@IntermediateHacker IMO, the two are not even close to comparable. Dennis Ritchie is orders of magnitude greater loss than Steve Jobs. He was not only brilliant and thoughtful, but a true gentleman as well.
@IntermediateHacker I don't think there's a lot of actual ignoring going on, but it is much lower key -- well befitting his lower-key, more private personality.
@IntermediateHacker We don't shoot anybody here (though tar and feathers definitely can't be ruled out). In any case, discussing the many shortcomings of Java is quite a popular pass-time.
@IntermediateHacker I don't know the title, but a logic programming course, if I'm not mistaken. As far as teaching it, that seems to be open to more question. They required him to learn it, but appear to have fallen somewhat short of the ideal when it came to actually teaching it.
@DeadMG The fact that silly news services (or what some believe to be silly news services) also provide the great news, does not in any way diminish those news.
@DeadMG Without Dennis Ritchie this whole room would not exist and who knows what we all would be doing today. (That is a lot more than I can say about last week's other famous dead one.) It is still Ok for me to hear that you don't care enough to make this worth a mentioning mainly because it's not like I expect you to suddenly become the reflecting, pondering person you never were.
Didn't say it shouldn't be the tagline because I don't care. I said that it shouldn't be the tagline because it's just repeating what pretty much everyone already knows.
I had flagged this yesterday, asking whether a mod could remove the four close votes it had, lest someone steps in and throws the final one, because I (and others, according to the comments) considered them wrong. Until I left last night none of the mods did that (I suppose I lost flag weight for that), and today the question was indeed closed. Sigh.
I now voted to reopen. Please consider doing the same, it's a shame it got closed, especially after @StackedCrooked changed it.
@BjörnPollex Thanks. If you think so, then please also consider upvoting my latest comment, so that passers-by with enough rep see the reasons for the reopen votes and can join.
@BjörnPollex I am just so sick of those ignorant passersby who earned 98% or their rep in some other popular tag coming by us and voting on subjects they have no business with and no idea of. The guy who threw the last close-vote on that question has a whooping 9 answers in the C++ tag amassing a score of 34 and decides against the comments of two high-rep users in the tag (2k+ and 5k+ scores) which, between them, got 15 upvotes for their comments.
2
This whole close-voting system is so seriously in need of an major overhaul.
@sbi "Annoyingly insensitive or slow to understand." From this is concluded that two meanings could be unintelligent and tactless. The word 'tactless' itself never appeared in the definitions though.
@StackedCrooked Ah, Ok. I can see how you got to the conclusion, but it doesn't fit my feeling for how the word is used. ICBWT, I am a non-native. too, after all.
@BjörnPollex Thanks, but I'm too lazy to google. Or, to make it sound more nicely: I have work to do and cannot google obscure references thrown at me.
@StackedCrooked: PODs are zero-initialized if not initialized explicitly, so the constructor did exactly the same thing the compiler would have done anyway.
@BjörnPollex Is that new in C++11? Because C++98 definitely didn't do it.
@ManofOneWay Please don't. If for no other reasons (like: it's wrong), this would fit very badly with me currently leaning far out of the window on meta regarding serial voting fraud.
@ManofOneWay Anyway, if you wanted to try this only for scientific interest: I am pretty sure that, should you cast ten upvotes on unrelated answers of the same user within, say, 5mins, without voting for other users in between, the algorithm would pick this up. Start slacking some of these parameters and I wouldn't be so sure anymore. (I am pretty sure, though, that some of them can be slacked somewhat.)
To default-initialize an object of type T means:
— if T is a non-POD class type (clause 9), the default constructor for T is called (and the initialization is
ill-formed if T has no accessible default constructor);
— if T is an array type, each element is default-initialized;
— otherwise, the object is zero-initialized.
@ManofOneWay: If X is a POD-type the memory-layout is guaranteed to be identical to that of C, meaning you can pass it into a C-library, and it will work just like it was called from C-code.
@ManofOneWay: A POD is an aggregate, and that is defined as: *An aggregate is an array or a class (clause 9) with no user-declared constructors (12.1), no private or protected non-static data members (clause 11), no base classes (clause 10), and no virtual functions (10.3).*
This FAQ is about Aggregates and POD's and covers the following material:
What are Aggregates?
What are POD's (Plain Old Data)?
How are they related?
How and why are they special?
What changes for C++11?
However C++ decided to not specify how ordered the different accesses are relative to each other to give levy to compilers (quite usual when it comes to C and C++ Standards).
Please have a look at my comment to Jeff's answer to this question. This is the outcome of me combing meta because I was disgruntled about the close voting system. (Jeff's answer is all the way at the bottom, BTW.)
Yes. Hit Ctrl-R then ". If you have literal control characters in what you have yanked, use Ctrl-R, Ctrl-O, ".
Here is an explanation of what you can do with registers. What you can do with registers is extraordinary, and once you know how to use them you cannot live without them.
Vim stores wh...
Possible Duplicate:
Namespace + functions versus static methods on a class
I want to group similar functions togther. I can do it one of two ways. To me they are just syntactical differences...in the end it does not matter. Is this view accurate?
Namespace:
namespace util
{
vo...