You're quite unlikely to do better implementing the basics of mpi yourself. You're unlikely to do better than the gmp/mpfr backends, of course. Giving those a shot should certainly not prompt a sad-face-smiley. You can use the boost::multiprecision::number<> interface for all three of them. You can only win! — sehe56 secs ago
@VillasV So, it's an ironic library for Asian markets? Bad pun alert
@Elyse deleting only invalidates references/iterators that point directly to the deleted nodes/elements
(Although, in thread safety, deletions are mutations, and need to be synchronized)
@VillasV As I said before: You wrote "it is the true answer to the question", it may be a true answer, but it isn't "the" true answer, and it shouldn't - on a basis of whether or not it provides a valid answer - be accepted
@Columbo I think that's quite subjective. You're making it into a moralistic issue, and that's usually decided by "the community" on SO. Votes will tell
@sehe As I said before, I don't care for this one anyway, and the last time I got pissed off by an unfair accept I actually got a gold badge, so whatever :D
I voted on yours, because I vote in the thing that has more value. But I think its fine if the OP keep the other one as accepted. I see non-accepted answers having more votes all the time, and I usually pay more attention to them.
@sehe We're here to build and improve on a site that will help professional programmers get excellent answers quickly. A vital part of that is to ensure that good answers go top by responsible voting and accepting. Too often, that isn't the case, I'm afraid.
If the most voted answer will decide the final answer, i.e. the community and not the OP, then the whole point of having an "accepted answer" is useless.
@Columbo We can already downvote the accepted answers. And we can upvote the best. I don't know what else we need (overruling the OPs accept is changing the meaning, and there's no way I can redefine "acceptance" to mean what it then means)
@sehe true, but that could be replaced by "OP's upvote gives 25 rep instead" or something like that. What I mean is that upvote and acceptance have different purposes
You can't portably take the address of member functions of standard library classes. The standard allows implementations to alter their signatures to their hearts' content as long as ordinary calls have the correct behavior. — T.C.33 mins ago
One doesn't have to look around SO very long before you find questions with accepted answers that are either dated to the point of being deprecated, or which were just flat-out wrong even in their own time.
Often, there will be another, correct answer, and many times this answer has been upvote...
@sehe [member.functions]/2. Footnote 188 is on point: "188) Hence, the address of a member function of a class in the C++ standard library has an unspecified type." — Columbo2 mins ago
@Borgleader You can do it offline, but that'd probably require you to use the SD in another machine (can you?)
This is a major problem for outdated accepted answers. For example, super long, convoluted answers for low versions of Java are always on top when there's a one-liner in Java 7. Community votes usually end up supporting the more recent versions of Java, but users still see a 20-line solution from Java 3 on top, and I can imagine that a lot of new/anonymous users don't even bother scrolling down... — Chris CireficeJan 15 at 2:50
Apparently that's because of this > An implementation may declare additional non-virtual member function signatures within a class: — by adding arguments with default values to a member function signature. But I can't see the relation.
@sehe Another linux machine? Well technically I have a micro-sd to usb adaptor so I could plug it into my desktop. Idk if the Ubuntu VM will see it or not though
If you represent a timestamp using the number of milliseconds since the Unix epoch as a 64-bit signed integer, what's the maximum timestamp you can represent?
William Bruce Davis (born January 13, 1938) is a Canadian actor and director, best known for his role as The Smoking Man on The X-Files. Besides appearing in many TV programs and movies, Davis founded his own acting school, the William Davis Centre for Actors Study. In his personal life, Davis is an avid water-skier, lectures on skepticism at events such as the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry's CSICon, and advocates for action on climate change. In 2011 Davis published his memoir, Where There’s Smoke .... The Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man.
== Early lifeEdit ==
Davis was born in Toron...