@JerryCoffin Yeah I voted to close as "Unclear what you're asking" because when I saw it (I can't see it now) it was just a code snippet with no question at all.
@Rapptz It's accompanied by some description: "for this Question I wrote this code and got wrong answer:". Doesn't it seem fairly clear that the associated question(s) would be "why is it saying wrong answer?" or "how do I fix it?" or both?
> D:\Dev\json_spirit_v4.06\json_spirit\json_spirit_reader.cpp : fatal error C1128: number of sections exceeded object file format limit : compile with /bigobj
@MohammadAliBaydoun Jerry doesn't downvote bad answers. He's busy making an awesome one that'll just shadow the bad answers and make their author delete them in shame.
@MohammadAliBaydoun Down-voting is like a foam hammer. I usually swing a bigger hammer -- if a question sucks, I either edit, or (if I think it can't be saved) vote to close.
@JBL It's not shameful to have an answer that's worse than Jerry's. It's shameful if your answer is better than Jerry's. Because that means you cheated.
> please revise your answer to explain why questions like this are problematic, or explain which questions your answer applies to, and I will reconsider my downvote.
I want people to learn and improve and eventually post positive-repped answers, but if you keep getting negative rep on all your answers, that doesn't exactly inspire you to keep trying. On the other hand, as long as the answers are terrible, what are we supposed to do? :p
@Borgleader sure, and I have zero qualms about downvoting a single answer into negative. But learning that all the guy's answers end up like that kind feels bad
that moment when you spend around 2 hours fiddling with lots of SSE bit-hacking before taking a break, having dinner and then realizing that "oh, I could actually do all this much more easily and efficiently with a single uint32_t.
@Borgleader, games are not real-time applications. Not hard real-time at least. Make sure not to mistake high performance and real-time. wikipedia — Shahbaz1 min ago
Whatever you want to call it, some software is real-time in the sense that it has to be truly real-time down to the clock cycle level. No arbitrary OS interrupts, or unpredictable page faults or competing with a dozen other processes for CPU time. Some software just tries to "feel" real-time to the user, such as Halo. Whatever you choose to label the two, they're very different things
. @jonskeet Mmm. Can you credit sources you used? I've seen this before e.g. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15090209/does-boost-have-a-datatype-for-set-operations-that-is-simpler-than-the-stl/15090751#15090751 and https://github.com/klmr/named-operator /cc @klmr
@jalf It is. Even has modest ways to cheat the operator precedence conundrum (allthough it distracts from the elegance). Anyways, turns out Jon already referenced Konrad's work:
Just seen this: https://github.com/klmr/named-operator - ported a proof of concept to C#. Definitely something for my abuse talk next week.
@Borgleader, do you code in scripting languages? (such as C++) Before you answer, pedantic argument is useless. I'm merely asking the kind of language you code in. — Shahbaz34 secs ago
@Borgleader no, but he did. Point is, when people talk about "real-time applications", it is not unreasonable to assume that they talk about those, and not merely "games of genres normally considered to be 'real-time'"
@Borgleader he's obviously coming from a domain where real-time applications is not a term you toss around for anything that merely reacts to user input in what appears to be real-time on a human scale
IMO it makes no sense to try to draw a sharp line between them. "scripting language" is an umbrella term for programming languages which are easy to use in an ad-hoc manner to automate simple tasks, IMO. And that's not a binary thing, but a sliding scale. Some languages are all the way out at the extreme end of the axis, and others are around the middle, and some are all the way over at the opposite end where you'd never dream of using it in this manner