@R.MartinhoFernandes well, I'll grant that you shouldn't have a cable running up to your head unit. Also, not got any transistors that you can use for a h-bridge?
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah, well then you probably should have said you were getting a h-bridge IC to use as a transistor bank... which can't you get anyway?
> A must for travelers, the MM 550-X TRAVEL comes with Sennheiser’s TalkThrough™ function, which lets you speak to a friend or flight attendant without removing the headset.
they have a butan you press if you want to hear the surroundings :D
Overloaded functions don't play well with being used as function pointers in generic contexts. Simplest solution since you're using VS2010: Use a lambda. std::transform(vec.begin(), vec.end(), vec.begin(), [&](int i){ return abs(dpi-i); }); — XeoOct 16 '12 at 13:27
amazing. Thanks @Xeo from 2012.
could I force a decay in a reasonable way instead?
As always, with delightfully underspecified questions like this, there's not a lot more than just showing "a way" to do "a thing". In this case, I used Boost Spirit (because you mentioned it):
Parsing into flat containers
#include <boost/spirit/include/qi.hpp>
#include <boost/fusion/adapted.hpp>...
Seems a bit weird though. iterator_traits was meant for supporting pointers, what does container_traits gain over typename Cont::value_type (for example)?
Yes, this appears to be related to GCC bug 53119. It goes away if you change the C declaration to {{0}}. Your options are:
Ignore the warning.
Manipulate the C code after generation to have {{0}} instead of {0} on that line using sed or the like.
Declare the array extern in Vala, and write the ...
I designed an RPG without classes once, and the most striking thing I realised was that the players were completely lost in the amount of choice that gave them.
Though I cannot say how much of that was conditioning from decades of playing games with strict class systems, and how much was a direct consequence of the amount of choice.
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, I agree it's unintuitive, contradicts itself and is a pain to use overall. I don't think your own stdlib will help much though.
@AlexM. It removed the stuff that never made sense, and which encouraged you to play the game in the least fun ways. It takes a weird kind of "hardcore" fan to be opposed to that
Dungeons & Dragons: Dragonshard is a real-time strategy role-playing video game, developed for Microsoft Windows by Liquid Entertainment and published by Atari in 2005. It takes place in Eberron, one of the official Dungeons & Dragons campaign settings. The game combines elements of traditional real-time strategy gameplay with role-playing elements such as hero units and questing. Dragonshard includes two single player campaigns, single player skirmish maps and multiplayer support. The single player campaign follows the struggles of three competing factions to gain control of a magical artifact...
maps had two levels; the surface was for RTS action, the underground was for dungeon crawling
> It puts us in handcuffs that prevent us from going overboard and ending up with funky grammar rules like some other dynamic languages that will go unnamed, such as Perl.