@DeadMG Oh, no argument there. The point though, is that while you certainly can write non-portable code in C++, you can also write code that's about as portable as you care about.
@StackedCrooked The perspective of mainstream economists does tend to change when, y'know, massive recession and financial meltdown that hardly any of them saw coming.
@DeadMG That can (and should) change how they react (or advise others to react) to the situation, but not the fundamentals of economics itself. Somebody who can't afford to eat is broke, regardless of how well or poorly the people around him may be doing.
@DeadMG I can't argue that -- in fact, I'd tend to do the opposite: I think anybody who thinks macroeconomics can be understood should probably spend some time studying chaotic systems, and realizing that (almost by definition) macroeconomics is a chaotic system.
@StackedCrooked Yes and no. Yes, some people took some pretty serious gambles that they almost certainly shouldn't have. But, the de-regulation (for one thing) that allowed them to take those gambles was largely based on lack of understanding.
@DeadMG I think that's misunderstanding the situation as well. I think quite a few did understand the risk -- but many were in a position to gain a great deal (e.g., bonuses) if the gamble paid off, but (at least though they would) lose essentially nothing when/if it fell through.
Meanwhile in Ontario healthcare is amazing as 64% of Cancer patients get fully treated in 6 months, Toronto remains the most multicultural place in the planet and we surpassed the population of Chicago.
@DeadMG Much (most?) of the problem really stemmed from the government in the first place (at least here in the US). Much of the problem here can be traced directly to banking deregulation, and is exactly the sort of problem the regulations were designed to prevent.
@DeadMG Many of the problems in Europe are also clearly traceable to governments, such as governments having far more debt than the regulations were supposed to allow.
@EtiennedeMartel Kudos to him, for taking the time to actually share thoughts and even write an old fashioned letter, in this day and age. The sender nobly accomodated the fact that grand-mothers don't necessarily have facebook or, for that matter, internet.
@DeadMG Governments have much the same motivation though: value is based on perception -- so if they can convince people of prosperity, 1) they get rewarded for it, even if it's an illusion, and 2) if they're convincing enough, its being convincing can actually make it real.
@DeadMG I do recall a time before having a mouse (although all my own PCs had one). However, I never liked it. I don't like to be a slave of the computer, having to hunt things moving across the screen. I rather tell it commands.
I honestly regret the fact that I got my first computer at 8 and I played Tonka games on it until 12 instead of learning C and developing Napster first :p
@sehe At this time of night, after numerous 6X, I will not pick a fight, even with devs who have a cretaceous mindset and cannot think past stdin/stdout :)
@DeadMG Yeah, the issue in your case is making sure your CV gets through HR filtering and lands in the hands of an actual software developer. Which means you need to know someone on the inside.
@DeadMG They retroactively demand repayment, as they view the entire summer as "getting money you don't deserve"
So you backpay the government programs, which means you receive nothing and have to remain on the program until the time is up and all the money is paid back.
Just look at this great example of how nice and helpful Stack Overflow is getting these days!
Delete a member array correctly in C++
This is obviously a neophyte learning C++ that lacks knowledge in a particular C++ concept. How do we reward him? Here's a sample of the feedback we've provid...
This question is a great example of why Stack Overflow is getting a reputation for being a hostile environment these days
Possible to convert C# get,set code to C++
This is clearly a developer used to C# who is trying to apply existing concepts to C++ and failing. You can see from his comm...
I always used the http://www.cplusplus.com as a reference. I really like the way the documentation is organized, making it really easy to find what I'm looking for.
However, I was looking for good alternatives and I stumbled upon this question: Good reference for C++ iostreams?
There, one of th...
@Oleksiy I don't know what you,re expecting here. Its has bad examples and errors. It,s a bad source of info. Use cppreference.com instead. End of story.
@Borgleader TBH, I don't even understand the accepted answer. 'The rect array has automatic storage'. If the class is intantiated with new, how is the array storage 'automatic'??
@Borgleader: You got a down vote, so people are still reading it. That's optimism to me. I've got a thing about down votes. Well, really, about drive-by down votes where people do it without at least saying why...
@Oleksiy oy mate. If you don't want to accept the fact it's bad, then more power to you. It's bad because the examples are pretty shitty, using the notion called C with Classes rather than actual Modern C++. The website itself isn't community edited, so you can't fix any issues you have with it should the documentation be wrong (which it used to be back then, I'm sure some of the points were addressed now).
By in practice, I mean.. well, somebody who knows what it is, and to not make such big local arrays. Unless your answers take that into consideration. Perhaps they do.
Changing your IP address or using proxy servers to access public websites you've been forbidden to visit is a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), a judge ruled Friday in a case involving Craigslist and 3taps.