« first day (3782 days earlier)      last day (1168 days later) » 

1:12 AM
@TelKitty There's a term for this that I can't remember for the life of me. Anyways the term is meant to describe that people who are in conflict tend to inflate the conflict even if it seems trivial on its face. I think I came across it while reading a book about office politics.
 
 
1 hour later…
2:13 AM
@CupOfJava The descriptive phrase that leaps to my mind is simply "human nature", but I suppose you had something a tad more specific in mind.
 
2:40 AM
I think you're right
Yeah, there's a term I can't think of
 
3:26 AM
@CupOfJava Thing is, whether it involves conflict or not, people tend to view their own concerns as really mattering to the world as a whole. People who care about football think of it as really mattering to the (regardless of whether the "football" in question is round or oblong). People who are into chess think of it as really mattering. And those of use who care about C++ think of a new C++ standard as really mattering. And most of the rest of the world thinks we're crazy...
@Mikhail A few people think it's a good idea. I liked how it worked in Pascal, where it was something like function foo(a: int, b : real) : real;, but I think the auto and such necessary to shoehorn it into C++ syntax makes it a net loss (except where truly necessary).
 
 
4 hours later…
7:10 AM
@JerryCoffin The real necessity was to enable lambdas to have a defined return type?
 
Wasn't it about argument deduced return types in templates
at least that was the only reason I ever had to use it
 
clang-tidy making me do it, going to be reason soon :-(
 
 
10 hours later…
5:19 PM
@Mikhail Yeah I wouldn't want to read code like that. I can only assume it "makes sense" to some FP aficionado that associates -> R syntax with their favourite PL
It's been a long time since I've been told too "learn manners" on SO by someone who can't ask a clear question and doesn't bother to upvote.
I'm a bit confused why I'm being berated for "manners" here. You didn't upvote or accept my earlier answer, and didn't acknowledge it (or link for context) in this follow-up question. I don't think it's bad manners to point out that asking partially formed questions is proving useless because of moving targets. I never said that answering is "below me". In fact, asking the wrong questions is "below you" if you ask me. — sehe 19 mins ago
 
 
1 hour later…
6:31 PM
How wude
 
7:05 PM
 
 
1 hour later…
8:11 PM
@ABuckau Agweed
 
8:27 PM
Ooo @fredoverflow Had to think of you, marketplace.visualstudio.com/… - dunno if you ever need such a teaching tool again
 
9:02 PM
@sehe Looks cool! I haven't worked on my tool for 6 months and consider it basically done.
 
posted on February 22, 2021 by Herb Sutter

Today, the ISO C++ committee held its second full-committee (plenary) meeting of the pandemic and adopted a few more features and improvements for draft C++23. A record of 18 voting nations sent representatives to this meeting: Austria, Bulgaria, Canada, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Russia, Spain, Switzerland, United Kingdom, R

 
What do people call a perfect hash function that produces unique names but not necessarily compact in the output domain? For example, mapping [1,2,3,4,5] to [1,5,20,10,55] is "perfect" (no collisions) but not "compact" unlike for example, mapping it to [1,2,3,4,5]...
 
9:26 PM
@Mikhail ..."perfect hash function" :) The "compact" case is called "minimal perfect hash function".
 
10:09 PM
Hey, is anyone here very familiar with software architectural patterns?
 
Some of them.
 
Is a monolith still consider a monolith if it routes through a single API
 
That's kinda mixing concepts. Monolith refers to the coupling of services.
So, if you're using a single API but your services aren't coupled, its not really a monolith. Although somehow I suspect if the API provider has access to the entire data set, then the provider become a monolith.
Probably should just give your specific example.
 
I think I'm just going to go with an ESB
it's less confusing that way
I wanted to do a microservice structure but I don't have the manpower for that at the moment.
 
BTW, you understand that ESB is the hallmark of a monolith oriented design?
That's what I meant by the server of the single API must usually be a monolith?
 
10:20 PM
I thought ESB was an indicator that you're working with a service-oriented architecture
 
`Monolithic Applications: ESB vs. Microservices
In monolithic applications, an ESB connects all the features and functionality of each application run interdependently within a single instance. The monolith houses all of the code for each of the functions and services it performs. `
As a side note this chat is mostly dead but like 3 people in recent memory seem to be confused about this concept. Is this what they're teaching in schools these days?
 
No, I just haven't had to construct an architecture from the ground up in a while and I need to reread what is industry standards
I know the answer is going to be microservices but I don't want to have to do that. it's too many moving parts for my liking.
@Mikhail Has everyone moved to the discord server?
 
I've been scared to go on there, probably irrationally.
 
10:37 PM
discord chat is the kotlin to my java
 
user image
2
Historic memes
 
11:31 PM
So, in a year I'm turning 50.
 

« first day (3782 days earlier)      last day (1168 days later) »