@bamboon 150 means you did something to be involved, so you know how asking and answering works. So they're hoping you at least know how moderation will benefit the site.
@bamboon It means, what do you do when the community as a whole fails to resolve a problem. You call on a more respected member of the community to resolve the debate, or address issues faster.
"storms into the room, actively searches the room's history for words and phrases he finds offensive and then goes on a rampage flagging a bunch of old messages." that alone isn't necessarily bad
well, I probably don't mind using the word "fuck" because I say it and other people don't get offended, and when other people say it, I don't get offended
and I'm not going to micromanage every exception to that rule
@Fanael Basically, "everybody blocked" was the state of the chat before the chat was created. If it went back to that state, I would miss it. If you wouldn't, then what are you doing here?
FWIW, I don't think you're moderator material @Johannes, what with you pranking all the time. But then it's not as if that would be a bad thing to say about someone. I don't consider myself moderator material either.
@DeadMG I'm not sure if I'm meant to unveil that for you, but your Nigerian prince is a fake. I know, because I got mails from the real one, and he told me all about it.
Do I think certain sexual preferences are detrimental to the health of society? Yes I do, and I don't apologize for that. Do I think legal marriage issues are something to be bothered with? Not really. IMO, remove the term marriage and there's no sanctity of concept in the legal realm anymore. Remove the concept of legal unions, and let anyone who's on a living will visit a terminal patient.
@sbi: "In connection with the moderator elections, we will be holding a Town Hall Chat session with the candidates. This will be an opportunity for members of the community to pose questions to the candidates on the topic of moderation. Participation is completely voluntary. I am working with the candidates to find a time that allows the most participation."
Concurrency and Parallelism panel at C++ and Beyond 2011: http://channel9.msdn.com/Shows/Going+Deep/CB-2011-Panel-Herb-Sutter-Andrei-Alexandrescu-and-Scott-Meyers-Concurrency-and-Parallelism
@Xaade Basically, I agree with that, though grudgingly.
The other day my teenage daughter looked over my shoulder, and someone posted such a pic. She was a bit baffled about me being somewhere on the net where they post pictures of young girls too poor to buy their clothes, so I had to explain to her that the C++ chat is full of young, horny males, and that nothing will stop them from discussing sex and posting pictures. Sigh. I hope she understood. I am divorced from her mother, and such issues can bring up all kinds of trouble...
Oh, that and I really, really, really don't like to watch 24 year old girls that are setup to seduce. I am passed that age where all you value is firm breasts.
@sbi: I do understand the problem with inline pics. Why not add a guideline to the newbie FAQS which says to post images just paste link to the image instead of posting it inline, whoever wants to can click and see it.
@Als I'm sure the latest edition of The C++ Programming Language will discuss them (but I haven't checked). Also, Effective C++ (3rd) has item 17, but offhand I dunno how extensive that is.
@vivek size_t == dd.length() here which is 9 , and i provided pos2 as dd.find("F") which is 4 , and str to be inserted is dd (goodFella) -> good*Fella.... <-the string from star point should be of lenth 9 , isn't the case?
@bamboon My reply was absolutely serious. Except for when you want to flush the output stream (and you're not about to read from a tied input stream), why use std::endl?
@bamboon If you want code to look nice, why use C++? Just write it as a poem and let some human translate it. You resort to C++ when you want both high levels of abstraction and being "close to the metal", not if you want nice looking code.
@Als No, they don't. We still use C strings, the built-in types we got from C, and tons of other stuff. Heck, 60% of C++ is C, so how can you not use C when doing C++? We only fret about using unsafe stuff from the C++ std lib.
@sbi i think it should look nice because then it is easier to read and understand, I thought that is what it is all about. Havent you been the one who promoted to write std:: everytime and quoted meyers about not hestitating from writing 5 letters more. I really dont get your respond, I am the last one who wanted to write a poem, all I wanna do is learn and understand.
'\n' is C++' standard way of inserting a newline into a string or stream or whatever. If you want a newline, you want '\n', period. If you want a newline, followed by flushing the stream, use std::endl, otherwise don't.
@bamboon If you want a newline, followed by flushing the stream, I'm all for using std:: in front of endl. If you want only the newline, it's spelled '\n'.
That would be okay if you were to read or modify the positions of the matrix, however you are going to modify the matrix itself. In your example, you'll need to create another matrix.
So, you need to modify the formal parameter of transpose to:
void transpose(float*** array, int rows, int colum...