Ok, my friend is silly - this woman helped her to lose quite a bit money. Now she comes around and trying to sell my friend a piece of land for 200k she said yes! But the next door, almost the same piece of land was sold for 170k! Even the bank won't lent her 200k for the land.
A vector<vector<int> > (note the space in the > >) can work well, but it's not necessarily the most efficient way to do things. Another that can work quite nicely is a wrapper around a single vector, that keeps track of the "shape" of the matrix being represented, and provides a function or overl...
You are the victim of branch prediction fail.
What is Branch Prediction?
Consider a railroad junction:
Image by Mecanismo, from Wikimedia Commons: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Entroncamento_do_Transpraia.JPG
Now for the sake of argument, suppose this is back in the 1800s - before...
When you got an answer like that, top of the list is pretty easy
@ereOn I'm not sure 200 rep/day would even keep you on the front page. Near the top of the front page it's almost entirely about number of accepts -- figure 300 rep/day minimum.
Using python, how would I check if PHP is installed on my server? Most of the googled resources point in the opposite direction, i.e to check if the python module is installed in PHP.
Is there any way to check if PHP (whatever version) is installed on the server using Python?
@chris: I have a coworker that thinks loops read easier than those constructs and who refuses to use anything like that. He also hates templates, C++ features and thinks using explicit delete makes the code less error prone.
It's actually ironic that my highest voted question is a performance question, but it turned out everything was useless anyway because the problem arose out of a bug
@ereOn Writing idiomatic code is important. Your opinion doesn't matter when it comes time for others to read it. Idiomatic code is like the standard kind to recognize.
@JerryCoffin Yeah but I assume you are smart and knowledgeable. He usually spend more time trying to mask or justify his ignorance rather than learning the stuff that makes him outdated.
@chris By all means, don't trust them. The very fact that you are an active person on SO already puts you on the top of a pile of a lot of crappy coders in the industry.
I really am probably going to be nowhere near the experienced people in wherever I work as well, and recognizing that is important, since egotistic bad people seems to be a common trend.
@Xeo Exactly, what they don't teach in school is that when you need to use things all the time, you'll learn them quickly or else. Experience and real need count.
@Xeo I hope they do. But that doesn't mean new-comers can't bring anything. I've seen companies that just deny the opportunity for newcomers to contribute to anything, even when they have a very good idea.
> Similar thing happened to me... sort of... I put a kayak in my station wagon, then closed the trunk only to find it out the kayak was 5mm longer than the inside of my car. Bye bye windscreen.
@Mysticial I'm not sure I showed you this, but this is the result of our discussions about the encryption algorithm months ago :P nclabs.org/downloads/orlein.pdf
Apropos Japan, I was reviewing the ~100 Kanji I've been studying so far through SRS Flashcards, and I was very surprised to find that I remembered ~95 of them. Even more so, because I learned "Kanji -> meaning", but the review was "meaning -> Kanji"
@Xeo I've started looking at Remembering the Kanji a bit. It's really effective so far, but I'll focus on that after I'm further ahead with kana vocab.
@Borgleader It's quite similar to the Latin I did for a year in grade 10.
The r sound is annoying to say the least. What I learn from relies on you inferring grammar from seeing it used so often, which can be a bit annoying from time to time.
It sounds like it could be a good one to use for explaining things like grammar completely, and I know the vocab and reading practice I'm getting normally works very well.
> Amaterasu (天照?), Amaterasu-ōmikami (天照大神/天照大御神?) or Ōhirume-no-muchi-no-kami (大日孁貴神?) is a part of the Japanese myth cycle and also a major deity of the Shinto religion.
Ultimately, there is no difference. Ignoring (for the moment) static member functions, static means what it means -- but we see different parts of what it means under different conditions because some of what it means can also happen without the keyword.
When you use the static keyword, the obje...
I suspect some might find it surprising, but maybe not?
@TonyTheLion I've been thinking about that. I want to go into more detail on some parts, especially the last one, because I think it's a very nice example of what TMP can be useful for.
So I think I'll leave it at vague mentions and the gritty details in a more focused post.
@R.MartinhoFernandes "After a while on that I realised that Boost.Range didn't really help much." I suggest "After a while using it realised that Boost.Range didn't really help much." The former sounds a bit odd.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I just read your sequences post. Looks pretty good to me. I agree with Tony though, it's a bit abstract. I wouldn't expect a detailed reference manual of what you came up with, but a few snippets to act as examples of what you're talking about would be nice IMO
and might whet the reader's appetite for the upcoming "nitty-gritty" post
otherwise it's tempting to summarize it as "I tried some things, which sucked. Then I came up with a thing that didn't suck". ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, I agree with the general vibe, you come no real point. You should perhaps finish with a bit about this library, where to find it, perhaps promise an upcoming article on how to use it etc. why should I use it (in summary, the rest of the article does cover that I know)
@thecoshman Hmm, maybe I should downplay that aspect then. I never intended it to be about the library, but about the pain I went through with two iterator-based iterations.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, well if you just want to bitch, then compared to the rest of your articles, I wouldn't bother if I were you. You so far have managed to maintain a good track record of worthwhile articles.
@R.MartinhoFernandes obviously there is merit in pointing out why things are broken, but you need to be careful you are not just ranting. I am not saying you are just ranting, just saying it is a thin line.
instance Functor Maybe where
fmap f (Just a) = Just $ f a
fmap f Nothing = Nothing
instance Applicative Maybe where
pure = Just
(Just f) <*> (Just a) = Just $ f a
Nothing <*> _ = Nothing
_ <*> Nothing = Nothing
@thecoshman Well, I want the "bitching" to be the thing that sticks in your mind once you're done reading. I think I'll cut off the last bit entirely, as it distracts from that, and see how I can pass my library merely as a side note instead.
@R.MartinhoFernandes if at all. If you have a potential solution, you should either explain it, or just stick to saying what is wrong with what is out their.
@BartekBanachewicz Especially the first equation for <*>: If f is a function that takes more than one argument, you get a partially applied function back.
Talking in types: Just (a -> b -> c) <*> Just (a) = Just (b -> c), then Just (b -> c) <*> Just (b) = Just (c)