Argh. WordPress has added nags & annoyances to get people to pay for their services. Wasted much time just removing linebreaks in my HTML, because it is apparently no longer possible to post raw HTML. The HTML linebreaks end up as paragraphs.
The Windows console subsystem has a host of Unicode-related bugs. And standard Windows programs such as more (not to mention the C# 4.0 compiler csc) just crash when they’re run from a console window with UTF-8 as active codepage, perplexingly claiming that they’re out of memory. On top of that the C++ runtime libraries of [...]
Well, they already give you a detailed algorithm. And it doesn't seem to be very good, or to match the problem description, since they specify to output both bytes even though they're equal.
Really, ignore this paper, read the definition of RLE, and Just Do It.
So you told us it's "not for your class," but since we're doing your friend's homework for you, we still need to obey the rules of doing homework? No thanks.
@Potatoswatter Fair enough. I was simply saying "I'm not cheating on hw by asking for help". I understand if you don't want to be limited by those rules though. I'm with you on that.
@Potatoswatter Except that the input file on his website includes a bunch of numbers.
@Moshe Well… my advice to you is that life is too short, especially the few years of youthful learning you're in now, to worry about idiotic TA's and their inability to write coherent assignments.
> My fiance wants me to make it so that the thermostat turns on when she says ‘I’m hot’ or ‘I’m cold — Hacking Siri
Well, I can see that a couple of problems which can be caused by this. (Like bedroom gymnastics being canceled due to decreasing temperature making it impractical.)
Nothing is worse than half-intelligence. I'd much rather have a really dumb device than a half-intelligent one.
@RMartinhoFernandes I always have many tabs open. And when I say many, I mean a three digit number. This is FF, and I find it hard to manage so many tabs without a mouse.
> Vim "Vi IMproved" has yet more features than vi, including (scriptable) syntax highlighting, mouse support, graphical versions, visual mode, many new editing commands and a large amount of extension in the area of ex commands. Vim is included with almost every Linux distribution (and is also shipped with every copy of Apple Mac OS X).
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh yeah, "yet more features", "many new editing commands", "and a large amount of extension in the area of ex commands" — that's certainly what I always wanted of vi.
When I need to do a complex editing job I stop using the IDE and switch to Vim. I used to a keyboard shortcut in Visual Studio that launched the current file in Vim. (Not anymore because I'm now mostly working on Mac.)
template<typename T>
void exchange(std::vector<T>* a, std::vector<T>* b) what does this function is supposed to do?
{
T* p = &a[0];
T* q = &b[0];
for (size_t k = a->size(); --k != 0; ) {
exchange(p++, q++);
}
}
template<typename T>
void exchange(std::vector<T>* a, std::vector<T>* b) what does this function is supposed to do?
{
T* p = &a[0];
T* q = &b[0];
for (size_t k = a->size(); --k != 0; ) {
exchange(*p++, *q++);// <<
}
}
what happens if you pass two arrays then? Will it not call the pointer version? I don't think the vector version is very good regardless of whether it uses pointers or references.