@Jefffrey You mean apart from the fact that it cannot have a type mismatch error, it cannot accidentally use > instead of < (or use < on iterators which don’t support it), it cannot use the wrong ++ operator, etc. … Granted, these are all just very small problems. But the other version has none of them.
@KonradRudolph we all have written them so many times that the forms for (int i = X; i < Y; ++i) and for (auto it = X; it != Y; ++it) appear in our nightmares
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure but why do you want to subsample? What do you gain compared to taking the whole sample? Do you want to estimate the influence of outliers?
@R.MartinhoFernandes When you use asio, do you ever worry about limiting the amount of queued completion handlers for a service?
(I'm thinking of CPU intensive processing of data that is streaming in concurrently. I'm worried that if IO is fast enough, the io_service may be 'overwhelmed' with pending jobs)
I haven't found an obvious queue depth limit in the docs.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So that’s awesome but compiling this manually yields lots of warnings about implicit conversions, and the linker complains about unfound symbols …
@KonradRudolph I've seen it so many many many times. I've come to rely on it. And if I'm disappointed, I frequently stick with the elegant code and wait for the compiler to catch up :/
In fact, using Spirit requires this belief. Because, if it didn't thoroughly work this way, using anything Proto (or even Mpl) based would be complete insanity
@KonradRudolph Fixed I think. The linker errors should only be there for MSVC, because I cannot use <chrono> there, and Boost.Chrono is not header-only.
> APNG competes with Multiple-image Network Graphics (MNG), a comprehensive format for bitmapped animations created by the same team as PNG. APNG's advantage is the smaller library size and compatibility with older PNG implementations.