I have a software, every time I open it asks for email I'd and password that it has ended to that email id. I have to enter both to open the software.
Is there a way to bypass or skip this type of things please don't say me to buy the software as I want to use it please reply...
All I wanted is to do some Python, and for those reasons (compiling PortAudio), I need to install lots of thins : MSVC or Minwg64, etc. Each time I install a thing, I need 2 new other things ... like SCons for Python, like CMake, like tons of things...
@Basj Life's tough. Find binary distributions or deal with it. Last time I checked using PortAudio on windows wasn't complicated, but I never actually needed it
@ScarletAmaranth Okay, thanks for clarifying. We don't do that anymore. and certainly not for help leeches, unless they become violent/bad tempered. And then we flag for moderators. Otherwise, everybody loses
Flagging me isn't a real problem for me. I think my next night will not be so different to the previous one or the next one if you do so, @ScarletAmaranth :)
@sehe I thought thrice before flagging, I also didn't flag the first ~3 questions and it has been re-explained a few times that this is not an ideal place to randomly ask questions out of the blue, that said, I don't want to spam 10k rep people, but still
I understand :) My cool story of the night @sehe is that ... hum... just thinking ... the cool story is probably that I'm going to bed in 10 minutes and my son is going to wake me up in 3 or 4 hours ;)
No need to document this. I think it's fair to assume on your part that your users will know C++. Otherwise you'd need to add a full language tutorial in a comment before every function. — Kerrek SB2 mins ago
@Borgleader sounds like stress talking. Once it gets into vicious circle... There will be no recovering. So, better signal it first. Get realistic deadlines (or goals)
@BenjaminGruenbaum I signed for that job. I don't dislike that. Unless it is fighting with MSVC, linking 3rd party libraries and the likes. But that shit is the same on any platform/language
:) I write code and keep getting annoyed at the multiple quirks it throws at you everywhere, the bad documentation of code I have to interact with everywhere and writing in 4 languages at the same time takes its toll because you keep having to code in different paradigms.
There is not a time I see C++ where the lack of caller site indication for references doesn't annoy me - I get used to it after a few hours but every time I get back to the language it annoys me - really noob stuff.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I've never value call site ref qualification. I look at the function definition to see what happens. Anyways, with std::ref you sometimes get this - by accident
@sehe I don't know, it just always bothers me that I don't know if it can mutate the value by looking it at. I get past it after some time but it always bothered me.
@BenjaminGruenbaum also, the only notable language that has them I know is C#. And in this language, less than 2% of my methods would use out/ref parameters (or I'd consider that a huge code smell). AFAIR delegates, events, Func<> and Action<> don't even support them
@BenjaminGruenbaum The funny thing is that those language with ref qualification also have ref-semantics by default. Which means the situation is far worse because you can literally expect anything at all to be mutated at all times
@ScarletAmaranth Or just pass it as const <- good habit
@sehe I only use them in C# when working against an existing COM interface, I think their Nullable "maybe" solves stuff like tryParse better. It's a lot simpler with memory not considered - a part of my frustration is probably because I worry about performance a lot more - otherwise I wouldn't be writing that code in C++ to begin with.
@sehe I wouldn't be using C++ if I was prematurely optimizing ^^, this is code that gets rewritten in C++ because of non-premature optimization. I would have loved to not have to do this.
@DavidKron I'm not worried too much, it's just a thing I suddenly have to keep in mind, = (and operators more generally) act in a way that makes me have to think about it for a bit until I get used to it.
@DavidKron I use C++ in this case because it has a much lower memory footprint when writing the code I need to write here. In C# it takes too much memory and slows the computer down.
@sehe After a week I don't either :) The several things that you have to think of you don't in languages like C# most of the time, even without it being a requirements problem.
@sehe it's not just lifetimes, it's a completely different tool-chain (although ever since clang it does a lot more static analysis which makes me so happy) , it's slower iterations and I have to be 'aware' of much more. It's the stuff that goes away after you get used to it :)
My class has a method with the following prototype:
std::string
Block::get_field(std::string rec_type, std::string field) { ... }
It retrieves a value from a map, converts it to a string, and returns the string.
Someone used my class as follows:
char * buf = block.get_field(my_rec, my_field)...
@sehe no, I use clang for finding out quirks/odd things in my code. The part that actually talks to COM is completely decoupled from most of the logic so once I wrote and (voodoo) tested it I stopped touching it. I see it as "magic". I hate magic but that's what it is to me right now and the way I deal with it is avoid it as much as I can.