@LucDanton see here Eric Niebler (@ericniebler) heeft getweet om 10:17 PM on do, aug. 08, 2013: @sehetw ...so long as there is no intersection between the set of all derived types and types that satisfy the semantic constraint. (https://twitter.com/ericniebler/status/365567509413380096)
It's because I come from a generation with sufficient underlying intelligence to understand Makefiles. I believe that was lost in the subsequent generation.
@BartekBanachewicz It's more productive to write a quick makefile in fifteen seconds than it is to read through the documentation of some high-high-level super-abstracted build system for a test app.
@BartekBanachewicz Your "old things are bad" mantra is tiresome
@SadStudent When using rm from make, you normally want to use -rm <whatever>, to tell make to ignore its return value. Make normally assumes return=0 indicates success and return!=0 indicates failure, but for rm that doesn't hold.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit And why would GNU make qualify as "first principles"? Perhaps you need to learn Control Data's build system before you even think about GNU make.
@BartekBanachewicz Learning old things is not a waste just because the things are old. It might be a waste partly because the things are bad. In this case, the things aren't even that bad.
@JerryCoffin No, I really did mean "first principles", but you have to define the starting point somewhere. Otherwise the conversation will devolve into learning to read, first. Which is not useful.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit While I realize that's what you think you mean, to a reasonably disinterested observer, (i.e., me) it's pretty clear that you're mistaken.
@SadStudent There is no clear reason for this to fail. We don't know anything about permissions, or the way you invoke make, or a million other things. You'll have to do more debugging then provide more information.
@R.MartinhoFernandes on the fact that, for one, make requires you to specify exactly which file is needed for which binary by hand? And write out compiler vars (which scons handles in Env?)
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Yes, I noticed. My comment wasn't directed at you personally nearly so much as the utter idiocy into which this conversation has descended in general.
@DeadMG Damn. I must still be asleep -- I'm not coming up with any funny way to misinterpret that as Pounds Sterling. I guess it must be time for me to do something other than chat for a while!
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought of something like: "well, you better pick them up quick, before somebody else grabs them.", but neither strikes me as particularly funny.
Reinstalls target atoms and their entire deep dependency tree, as though no packages are currently installed. You should run this with --pretend first to make sure the result is what you expect.
Seems to me the entire discussion about make can be summarized into the three stages of life: 1) What you learned before you were 6 is how the world has always been. 2) What you learn between 6 and about 30 is new and exciting (and will remain that way for the rest of your life). 3) What you learn after 30 is simply wrong and not how Jerry (or "God", if you prefer) intended the world to be.
I have this base Packet class - basically, an id, and whatever other specific data. Anyway, I wanted to force a function that parses a string and returns the packet.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It counted perfectly well, thank you very much! (well, I did have an un-hygienic macro that screwed things up for a little bit, but...)
To be honest, I think the only reasons to make such a decision are syntactic convenience and tradition. I'll explain why but showing what are (not) the differences between the two and how these differences matter when making a decision.
What differences are there between non-member friend functi...
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'll just drop the usual "but newbs can't dependency injection and proper design so they overuse friendship and make spaghetti relations"