canonical questions.
When it comes to page views on Stack Overflow and the content that we show, you basically have two...
I'm reading stuff about allocators and claims that thanks to rebinding, we could always feed std::allocator<void> as a proto-allocator to std::vector<T> instead of std::allocator<T> and that it would probably instantiate fewer things here and there
Would it be legal for current standard library implementations to always rebind the allocator before allocating, making std::vector<int, std::allocator<void>> actually work?
I recently came across this question which to me seemed like a Can you please do my job question.
Therefore, I added a comment with more or less the standard copy-paste text I use for reviewing.
As you can see in the picture, OP was not exactly too happy about my response:
Now I'm not trying ...
I want to answer my question that was incorrectly closed as a dupe. Looks like CUDA 9.2 can now build boost's small vector, although crashes in other places. But the link now redirects to the dupe instead of my question...