hmm. I just noticed that I’m calculating a list of … minority reports about some stochastic parameter in my programs. Renamed the folder from backups to minority-report.
@MartinJames In essence, somebody produces a show. A network buys the rights to it. Cancellation is saying they no longer want to buy those rights. Reversing the cancellation means after due consideration, they decided to continue buying the rights after all.
@JerryCoffin Heh - I wonder what exactly goes on between those steps. I guess it's like Windows - if I want to know how it all works, I have to join M$ and sign an NDA.
Anyways, I've already tried to check for most common linker problems that I could find info on on the web. The circumstances do not apply to my question as the conditions that cause them are not present
@MartinJames Much like you can understand a lot of the internals of Windows without signing an NDA, I think most of it is open enough that you can learn a lot about it -- but it will take quite a bit of time and effort to do so.
@JerryCoffin I don't think I'll bother:) Having been screwed over by DRM once, (bought a new PC which refused to play any of my large legally-aquired, full-price-paid DVD collection), I have no inclination to give Hollywood/TV any more of my time/money.
@MartinJames I can't say I blame you there. I remember when new computers, operating systems, etc., were about adding new capabilities to enable users. Nowadays, most of them seem to be about stopping the users from doing what somebody has decided they shouldn't/can't/don't have a right to.
@Mikhail no, my code is to compile without any changes at every platform with the biggest percentage I can get
:10182059 get out with macros already
damn these people.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that ain't fun.
As an (important) note, there is a "bug" in the current std::chrono::high_resolution_clock in VS2012 in that it is much, much lower resolution that using QueryPerformanceCounter and doing some math. See: bit.ly/QX86s6 — DonnieDec 2 '12 at 5:47
@BartekBanachewicz But that means a boost::duration-based interface instead of std::duration :( (this kind of thing is the main reason I shun boost stuffs that made it to C++11)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was writing a benchmark, and I don't care about the type, I need the numbers. Sure, I could use Windows only code, but in the rare occasion that will require running it on linux drivers I don't want to rewrite it.
@BartekBanachewicz I don't mean the clock thingies. I mean this kind of benchmarking in general, especially given that C++ folks are so enamored with it. (You just need to try Criterion once to understand what I mean)
@BartekBanachewicz And FWIW, Criterion is the one I am more familiar with. There are some competing alternatives available as well. In C++... do everything yourself.
user142019
@QWR I think you should think before writing, because apparently you don't. You just hit random keys.
@QWR If you really want respect: start writing like a grown up ( no "u", no "i" instead of "I", no "startted" and other shits ), don't be an help vampire, read those fucking rules I linked to you and remove spaces before dots, for Christ's sake.
> The first thing that [Criterion program] does is measure how long it takes for the system clock to tick. It will then run our benchmarked code enough times that the resolution of the clock will not introduce a significant error.
> We adjust our timing measurements to take the cost of clock calls into account, even though in practice this makes almost no difference to the numbers we report.
Basically, it uses stats for real. Not just grab two points in time, subtract and divide.
Actually, that's a good project to suggest to the next person that barges in asking for project ideas. (I can't stats and I don't have any free time left)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not surprising -- I spent some time looking a year ago or so, and concluded that if it's available for download any more, it's well hidden. I'm not sure of a good place to put it to make it available though. It's also old enough that it really needs some updating as well.
The main thing missing from bench++, as far as basic capabilities goes, is producing any sort of graphical output. In particular, it includes quite a few things intended to be compared to each other, where graphs of some sort would be very useful.
hey everyone, please pm me if you are a member of Mathematics site and could offer some help with a really small problem calculating eigenvectors. I know this is not the place but Mathematics chat is empty and this is not a real question...
@Borgleader Typically results from a power glitch while writing to the Flash. Most recent motherboards have at least some fallback so that doesn't brick the machine though (e.g., two Flash memory chips, so if one is corrupted, it can boot from the other).
@moonbeamer2234 nop its a bit too general, not constructive and seems more like a fault on my end on a specific matrix so yeah I think I should bother someone in the Mathematics community chatrooms provided I found anyone there...
Is there a 3rd type of programming related degree besides CS or Comp Engineering? Neither sound particularly appealing to me but I like programming lol. Maybe ill just ge a tech dg
@CatPlusPlus Nothing wrong with them They used to pretty much just sell the basic nVidia/ATI reference card, but more recently they're doing some fairly decent coolers and such.
@JerryCoffin They tried a comeback to the discrete gpu market "recently" didn't they? I forget what the card was called but iirc they canned the project before it hit the shelves
@DeadMG That's true, but there were many more problems than that. This was before Windows had any market share, so each game worked directly with the hardware, and the 82786 was completely different from any other hardware of the time.