@CatPlusPlus Sorry to hear that, though I guess being fair, I should add that I've never been to Poland either. I got semi-close a few times (Hungary, Russia, Romania), but not Poland (so far, anyway).
It's a great book, actually. I helped my daughter learn basic electronics. She would actually look forward to it and ask me to read it to her at night.
@TonyTheTiger I do think the basic stuff is much harder in electronics, because it's not very intuitive. People tend to use water analogies a lot, but those really becoming damaging pretty quickly if you really want to understand what's happening.
@TonyTheTiger He goes into those, as well as the principles behind them. You just don't know that until he tells you that's what he was talking about, and then the light turns on. That happens a lot in he book.
For reference, I am in no way associated with this book :)
Well, I think it would be a mistake to make it similar just so you don't alienate people. I think if the language stands on it's own merit people will learn the syntax.
@DeadMG That's your first mistake. The less you try to alienate people, the more it'll end up as a cross between BASIC and COBOL. Especially any more, you have to start with at least one utterly alien concept (e.g., functional programming) and preferably alien syntax as well (a cross between Lisp and Haskell, perhaps) to get noticed at all. Make it unreadable and unpronounceable, and you'll have a winner.
@DeadMG Looking at his history it looks like this might not be the first time a question has been posed that was crafted. I don't see that as a bad thing - some of them look pretty insightful.
@Josh You mount it on the outside. Definitely don't want it inside or pointed toward the house, because yes, it'll saw a house in half without even trying.
@CatPlusPlus Ah of course, I missed that. My mind was busy thinking about what ground vehicle has a 20mm cannon in it, and how I would fit an aircraft in my house for purposes of home defense. My bad :P
@DeadMG Perhaps my house is in a safe location, but there are other reasons why I would be asking.
@Josh I don't know about ground vehicles, but back when I worked on B52's, that's what the B52H used as a tail gun (a major step up from the B52G and earlier, which had a 4-barrel, .50 cal (though it did 1500 rounds per minute). OTOH, only one B52 is known to have ever shot down an enemy fighter with its tail gun, and that was a B52D.
@JerryCoffin Nice. I don't know why the US clung to .50 on aircraft so long. I think we finally learned our lesson when the sabres in korea would hammer MiG 15's with a few hundred rounds to down them
@Josh My immediate guess would be NIH -- anything measured in good old inches just had to be better. Those millimeters were undoubtedly a socialist conspiracy.
Listen, C++ is turing complete, right? Wouldn't that include electronics and aircraft in it's problem domain?!
@TonyTheTiger Last time we talked about women in this chat some some poor chap said that his "interactions" with women were like an early return statement.
@Josh Of course, I may have mangled the reference -- it's been a couple of years since I saw it, and my memory doesn't seem to be improving with age either (and I'm allowed to feel old, it being my birthday today...)
@Josh Not as bad, but still 90+ every afternoon. The good point is that it gets down to ~60 at night, so as long as I open the windows at night and close them during the day, the house stays fairly decent.
But that's not telling me whether that's a truncation, because 0x10FFFF doesn't fit into 16 bits, or whether there is some effort to create a surrogate pair.
@Kerrek btw in your question, narrow and wide literal are not 'no semantics'. They are associated with the narrow set encoding and wide set encoding, respectively, which are implementation defined.
@Josh The 6502 is old, but not quite that old. I believe the last B52 was built in 1960. Military aircraft also continued to use vacuum tubes well after the rest of the world switched to transistors because they're more resistant to EMP.
@JerryCoffin So, you used to work on b52's, you know crypto, you write software, you know assember, in your 40's.... you sound like a defense contractor!
@Josh Your forgot the "live in Colorado Springs", part, which also fits with defense contracting. Despite all that, however, nope, I don't do defense work. The last work I did for the DoD was on March 23, 1988 (I day I celebrate more than I do my birthday!)
@Josh Not broken, just a few decades off. Then again, working on B52s is pretty much a dead giveaway. Despite their age, at least when I was working on them, there were parts that had to be hidden from anybody who didn't have at least a Secret security clearance and the infamous "need to know".
@KerrekSB I don't have a problem with it. I like the sound of 'octet' what with it being the native term for me but it sounds somewhat pedantic/dated in English.
@KerrekSB yeah you cannot spell it out without a typedef or identity<T>::type or alias template
@LucDanton also with template<typename T> using nondeduced = typename identity<T>::type; it becomes really convenient to say nondeduced<T> as a parameter type of a template
@KerrekSB well it's difficult for me to find a direct quote or a simple expanation in the spec. but the spec says that a function having the name operator conversion-type-id, then "Such functions are called conversion functions. No return type can be specified. If a conversion function is a member function, the type of the conversion function (8.3.5) is “function taking no parameter returning conversion-type-id”."
so if anything, your function definition would define a function that simply returns int. and not a function pointer.
the surrounding (* ... )(int, int) is what would modify the return type.
the spec says for conversion function " No return type can be specified. ". i suspect that is intended to rule out both a type in the decl-specifier-seq that would preceede the name, as well as the modifiers like (* ... )(int, int). because both are just ignored for determining the type of the conversion function. only the conversion-type-id is respected