Oh, and I'm originally from East Germany, and that part of the country did have a somewhat complicated love-hate relationship with what#s now (again) Russia.
@TonyTheTiger See, I know how one drinks. (Did I mention I have been out drinking with friends for three nights straight?) I even know reasons for getting drunk. I even got drunk myself quite often. So I was asking: What happened to you that you needed to get drunk.
@Man: I see that you are evading my interrogation. What did make you say "you C++ guys"? What kind of guy are you? And what are you doing in my swamp^Hroom?
@FredOverflow There's two things I keep hearing about Java 7: Dropped features and glaringly obvious show-stopper bugs. Why is that? (I guess I'd need an Oracle to answer that.)
@ManofOneWay Whoa! You haven't a single c++ tag in your portfolio, but many iphone and objective-c tags! So you're not a spy from the Java room, but from the iPhone room!
@JitendraPathak To seriously address your concern: Look at the room's name. It's called "Lounge" for a reason. If you have any other question concerning the room, please first read the newbie hints, boldly linked from the right-hand panel.
@TonyTheTiger I dunno. But since he must have an iPhone, we could terrorize him by constantly making it ring - especially when it's sleeping time on his side of the planet! :)
@DeadMG As usual, @Tony beat you to mentioning sex. Monkey sex, OTOH, has a new ring to it. (So far we mostly had apes in here, after all, and I'm absolutely sure<stern_look/> you would never confuse the two.) So you get +1 for being original.
Really. These are innocent animals, doing what they do, innocently, since nature invented gender, ensuring the survival of their genes, just like your mom and dad did with you idiot.
@TonyTheTiger They aren't even doing it. It's still foreplay, I guess. :)
@ManofOneWay Actually, I was waiting for this to come up. You uneducated monkeys ought to confuse chimps with gorillas. I suggest you go to a zoo and watch the two species. You will find that "agitated" is quite an understatement for the chimp colony's normal state, while you will have to wait quite a while to see any kind of excitement with the gorillas.
And, of course, all this ignores that I'm a bonobo in disguise, and, as we all know, bonobos solve all social problems by wild, innocent, and extensive sex.
@TonyTheTiger Well, you wouldn't be able to blame sex coming up as a topic on anybody else, though, since we all know it's you who brings it up again and again.
@ManofOneWay oh yea and if those monkey's really offended you, I suggest you go browse reddit for a few days and you will hopefully get to new levels of things you can handle
Mhmm. Sometimes I don't understand this chat. On the right, our avatars are listed in the order of their last activity. Why then is @Jitendra listed before @FredO, when Fred has spoken only 10mins ago, and Jitendra hasn't spoken up since?
Ah! I know! Jitendra must have left the room for a moment! You get to the head of the list when you enter the room.
@DeadMG Well, the message I answered to did end in a question mark. Can we establish, as one of the foundations of communication here, that any message ending with a question mark can be assumed to be a question?
BTW, @Man, in a forum like this, Germans would use the informal "Du" rather than "Sie". But other than one tiny issue with word order, it's perfect German. I bow before you.
@FredOverflow Why would he want to have a cake if he could eat monkeys instead??
@DeadMG You are certainly free to not to bow to "normal" conventions here (or anywhere else, FTM), but you will find that using question marks to denote non-questions (or asking question and later denying having done so) will make it quite hard for you to communicate with the rest of the world. :)
Besides, the only reason you don't sell your programmer's soul for money yet is that either mom and dad still provide for you or you're doing something silly like washing dishes in a local pub. Nothing to be proud of if you ask me. :)
> Since iterators are an abstraction of pointers, their semantics is a generalization of most of the semantics of pointers in C++. This ensures that every function template that takes iterators works as well with regular pointers. This International Standard defines five categories of iterators, according to the operations defined on them: input iterators, output iterators, forward iterators, bidirectional iterators and random access iterators.
@ManofOneWay I knew someone would bring this up. Now, with the bonobo's well-known reputation of having sex all the time, I'm not going to repeat my statement substituting "gorilla" for "bonobo". Otherwise, the puppy would get ideas.
@FredOverflow IIRC where the Standard use(d) only a single hierarchy where each iterator concept is a refinement of the previous one, Boost split that into two orthogonal concepts: it separated one-pass from multipass iterators on the one hand, and access (random access vs linear etc) on the other.
How would you name a function that takes an array and returns a vector containing the array's elements? to_vector? array_to_vector? vector_from_array? vector? make_vector? Something else?
@LucDanton Well, Input and Output are single pass.
@DeadMG After three days of heavy rain (really, almost non-stop) we now have only the odd shower today. The weather will continue to improve tomorrow, and sunshine will resume regency for most of the week, until the end of the week, where the weekend rain will take over again. This weather is a bitch. :(
@FredOverflow I also do, but only if I would need this quite often. Otherwise you would have to add the code of make_vector<>() to the picture, and that would shift balances in favor of the off-the-shelf solution.
@DeadMG I have seen British weather, so I know what you're talking about. (I once spend a winter in Portland, OR. I slept under the roof. I'm still in love with the sound of rain falling on the roof while I fall asleep.) This wasn't it, though. As I said, we had three days of heavy rain. In fact, I was just checking the news to see if any floods were caused by that.
But the US about to be going bankrupt is still dominating the news.
I think that the current system, especially in Europe, is to pretend that everything is fine, the recession never happened and we can pay all our debts
but I don't think that's the truth at all, and I think that the sooner they wake up and refuse to pay back at least some, the better
Firstly, I've been looking at some questions with broken tags recently. Take a look at What is the difference between Platform-Independent and Cross-Platform? for example. The question is about terminology and has absolutely nothing to do with C, C++, or Java, and I re-tagged it as such, and left...
@ManofOneWay Every message has a flagging link. You click on it, you get a dialog asking whether you want to flag the message as "spam, inappropriate, or offensive". If you do, then it gets presented to the whole of the chat for evaluation by everyone, I think, >10k rep. They all get a nagging little blue number over their avatar (close to where the number indicating replies is), to click on and decide whether the categorization is valid, invalid, or they don't know.
I repeat: The whole of the chat. Everybody >10k gets nagged. We usually are very nerved about the guys in the Android room flooding us with such flags.
@ManofOneWay Yes. It's not acceptable to come in here and link your utterly unrelated question to scrounge attention because it hasn't been answered in ten minutes
@DeadMG Pipe down! You lost all sense of proportion. @Man isn't some guy who came here, dumped his link, only to never to be seen again. He's been here quite a while, participating in discussions, chatting, making this room a better place. Now he has asked a question, and he makes us aware of it. That's quite different from what we object to.
@ManofOneWay Don't let yourself be bullied. Yes, the question didn't have a c++ tag, and you could be more considerate next time. But that doesn't mean @Dead couldn't have politely told you so rather than flag your question. He wouldn't have dared flagging many of the regulars if they had posted that.
I'll add a note about drive-by linking (thanks to @Luc for that term!) to the newbie hints. They'll say something about it the next time I'll update them.
@JitendraPathak No, we're all asleep. Besides, you might want to read the transcript of the last half hour, starting here, before you post your question.
@ManofOneWay I honestly don't know.
Wow, someone flagged @Dead's message bragging about his answer! How appropriate. :)
So a guy who has earned millions by selling electronic equipment and software to US prisons now explains why the stuff he sold is insecure, demanding that it be updated to prevent electronic jail breaks. Why do I think of forked tongues here?
> “Most people don’t know how a prison or jail is designed, that’s why no one has ever paid attention to it,” says Strauchs
> An attacker could also pick and choose specific doors to lock and unlock and suppress alarms in the system that would alert staff when a cell is opened. This would require some knowledge of the alarm system and the instructions required to target specific doors, but Strauchs explains that the PLC provides feedback to the control system each time it receives a command, such as “kitchen door east opened.”
@JitendraPathak Weren't you the one who objected we weren't talking C++ here?
> He and his team recently toured a prison control room at the invitation of a correctional facility in the Rocky Mountain region and found a staffer reading his Gmail account on a control system connected to the internet.
I was thinking about going meta and requesting replacing flagging with more power for the room owners, but I have a feeling that won't change anything, anyway.
These are the current numbers ("current" because they can obviously be changed, but there aren't any plans to do so; they have been like this for a while):
The threshold is six, meaning the net flag count of the message has to reach six. Net flag count means the number of flags minus the number ...