let's be fair now; I'm pretty sure that if you had just stolen the Wide Clang code and compiled it with a non-preview VS edition, it would have worked first time.
@chris I thought so, but making them split was suggested to me. If lightning did split (fractal-like, as in nature), should I make it only split into two groups? (not, say, branch once).
Once it is done generation, if it is a valid block (that is, not already hitting the ground, for example), then if a random bool is true, it gets the next part.
Which, is another random chance of failure, where the lower it is, the less likely.
Finally, they always split in those two directions.
Also, this is rare - took about five generations of this to get one, and this is when the first bolts are set to length 5, when in reality it will be [5, 15].
@minitech Depends what you're doing, really. I'd definitely rather use it for forms than piecing together some terribly ugly code for each component entangled into one giant ball of relations. C# is pretty nice sometimes with built-in types acting properly as well, and no C backwards compatibility. On the other hand, when you need a lot of P/Invoke to do something, it's not really as fun. C++/CLI isn't perfect, either imo.
My lack of experience in C#/.NET means I don't code as elegantly as I could, either. R# is actually surprisingly good at helping with that a little.
I once read an article by a VB.NET programmer, and some argument about why case-sensitivity is evil. I still don't understand their point of view, though.
@Pawnguy7 "abc"s + someConstCharStar + "abc" or something like ClassWithStdStringConversionCtor obj("abc"s); since just "abc" would require two implicit conversions.
@Rapptz The only one I know of that does even remotely that is the Bond films, and AFAIK they always did the whole "Song as credits" thing since like, 1950 or something.
and you can't really write a function that's gonna take the language-inbuilt hash table or some other hash table with slightly different implementation but identical interface.
because nobody can meet the interface of the language-defined hash table.