@kbok But regardless, it will take less than 20 minutes if you want to disable your lockout chip, that way you can play NTSC, and any other format with no problem (minus the internal clock timing issues very few games have)
@DeadMG That's actually a bug in the implementations. If doing T t = expr a copy/move constructor is required to be called if the type of the expression is cv T& or cv T&&. Any other constructor must be left out.
I have the same problem with GCC so I have a enable_if_unrelated helper.
@kbok Someone posted it on craigslist. They are selling a NES and those games (top left is track and field II). I keep looking hoping to find some rare games for cheap. It has worked out so far.
@DeadMG I don't know. Use std::decay + std::forward when you need to 'extend' lifetime, T&& + std::forward when you don't. I had some complications when I added std::tuple into the mix (std::get is iffy when it comes to value-category), perhaps you're having the same difficulties. Care to share?
Can someone mirror this 64KB PDF file, please? I have some problem with the connection, it has been downloading for several minutes and still isn't finished...
@FredOverflow You can save it to a google docs account, and from there save to your computer. And they all look fine to me. The PDF probably has not rendered right for you.
Today while I was in one of the chatrooms, I noticed a lot of posts being flagged in some other chatroom(I have the necessary 10K rep to vote on flagged posts) but the flagged post just shows the particular post that is flagged and no information or way to seek the information in the context in w...
the only thing I did was add the explicit copy and move constructors and SFINAE out the template from consideration if it was a reference to a Proxy<T>
@kbok Someone who helped inventing MRC compression (one of the jp2 compression modes) took over my lecture when I resigned. I had a good talk with him once.
@Als Yeah, of course. Still there's average in beauty - what most people of one culture agree on is beautiful. Old people usually are not included in that.
@Als I started to program in the mid-80ies. First BASIC, later Z80 assembler. Then I learned Pascal. Later, when I studied, I needed to learn Ada, C, C++, LISP, PROLOG, and a few others.
I started to teach (officially) programming (Ada, IIRC) when I was still studying, but not much. I taught programming with C++ as a first language in a company I worked for for almost a decade. I also taught C++ in the industry once in a while. I taught C++ as a second language to CS students for two or three years, at two different universities.
@DeadMG At a company I once worked for, we had table tennis, and later a pool table. This would be the perfect moment to get away from the computer and do something completely different for half an hour, then get back and look at your problem with a different mindset.
@Als The first time I worked for money as a programmer was in 1994, IIRC. I was still a students then. My first job after studying must have started in 1997 or 1998.
@Als Yeah, I'm being around on programmers.se at the same time, and only look here when I get an audible notification. That makes it hard sometimes to follow these sliced threads here.
@CatPlusPlus Contrary to popular believe, in real life there is no rep level cap. (And the gurus are way above me.) But, yeah, I've seen projects succeed and fail, and I've seen my share of reasons for it.