It's not a duplicate question. Everyone isn't understand. It's not windows console. It's the output screen of visual studio console program. — Nafeeur Rahman3 hours ago
@Ven It's @Xeo's code, ask him :) I presume it's a version of get<> which finds get() using ADL lookup - which is disabled for function template calls where arguments are explicitly specified.
@thecoshman seriously, if you believe Poland has no Internet, white bears roam the streets and you can go there by car from Korea, I reserve the right to call you dumb.
> There isn't yet support for compiling managed code on OS X. The following instructions assume you are on a Windows machine with clones of both the CoreCLR and CoreFX repos and that has a correctly configured environment.
> If you thought our first book was inappropriate for kids, this volume is barely appropriate for adults! More incest, genocide, talking animals, martyrs, abortion, wrestling, magic, and selficide! What would Jesus do
@Xeo I see. For some reason I thought otherwise. Recently I had a situation where I was using std::placeholders:: stuff, and my TU was including both boost.function headers and <functional>; with using namespace std::placeholders I had ambiguities (both were found), while using std::placeholders::_1 resolved the ambiguity. That's probably what tricked me
@AndyProwl I think a targeted using-declaration makes that the first lookup target (after ADL for functions), as opposed to the broaded using-directive which just makes the names available in general.
I'm trying to extend the stuff I wrote earlier to other parts of the JNI and see if I can manage to fit the things like turning JNI-specific types into expected types (e.g. jstrings into std::strings and arrays into w/e collection the client wants) under a single wrapper
and it's fun because I have no idea what I'm doing so at every step I'm like "whoa, that's cool"
@thecoshman if you haven't realized yet, trying to hide your terrible, annoying, racist or otherwise offensive behaviour with "just winding you up" added as an afterthought is hardly working
@BartekBanachewicz Nice. Friends of mine have been there, said it was really nice. If you want a nice summer-time destination I can recommend Jurmala in Latvia, very nice seaside town. Good beer.
I mean ffs why isn't there a damn diagram with nodes of the AST and the edges for parent-child relationships, is it that hard to make one? Or is it so obvious to deduce the structure of the tree from the code? Because I can't. If at least dumping the tree did dump the entire tree
I do like the fact on the latest version of git, you can tell it that you already have a submodule as a 'standalone' repo else where, so no need to clone the entire thing all over again.
> We're going to remove the payment feature from the Skyrim workshop. For anyone who spent money on a mod, we'll be refunding you the complete amount. We talked to the team at Bethesda and they agree.
We've done this because it's clear we didn't understand exactly what we were doing. We've been shipping many features over the years aimed at allowing community creators to receive a share of the rewards, and in the past, they've been received well. It's obvious now that this case is different.
Blaine spent 9 months spying on Ford from a tree outside his window, he filmed 42 hours of video of Ford playing cards and learned his favourite cards, then, before this encounter, he got the top 20 cards Harrison used and put them in all in different fruits in his house, and that my friends is how the trick was done.
> OMG GIT IS AMAZING > Actually, if you'll permit me for a moment, I have some reasons why SVN may be considered superior from a certain point of view. > OMG WHY DO I LISTEN TO YOU I'M PLONKING YOU NOW WHO IS NOW GOING TO JOIN ME IN A CHARACTER ASSASSINATION
Anyway, I need to go. If you so dislike the robot, then do not pin/star that message, and rob him of the pleasure to be congratulated here. I can always text him, if I want to.