Unfortunately, this is the only font that my hand supports. That would be very sad if I am unable to program in C++ because of this. Do you think Java would support this font? — James McNellisApr 1 '11 at 1:35
Without specific examples, I'm inclined to think that you - like so many others, and also like you did earlier this morning - are zooming in on the one argument that doesn't make sense en "miss" the other part.
I've been over this countless times already: implementers could make standard headers magical and ensure they don't pollute namespaces silently, but for some inexplicable reason they don't.
(The inexplicable reason is often "OMG magic can't have that has to be all C++ except where it isn't anyway")
@sehe Nice. Is the include itself rather small ? I'd use that next time I need these standard headers and I'm too lazy to type for more than one include.
@EvgenyPanasyuk I have been looking at it. But I hate how hard it was to add custom flags to certain objects/targets. I mean, discoverability of features in CMake is really really bad
@BartekBanachewicz Tell me how well it performs when you have used it for a while. (Genuine request; I never got to trying it since I usually just use screen or tmux)
@EvgenyPanasyuk also that recording is a bit cheesy. The vocals are nice (Bobby McFerrin, no doubt). But the rest... spartan and not very well registered
<C-O> is nice to know anyway: if you're in insert mode and need to quickly run a single normal mode command, <C-O>command, and it drops you back in insert mode ready to proceed.
@EvgenyPanasyuk The link is what YT gives me (right click, "copy url at current position") and it works for me. Perhaps you're using a "smart" browser (Chrome?) or plugin
open-std is a standards organization. carbonite is back up
Robot, something in your vast memory?
I guess the simplest way to insert this would be std::this_thread::sleep_until(std::chrono::system_clock::now() + std::chrono::milliseconds(msecs));. I'll have a look if boost provides some conversion. — DyP2 hours ago
@BartekBanachewicz It's to make holding the violin a bit more comfortable. Chin rests are often clunky and don't hold well when sweaty. Many professional violinists don't use a chin rest at all, and most of them have permant skin scarring in the neck from where the 'tail-pin' hits
@R.MartinhoFernandes His comment is the only thing I can think of myself. I deemed it unimportant. I'm too lazy
@BartekBanachewicz With proper technique, there's no need to "clasp" it with the chin. But I agree. I find it "tricky" and fear I'll drop the instrument sometime
A right triangle (American English) or right-angled triangle (British English) is a triangle in which one angle is a right angle (that is, a 90-degree angle). The relation between the sides and angles of a right triangle is the basis for trigonometry.
The side opposite the right angle is called the hypotenuse (side c in the figure). The sides adjacent to the right angle are called legs (or catheti, singular: '). Side a may be identified as the side adjacent to angle B and opposed to (or opposite) angle A, while side b is the side adjacent to angle A and opposed to angle B.
If the length...
The algorithm seems to be similar to UTF-8 (find start bytes, read continuation bytes if needed, decode) except it's not self-synchronising (i.e. some values are used for both start bytes and continuation bytes).
@wilx Basically, if you implemented it as a stateful encoding, the only situation where you would be left with some state at the end would be if the input was corrupted and had unterminated sequences.
int * zero_based = malloc(100 * sizeof(int));
for (int i = 0; i < 100; ++i) printf("%d ", zero_based[i]);
int * one_based = zero_based - 1;
for (int i = 1; i <= 100; ++i) printf("%d ", one_based[i]);
@R.MartinhoFernandes It can replicate itself, but only very basically. Dependency resolution was there, but quite strict on ordering of project file contents.
@FredOverflow That gives undefined behavior. You can create a pointer to one past the end of an array, but not to one before the beginning. It's much cleaner to simply add one to the allocation size, and ignore the first element when you want to use 1-based indexing.