bacteria aren't the main concern only as long as our antibiotic arsenal remains stocked.
if we run out of effective antibiotics, we're back to square one when it comes to dealing with infectious and contagious bacterial infections, which would be very, very bad.
as near as I can determine, antibiotic resistance is a critical problem because we depend on them almost entirely to control bacterial infections and they're all becoming worthless.
as for "we don't possess anything that effectively fights except certain drugs" you're implying there's some alternative: what alternative would you rather have?
for example, lots of antibiotic resistant pathogens evolved in farm animals when developed farmers fed all their livestock antibiotics to boost growth, or when the antibiotics factories in India dumped waste into the river so that the whole thing was flooded with them
I honestly believe that this will be the first major problem of many that the technologically-advanced human societies will encounter as they use their technology with utter infantile ignorance
@qwr: That I hate the US has nothing to do with it; my problem right now is that you jumped into "FDA" assuming that everybody you're talking to is an American, or that "FDA" is a household name for everybody, because America rules the world, right? Wrong
I mean, there's no question that our climate was changing a little with or without our intervention, but we've made it much worse with our reckless overreliance on fossil fuels.
@PMF Please next time do not comment my answers. If you know the right direction then simply describe it in your own answer. — Vlad from MoscowMar 23 at 21:54
The statement is true in two different senses. As Sabyasachi shows, the intended sense that $2^{42}$ times the thickness of a sheet of paper is greater than the distance to the moon is correct. In the spirit of achille hui's comment, the sentence is an implication with a false antecendent, so i...
@qwr In a sense, yes. Both are containers; both contain objects; lists may contain duplicates whereas sets do not. In terms of "theory" they differ in more ways than that, as they do in terms of implementation, and in mathematics. But if you're just looking at it at the basic "what can I do with this?" level, then, yes.
noob question, why when i try to include pthreads i get an error of "no such file or directory" for #include <sched.h>, c++ use relative paths? how do you usually include an external util?
In C++03, std::exception has a destructor that is declared such that no exceptions can be thrown out of it (a compilation error will be caused instead).
When you derive from such a type, your own destructor must have the same restriction:
virtual BadJumbleException::~BadJumbleException() throw(...
@LightnessRacesinOrbit All Standard types do not throw on destruction. I believe there's a couple of minority exceptions like maybe std::thread, but certainly not containers exceptions and such.
I'm not actually sure that C++03 had any such rule about throw specs, and even if it did, I'd be surprised if the destructor was actually marked nothrow.
it's probably just a C++11 rule.
which would explain his different projects, different results.
I'm confident about the situation in C++03; it was the changes in C++11 I wasn't sure about. And since my conclusion that he was lying about compiling as C++11 hinged on those changes... :)
I'm trying to get a bitmap image of my computer and to send it continually to the computer that I'm working on.
What's the lightest image format that saves quality and transmission speed that I can use to deal this, please?
The whole day, waiting for a lone upvote on many, hard-work high-maintenance boost questions... Then - come back after a night's rehearsal, and - bam - +85. How does that work
The capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) is the largest rodent in the world, followed by the beaver, porcupine, and mara. Its closest relatives are guinea pigs and rock cavies, and it is more distantly related to the agouti, chinchillas, and the coypu. Native to South America, the capybara inhabits savannas and dense forests and lives near bodies of water. It is a highly social species and can be found in groups as large as 100 individuals, but usually lives in groups of 10–20 individuals. The capybara is not a threatened species, though it is hunted for its meat and hide and also for a...