can people please write an answer not down-vote this question because some people have struggles not even mentioning brain disabilities. — CATspellsDOG2 hours ago
Can people please write questions not disrespect the experts on the site who give of their time freely to try to hunt for answerable, on-topic, deserving questions because some people have families not even mentioning jobs. — Lightness Races in Orbit5 secs ago
@Rapptz hmm is that a good thing or not I can't tell
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Nice comment. I initially assumed, thanks to no punctuation, that he wants other people to write him an answer, otherwise he won't understand the subject because of his brain disabilities :)
@AndyProwl If anything it's a little too broad, and the guy is confusing language with library/toolkit (like the horrid "how do I use PHP in JavaScript" which makes no sense because they are languages fuck off) but it's not fundamentally a bad question
@sehe, also, what is incomplete about my reasoning? How hard is it to understand that accessing a global hash table every time you create or delete an object is going to cause overhead? — Taylor23 secs ago
I really need to get us on up-to-date C++ (GCC in general), Boost, JsonCpp, everything. There's just so much to do to get it working, and I'd need to keep the older stuff side-by-side, and I'd need to let our projects be able to know which dependencies to link to which doesn't come for free, and fuck it, and too much else going on
In fact what I need to do is to read some articles about how people usually manage this kind of shit
@AndyProwl embedding JVMs is a thing. Upvotes also rate popularity (if lots of noobs want to know whether this is possible, they can upvote; arguably they should/could favourite instead, but hey)
(My primary concern being backward-compatibility, of course: this is on our dev + build servers, which need to be able to allow dev on and build historical code; we have like ten projects and they all have historical maintenance branches that get used for urgent bugs)
Guess I can't have my cake and eat it too but this really is the issue here
fundamentally
I think I'd have to start mandating that builds of X on the dev server only take place after some manual step, setting the environment up for such-and-such mode
I think I'd have to start mandating that builds of X on the dev server only take place after some manual step, setting the environment up for such-and-such mode
I think you missed the point. @πάνταῥεῖ The point is not that he should somehow come up with code. He should explain how the costs that he describes are not present in the standard implementations (which he just doesn't describe)
we already have this problem creeping in because our most recent project targets an entirely different distro with different libc and whatnot so the build server is useless for that. it's a reyt shame. can't be helped though. maybe if I get a bunch of VMs (including one for this current project) up on the build server and start delegating builds to individual VMs, and enhance the nightlies system to be able to do that automatically.... hmm....
> When we update a snappy application we backup all your data before the update and rollback if the update fails for any reason, so your system is never in an incomplete state. Updates are guaranteed to succeed every time, and users can rollback to previous versions just as efficiently.
You know I can see all your comments, right @Lightness? So I know for a fact that what you just typed here bears no resemblance to the nonsense you were typing in comments on Stack Overflow 20 minutes - 1 hour ago? But hey, go on with your posturing if you're having fun - just be aware I know you're full of it. — Shog9 ♦16 mins ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Me and my colleagues, have developed an OSAL API that covers at least FreeRTOS, a (clumsy) POSIX adaption layer (for FreeRTOS), and Linux properly.
Autoincrement is kinda hard to do on a distributed database
> In 2008, Jeff Atwood and I set out to fix a problem for programmers. At the time, getting answers to programming questions online was super annoying. The answers that we needed were hidden behind paywalls, or buried in thousands of pages of stale forums.
And now they're buried in thousands of duplicated shitty questions and upvoted broken crap
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Didn't get anything so far. But I'm seriously willing to help you with all of my knowdlege about this topic (for free). If you really need an NDA, you can sent me one over and I'll sign it, and send it back.
@AlexM. Days later. This was my Pizza Diavolo I've been talking a while ago (just to let you know, I'm not telling random shit). It appearantly just took some time until the picture was uploaded from my phone :P