still better than the meta chat, the first time I was there after they split meta, I was like 'omg horror!' - they use ... you know the tint of blue that are usually put in horror movies
@Rapptz Once in a while I get a score of 2 or 3 (always on the bottom row). I'm pretty sure it's a matter of just getting bored and hurrying too much at the end though.
@Borgleader Okay, so you're not color-blind after all. You have no real excuse left--you obviously lack taste in colors. :-)
@Rapptz A good (calibrated) monitor certainly helps, but some people (especially quite a few men) just don't perceive fine gradations in color very well.
@cyberspace009 That's telling about how you're trying to use them, not how you defined them.
user457812
Even had Woot contacting me for some reason. Probably because I half-filled-out an application then went "there's not a chance in hell" and dropped it.
@cyberspace009 Most obvious possibility would be that you've defined setOfWalls as an array smaller than total_tiles. Or perhaps you've defined it as an uninitialized pointer.
Without seeing code, it's impossible to make a more informed guess though (and this really isn't the place for debugging defective code in any case).
it was dumb: "std::array<SDL_Rect, total_tiles> setOfWalls;" was causing an exception because the for loop : "for(int i = 0; i <= total_tiles; i++)" was using the total_tiles variable.
We are building a product that has a migration path for BPMN 2.0 but does not - internally, use BPMN. We believe checklists are much easier to use in real-time workflows than flowcharts. Is still however, has rules/triggers/conditionals and more - so it's a tool that effectively models processes ...
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This guy has two answers (both promoting his product).
I've been playing with the new review system for a few days now and I've noticed something about the "Low Quality Posts" section.
It seems that >95% of the posts that I get already have comments left by other reviewers. So nearly everything that I see has already been reviewed (multiple times) b...
Swift logic : Type inference - compiler crash, specialize the generic yourself: "Cannot explicitly specialize a generic function" oh how much I hate you :D
Not so far I discovered, that I completely have no clue about nature of std::vector.
Let me explain:
Vector is growable, right? That means, inside it must somehow allocate/reallocate memory dynamically. Something like this:
class vector {
private:
int *data;
};
Okay. But such definition ...
You're not the only person who I tend to auto-bind dupe votes for. There's a number of other users in smaller tags which I would consider an expert, but they don't have dupe hammers.
> The fairy tale [i.e. hansel & gretel] may have originated in the medieval period of the Great Famine (1315–1321), which caused people to do some desperate deeds like abandoning young children to fend for themselves, or even resorting to cannibalism.
I think fairy tales are the best kind of literature we've ever produced; before being written, most are built up in time by legends coming from normal people
with its constant and naive good vs evil approach with good winning all the time, they look like a collective effort to escape what's not likeable in the world
random_sample selects k random elements from a given sequence, and random_choice returns an iterator pointing to a random element from a given sequence
@nightcracker You're sure about that? if (std::uniform_int_distribution<diff_t>(0, i)(g) == 0) result = first; seems biased towards first elements. Unless, of course, this is what you want to do. Either way, your input shouldn't be a input iterator, but forward iterator.
@Zeta good point about the forward iterator, but the distribution is correct
@Zeta the first element gets selected automatically, the second element has a 1/2 chance of replacing, the third a 1/3rd, fourth 1/4th, this gives every element a 1/n chance to be chosen
@nightcracker Why not use properly formatted comments at the point of declaration, then your headers are fully documented for those who enjoy muff source diving and you can generate that friendly stuff without any effort at all?
I header dive, typically, and when that paragraph is not there for a function I want to use, naming pre- and post-conditions, I want to mutilate the author
Baffles me how supposéd experts in this room can be so derpy
if there was an "automated" tool that would pull out declarations from my C++ files and allows me to annotate them IN SEPERATE DOCUMENTATION FILES I might consider using it
all I want from a documentation tool is automagically cross-linkifying and structuring MANUALLY WRITTEN DOCS IN SEPERATE DOC FILES in a way that turns it into usable HTML docs
if you remove the bloat, simplify the syntax and add a bit of sugar to structure methods/classes/namespaces/modules/whatever for various languages it's pretty much perfect
In file included from C:\Program Files\mingw64\x86_64-w64-mingw32\include\c++\iosfwd:38: C:\Program Files\mingw64\x86_64-w64-mingw32\include\c++\bits/stringfwd.h:73:33: error: use of undeclared identifier 'char16_t' template<> struct char_traits<char16_t>;