That one dwarf killed ninety-something out of two hundred dwarves, including all the other members of the militia, and didn't get a single scratch. Only stopped when he fell from exhaustion, and then one of the miners spent a long time hitting his head with a pick until somehow she bashed the fucker's head in. By that point everyone had lost some relative or friend, most of them multiple and fights broke out between everyone else. When things calmed down there were three left.
@Ell The last drop was losing his wife during a werezebra attack. He had previously lost both his mother and father to zombies, and some friends to various other nasties. The fortress had been under siege continuously for over two years, and was raided by beasts rather often, even during that two year zombie siege (the zombies always managed to beat any beasts that showed up).
@BenjaminGruenbaum and we can no longer have fun "You have been kicked from Lounge<C++>, this room is for discussing 'the robot lost his keys and we are all laughing at him'"... no yeah, tha works well.
> I caught a Weremonkey early on during my fort's life and I was trying to get a weremonkey army started when some Snake Man man showed up and got randomly caged. When the next full moon came about, I realized the Snake Man was a Weremammoth and abandoned my efforts towards making a weremonkey army and started working on a weremammoth army. Here are some of the stuff I found out doing this.
@thecoshman The fact that the "K" is pronounced in "Knuth" immediately legitimizes pronouncing any and all "K"s that some might think should be silent.
@Puppy If you can transmit the curse in a half-controlled manner, you get an army of what are probably the most powerful dwarves anyone ever had in a vanilla game.
did you know that there are now so many biology papers, they had to use a supercomputer to determine if they indicated a link between a specific gene and a certain condition?
there's vastly more information available than any human could possibly process in their lifetime.
@Xeo It's not just a PID. There's an image name, there's a working set of 26MB, and more importantly, there's a system-wide mutex open for single-instancing, so I can't launch it again.
Perhaps you could say what this all does. Win32 does have sockets, but they're not named (that would be Named Pipes, akin to UNIX domain sockets). Also, the line connect(notifier, SIGNAL(activate(int)), ... won't mean much to Asio experts that don't know too much about Qt. Perhaps you can explain what you want to achieve rather than to pose impossible "translate this code for me" riddles with no context? — sehe7 secs ago
Too harsh?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Different session/windowstation (i.e. privilege separation)?
@R.MartinhoFernandes room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: LIVE: The dead talk amongst us, Bartek reveals what it's like to come back! [c++] [c++11] [c++14] [c++-faq]
> You define a good flight by negatives: you didn't get hijacked, you didn't crash, you didn't throw up, you weren't late, you weren't nauseated by the food. So you are grateful. — Paul Theroux
Note: This answer is written with the assumption that the CPUs being compared consist of commercially-available Intel, AMD, and ARM-based SoCs from approximately 2006 to 2015. Any set of comparison measurements will be invalid given a wide enough scope; I wanted to provide a very specific an...
> Also Linux is quite often the first priority for developers of open source tools and windows support is sometimes an after thought. You’re obviously interested in open source or you wouldn’t be here – so I’m telling you to take the plunge, go all in, close this tab and grab an image of Ubuntu (or Mint if you want to be just like me :p ) and become enlightened!