@jalf: You missed the point. Look at the other screenshot. Also, not that I reduced the screen capacity so the sshot was less bulky, I grouped my tabs (32+ now) and the preview bar is dismissed/summoned with a doubleclick
I don't think I have much to contribute here. I've said why I think the feeds offer negative value (but a smaller negative when they're low-volume and high quality).
moving on from the thrown bottles, I think we can at least agree that the current feeds are not really that annoying due to the low volume of traffic. Weather or not they are actually worth keeping is another matter.
Oh, and I see no reason to believe that automated posts are going to spark noticeably more discussion, compared to people discovering interesting posts themselves, and posting them here
I feel like the spanish inquisition in Monty Python now
for being unable to enumerate the points I tried to make
@sbi yeah, I figured. But I don't think I've overlooked any arguments either. I know you've said that you believe the automated feed posts are going to spark much more discussion, but do we have any evidence to support this either way? It's hard to discuss opinion
@DeadMG well, seeming as said I was going to de-star, I would have appreciate it would ask me which ones to remove. Fair enough I might have got a bit over zealous. I would prefer to have that first one of the four back as well, if you would be so kind.
@thecoshman: not really. It comes down to egos getting hurt and some people accidentally getting caught up in arguments on the side. It is human, but it had very little to with <strike>overlooking</strike> <strike>feeds</strike>
:) Thanks. I've never been into the chat, and don't want to make a jacass of myself, because there's already a question out there. I think the answer is prolly just that you simply can't do it.
The better way is
begin(container)
end(container)
because it's more extensible. For example, template argument deduction can be used to determine the size of a static array and hence begin(my_static_array) and end(my_static_array) will work.
More generally, you can add overloads/specialisatio...
I hate Visual Studio. If you define only a prefix increment, you can still use postfix increment, which will then silently (well, with a warning) call the prefix version. How stupid is that? I want sane C++ compilers to reject non-conforming code!
@FredOverflow So... with using std::begin, begin can come from either std::begin, or from a custom, freebegin() function in the same namespace as the argument?
When would the latter ever make sense? Legacy code?
@thecoshman Ah, I see, you want to adapt the left-side border! Mine does have a history, BTW. I just pressed Ctrl+Z for twenty seconds and it took me back all the way to one of my first messages here today.
@KerrekSB When you have a container-like class template that you want to provide overloads of begin() and end() for, which you aren't allowed to because they are in the std namespace?
@KerrekSB You know, the STL only came into this language 15 years ago. Some of us have a history from before that, and many companies have code from then. (And what about all the proprietary libs out there? Don't MFC and Qt come with their own — STL-incompatible, of course — containers?)
Imagine that were true in real life: You have collection vans driving around, and every time they come past you, you have to give them one letter of reference of a person who knows you, or you'll be collected.
@thecoshman Cringe? Are you trying to sneak in an advert or are you really not aware of the difference between semantic web and Symantec Corp.? Either way, that message could harm your reputation as a semi-smart troll on the interwebs :)
@KerrekSB I know of it. And tried using it (I remember it was possible). But I went with libjack after the initial reconaissance
Is there any way to do something different in the object's constructor when constructing a const object than when you are constructing a non-const object
@FredOverflow You found a good use-case for newfangled language D
@TonyTheLion Boost Mpl has complete coverage for compile-time strings (up to compiler limits) IIRC, complete with simple algos. Most of the fun in that goes away with user-defined string literals from C++11 IMO (but it appears to have ephemeral support ony in gcc 4.7 trunk nowadays)
How much information is copied/shared when I assign one array variable to another array variable?
int[] a = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9];
int[] b = a;
a[0] = 42;
writefln("%s %s", a[0], b[0]); // 42 42
Apparently, a and b share the same payload, because 42 is printed twice.
a ~= 10;
write...
@sbi +1 on the former (D), 0.032% chance on the second. I think that Alexandrescu is often under-credited for starting the template meta-programming revolution. He is right in there between D. Vandervoorde and Scott Meyers, in my view. I'd certainly say that without that particular revolution, C++11 would not exist.
@thecoshman You certainly need to learn a lot more about your spell checker