He goes on about how bad a C# feature that he decided to refer by a name no one else does, and it doesn't work as he thinks it does. That makes him look like a fool.
but then he has always been very verbose. my students refused to use "Object Oriented Software Construction" because he didn't get to hello world until page 467 or something, anyway, several hundred pages before first working program!
i think betrand is like my mother
she can't ever get to the point, but has to explain everything in ever-diverging tree of digressions first
Still, what I found so very attractive of Eiffel was the DBC ideas
But later on I realized that DBC (Design By Contract) isn't as great as I thought, because there is so much that can't be practically expressed
And that includes not only inefficient expressions, but also the showstopper for DBC in C++
Namely drawing sharp line between public and internal, where for the internal constraints can be temporarily violated (and necessarily so), while not for the public
Maybe somone (e.g. Thorsten) will figure out how to do this cleanly
I'm trying to compare my own implementation with another solution of ProjectEuler problem #1, which uses a list comprehension:
module Progression1 (sumProgressions) where
import Prelude
// Solve using a simple list comprehension
sumProgressions :: Integer -> Integer -> Int...
@robjb Wanna time mine: hg.tumtumtree.me/euler/src/2a7cc3586315/haskell/1.hs? I didn't care for performance at all. And I still don't have a good feel for how the optimizer deals with stuff. It surprises me constantly.
> January 6 1957 – Elvis Presley appears on The Ed Sullivan Show for the 3rd and final time. He is only shown from the waist up, even during the gospel segment, singing "Peace In The Valley". Ed Sullivan describes Elvis thus: "This is a real decent, fine boy. We've never had a pleasanter experience on our show with a big name than we've had with you. You're thoroughly all right."
If you need just one reference counter for several objects, try to do your own ref counter. You're already using tr1, go further and uses std::atomic from C++11.
class File
{
public:
/* Constructors, methods and so on */
private:
static void* data1;
static void* data2;
static std::at...
@DietmarKühl You weren't drunk in Berlin when we left the pub, so if you don't remember the trip, it must have been something else. And do not judge me by my avatar! :)
JFTR, @thecosh, I do need to leave now, so I'll cut this conversation short at this point, and if there are any replies, I will answer them later. I hope that's Ok with you. (If not, feel free to go to the Java/Haskell/C# room instead.)
@RMartinhoFernandes ooooh, that makes a lot more sense. Google defined it as Joint Federation Travelling something or rather. I was very confused to say the least
Help! When I write A::template rebind<T>::other, GCC complains "error: need 'typename' before 'typename A::rebind<E>::other' because 'typename A::rebind<E>' is a dependent scope". But I can't use typename here, because it's the declaration of a base class.
IKEA is a privately held, international home products company that designs and sells ready-to-assemble furniture such as beds and desks, appliances and home accessories. The company is the world's largest furniture retailer. Founded in 1943 by 17-year-old Ingvar Kamprad in Sweden, the company is named as an acronym comprising the initials of the founder's name (Ingvar Kamprad), the farm where he grew up (Elmtaryd), and his home parish (Agunnaryd, in Småland, South Sweden).
The firm is known for the attention it gives to cost control, operational details and continuous product developmen...
Well, I've heard that a "cubic" matrix would exist and I thought: would it be like a magic cube? And more: does it even have a determinant - and other properties? I'm a young student, so... please don't get mad at me if I'm talking something stupid.
Thank you.
P.S. I'm 14 years old. I don't kno...
@thecoshman No need to. You can easily google acronyms by adding, well, "acronym" to the search phrase. I bet googling for "jftr acronym" will have the acronym as the first hit.
@RMartinhoFernandes And if that doesn't help: Are you looking at the right file? In the right folder? Yes, I have been bitten by that. (That was 15 years ago, though. I learned my lesson.)
I went to Ikea to buy a €1.99 lamp and came home with €80 worth of incredible useful stuff I didn't even know I'm missing. Sigh.
@JerryCoffin Huh? How did you get close to a just-hatched yellow jacket? I suppose it was a solitary one? Most of them are not half as dangerous as the swarming ones.
and you know this common belief that bees die when they sting, actually false. Very few bees to die when they sting unlike wasps which almost all do die when they sting. Though, I think wasps are more aggressive, thus more likely to sting you in the first place
I don't think I ever found a stinger in my skin after being stung (and I had my share of those ): I guess human skin (or at least mine) is not thick enough.
> The different species of honey bees are distinguished from all other bee species (and virtually all other Hymenoptera) by the possession of small barbs on the sting, but these barbs are found only in the worker bees.
> The sting and associated venom sac are also modified so as to pull free of the body once lodged (autotomy), and the sting apparatus has its own musculature and ganglion which allow it to keep delivering venom once detached. The worker bee dies after the stinger is torn from its body.
> It is presumed that this complex apparatus, including the barbs on the sting, evolved specifically in response to predation by vertebrates, as the barbs do not usually function (and the sting apparatus does not detach) unless the sting is embedded in fleshy tissue.
Also, wasps do not die when they sting. ("...honey bees are distinguished from all other bee species (and virtually all other Hymenoptera) by the possession of small barbs on the sting...")
enough of this, let's settle this with a nice agreeable sentence. "Creatures that make honey are great; I wish death upon any living creature that stings me"
> They have a lance-like stinger with small barbs and typically sting repeatedly,[1] though occasionally the stinger becomes lodged and pulls free of the wasp's body;
@sbi there is an episode of QI that actually discusses this. If I recall correctly, there are only two species of bee that die when they sting. Though they could be using a rather obtuse definition of wasp
QI also proclaimed that, technically, 'fish' is a nonsensical type of animal; I forget the exact reasoning, but some chap spent years studying fish and concluded there is no such thing as a fish
@RMartinhoFernandes Like I said before going to sleep, I rearranged my keyboard, mouse and screen to actually be able to operate them from my bed... as such, the keyboard was mere centimeters beside me while sleeping :P
> We know how to write bad code: litter our programs with casts, macros, pointers, naked new and deletes, and complicated control structures. Alternatively (or additionally), we could obscure every design decision in a mess of deeply nested abstractions using the latest object-oriented programming and generic programming tricks.
> Then, for good measure, we might complicate our algorithms with interesting special cases. Such code is incomprehensible, unmaintainable, usually inefficient, and not uncommon. — Bjarne Stroustrup
@thecoshman Because it appeared as if belonging to the wasp discussion.