@sehe I did have TP 4.0 on a PC for a little while, but only a few months later I picked up a snazzy new "C" compiler, and that was the beginning of the end.
@JerryCoffin I never met a C compiler. I bet Borland C++ 3.1 came with it, but no one told me :/ I remember being confounded when I read C programs. Thinking "WTF, they told me this was gonna be similar"
@JerryCoffin I did make a lot of flight hours in Turbo Pascal 4, 5.0, 5.5, 6.0 and 7. Even some serious stuff.
I suppose I could say I owe my professional career to illegal copies of Borland's IDEs and compilers.
@BartekBanachewicz Good thing that everybody is always'in 0.001% of society'. Phew
hmm.. anyone know if there's been a proposal for something similar to make_array that could be used as auto arr = make_array<T, 3> (args...); which would be the same as std::array<T, 3> arr = {T (args...), T (args...), T (args...) };
@sehe I knew what this was a reply to. I don't think it was an overgeneralization, TBH. You know, maybe I've been brainwashed, but all the Intel videos showing PC<->Human interaction made me think about how software for humans should be made. And incidentally, Ubuntu is called linux for human beings
it's not like I feel a need for it really, just that it should be a way of creating an array of type T where std::is_default_constructable<T>::value == false
@BartekBanachewicz oh no you won't :) Of course you'll try, until you lose your patience. And it's so fashionable to lose one's patience in the lounge, it'll be too hard to resist temptation.
I don't mind much. I'll just keep pointing the other way. And I believe you will actually try. This is worth something to me
"In fact, it is difficult to list half of the commonly used ones. C, C++, C#, Objective-C, Java, Visual Basic/BASIC, FORTRAN, JavaScript, PHP, Lua . . . the list goes on. "