In logic, the law of excluded middle (or the principle of excluded middle) is the third of the three classic laws of thought. It states that for any proposition, either that proposition is true, or its negation is true.
The law is also known as the law (or principle) of the excluded third, in Latin principium tertii exclusi. Yet another Latin designation for this law is tertium non datur: "no third (possibility) is given".
The earliest known formulation is Aristotle's principle of non-contradiction, first proposed in On Interpretation, where he says that of two contradictory proposit...
> But on the other hand there cannot be an intermediate between contradictories, but of one subject we must either affirm or deny any one predicate. This is clear, in the first place, if we define what the true and the false are. To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true; so that he who says of anything that it is, or that it is not, will say either what is true or what is false
> I played this game for a few hours. I enjoyed the straightforward format. There isn't a huge learning curve. The one huge thing that was lacking was control of villagers. They rarely built things when you ask them to. They will do it for the beginning buildings and then seasons go by where they do nothing. It's just a crappy game with no real direction. Not fun for casual gamers.
> Similar to boost::variant, but has no space overhead over a raw pointer, as it relies on the fact that (on x86_64) there are 16 unused bits in a pointer.
//
// Init: initialize the context of a SpookyHash
//
void Init(
uint64_t seed1, // any 64-bit value will do, including 0
uint64_t seed2); // different seeds produce independent hashes
> jemalloc is a general purpose malloc(3) implementation that emphasizes fragmentation avoidance and scalable concurrency support. jemalloc first came into use as the FreeBSD libc allocator in 2005, and since then it has found its way into numerous applications that rely on its predictable behavior. In 2010 jemalloc development efforts broadened to include developer support features such as heap profiling, Valgrind integration, and extensive monitoring/tuning hooks.
I wanted to do a comparison between LZMA and PAQ, but I fucked up the setting, the video I compressed is 230MB and only went down by 400kb with LZMA =/