So the progress of each of the threads is not deterministic. But once something joins, it is deterministic. If a single thread dies, it is independent of the other threads.
You just know that each thread will do it's block of work, and then return, and you take the results of each thread in the order you need, not the order they complete.
Have you tried talking to the local USB driver Shaman? I heard there are some really good ones. I once had a malfunctioning USB drive and the shaman sacrificed a goat and cut a pineapple open and the USB started working straight away! — Benjamin Gruenbaum1 min ago
because it's not just a few hours, the games are not worth playing bar the amusement of seeing what you did in the time (and even that is only really interesting for those involved), it floods the lounge with that shite all day excluding others from dropping in and having a chat about their own things.
@jalf yes, the guy who was responding to someone with something related to what they said is complaining about this room being hijacked for an event that will make it nearly impossible for normal use to be carried out.
@thecoshman I guess so? I've never heard of anyone with that name. What do you mean? Who's called yak, and why would it be especially weird to Scandinavians?
There is a widely-used and obvious counter-example to the idea that all platforms use a single root filesystem. Therefore, the obvious way to make a cross-platform library for working with filesystems is to assume a single root.
The real problem is, you can only take the address when the compiler has seen a definition (and no, the declaration with an inline initialization expression does not count as a definition). Scott's new book explains it in full (nice) detail. I think it was in Item 32. — sehe37 secs ago
Ok. Maybe I try to get access to that book. To summarize: you say that g++ compiles it although the definition is missing but that's not standard, right?
@sehe The real trick here is to remember that the exception stack is a thread-local global. So effectively, all implementations implemented thread_local for as long as they supported multi-threaded exceptions. It just wasn't exposed properly to the user so they could make better use of it.
> In C++, if an initializer is present for a thread-local variable, it must be a constant-expression, as defined in 5.19.2 of the ANSI/ISO C++ standard.
@sehe It's used as a response to remove fake certificates. I wouldn't think it's unethical. A less experienced user might panic and will choose not to delete it. He might be a victim of man-in-the-middle attacks. Notifications might be used to let the user know what's happening and backups can be made of the deleted certificates. The ethical conclusion is drawn from the purpose of the end result software, not the action of deleting certificates. — Sebastian-Laurenţiu Plesciuc5 mins ago
Hey guys, sorry for getting in the middle. But if any of you are geeks who are really interested in science as a whole, check out this new Area51 proposal Scientific Imagination, and how it is supposed to be like.