What you want isn't on sale today? Get notified when it is! Add a game to your Wishlist and you'll get an email when it gets a big discount. A great idea after the sale too!
ugh, I need to tell windows not to turn off the disks after 20 minutes. Starting a download? whirrrr wait for the disk to spin up. trying to shut the computer down? whiirrrrrrrrrrrrRRRR wait for all 6 disks to spin up one after the other....
@R.MartinhoFernandes I love the fact that you can actually tell dependent projects to use the same working tree - and it will automatically schedule the follow up to run on the same agent node.
Hudson is a continuous integration (CI) tool written in Java, which runs in a servlet container, such as Apache Tomcat or the GlassFish application server. It supports SCM tools including CVS, Subversion, Git, Perforce, Clearcase and RTC, and can execute Apache Ant and Apache Maven based projects, as well as arbitrary shell scripts and Windows batch commands. The primary developer of Hudson was Kohsuke Kawaguchi, who worked for Sun Microsystems at the time. Released under the MIT License, Hudson is free software.
Builds can be started by various means, including scheduling via a cron-li...
Hudson is this Oracle piece of crap that does the bare minimum somewhat well and falters catastrophically any time you need something beyond the bare minimum. TeamCity is this nice tool by JetBrains that is made to be usable far beyond the bare minimum.
@melak47 lol, yes! they have two classes - ColorRecognizer and ColourRecognizer - when I asked what's the difference and what they are for, they couldn't explain :E
My favourite example is that TeamCity has had personal builds ever since I came into contact with it (maybe six or seven years ago). Hudson still doesn't.
It almost feels like no one uses Hudson for any serious stuff.
TC also has nice IDE integration for that. You can ask the server to build stuff without you even pushing it.
> The problem is that all kinds of common operations on strings, such as counting the amount of characters in a string, or converting a string to upper case, become a horrible mess when you want to support all the characters in the world (and then some)
There we go. I'm done here.
He clearly doesn't understand it.
"counting the amount of characters in a string" doesn't have to support anything.
I have a c++ library and I plan to add a optional feature to it (enabled by a macro) to show some extra debugging information. The idea is to create and open a window made with Qt to display some data. My problem is that I don't have access to the main function (it is a library) so I can't create...
> Note: I read on Hacker News that Ruby actually does something like this: it has one class per encoding. Declare a law in your Ruby shop that ASCII strings (plain old Ruby strings) are to be treated as machine-only, and you’re pretty far.
lol, "I read on Hacker News" is already funny. He had me at that.