> Job applications to CERN climbed by 50 percent on the day of the press conference. Who wouldn't want to work where they make neutrinos that break the speed limit? — About neutrinos being faster than light
@daknøk Btw I just learned that you can hide files from Finder with setfile -a V my_file. This is very helpful for clearing out visual clutter from Finder window.
The only things that I have that are related to programming are ~/Documents/Programmeren (programming) and ~/Documents/Boeken (books). I sometimes put things on ~/Desktop if I feel like they are important.
@KillianDS maybe it's fine. But in my actual projects I am using upper-camel case for directory names and they all have a "3rdParty" directory. So I'd have to write it lowercase or with-case depending on context.
I don't really care about the grayness. It looks like it was designed for Win95, but I can live with it. But those bits and pieces of ALL UPPERCASE look ridiculous
When I understood variadic templates and perfect forwarding, I immedately envisioned emplace_back in my head and wanted to propose it, but then I discovered it was already invented by someone else :(
@sehe I knew what it does, I simply was confused a second because I was looking for a push_back that inserts multiple elements and I saw the variadic templated emplace_back and didn't think twice ;)
it looks like Metro would look if a blind programmer was told to reskin a legacy Win32 app to look Metro-ey, and if he was given 90 minutes to do it in
@daknøk Yes. Have you seen any actual Metro apps? ;)
@daknøk sure, if the inspiration was verbal. As in "hey, someone told me they have this cool new style called "Metro". It's all about using ALL-CAPS text and removing all the color. We should try that"
If I checkout my source code and want to do an out-of-source build then I have to put the build directory in the parent path of my repository where it sits awkwardly among checkouts of other repositories.
hi guys, another answerer copied and pasted my 1 year old answer to his answer - although the critical part is just one line of command and he pasted it-. Now he gets all the reps, as his is the selected one. Am I being childish by complaining about this?
jalf, I already left respective comment under his post. But I don't know if it is ok to copy paste another answer. So I joined a chatroom to get your opinions. What is wrong with this?
anyway, if he just copied a single line, I don't really see the big deal. That's pretty much how SO works. The explanations matter. If he provided a better explanation of why and how that one-line command works than you did, then my gut feeling is that he deserves the rep
@Comptrol nothing. But you asked if it was childish to complain about it (to us, I assumed)
You didn't ask if it was childish to get our opinions ;)
I think it's even in the FAQ. Don't just raw copy-paste and post that as an answer, but feel free to take the useful parts from other answers and improve on them
and he shows the command to solve the problem, but he also has a detailed explanation of what's going on, and why the command solves the problem. You don't. That means that his answer is, as it is right now, better than yours
@Comptrol You don't know that he "used your answer", and there is no time limit on improving your answer. Why shouldn't he improve his answer after 1.5 years?
And even if he did copy/paste it from your answer, so what? I've done the same before. If I needed to add a snippet of code to my answer, and another answer already contains it, then sure, I could type it in myself, because I know what the code should be, but it's faster to copy it from the other answer.
@Comptrol Strictly speaking, I don't think there's a rule against it. But it's a balancing act. Copying complete answers verbatim is pretty bad form. Copying a couple of words that you could have written yourself, just to save a second or two, probably won't upset many people
@Comptrol no, the point is that what he allegedly "copied" is such a simple command that he could have just as well copied it from the git manual. Or typed it in himself
What if, for the sake of argument, he had found that command by searching for solutions to the problem on SO, and come across your answer? It would be an answer to the problem he was faced with, so he'd be allowed to use it
DeadMG, I gather my answer's point was higher than his. when I checked his reputation history, he gained a lot of reputation after updating his answer, to the one containing my answer
@Comptrol You're worrying too much about the rep :) The answer as it stands now is a good answer that helps people and that's really The Goal here. Rep is just a nice side feature.
Ninefingers, you are right too. I was just making some explanations to DeadMG's last answer
as I said. I haven't encountered such a usage before, and joined here to get some experienced one's ideas on it. Thanks a lot to you - especially to @jalf.
fwiw, I, too, find many "weird features" in SO, like the questioner answering his own question (sometimes immediately) - but imho, no need to dwell on it...
no probs. Like the others said, don't worry too much about rep. It's just a number.
And when you answer, try to bring in your own explanation as well. People can't really copy that without looking like complete idiots, and it adds a lot of vaiue to your answer
@IntermediateHacker I'd probably still bother as long as there were votes, without them you wouldn't be able to tell whether others thought your answers were any good
but I guess the rep encourages people to come back
hmm... ...thought std::atomic<bool> would be useful, but looks like I'll still have to throw a condition variable in there if I don't want one thread to be sitting on a spin-lock... (doing rubber-ducky debugging out loud)
@DeadMG Nah. Mono. And perhaps monodevelop (@daknøk)
@DeadMG Indeed.
@daknøk My point exactly. Monodevelop works like nothing else on windows. (Imagine an IDE, that launches in under a minute. Gasp. Really, in under 5 seconds on a lousy VM)
@DeadMG Well. Good for you. My visual studio at work takes a minute, at least, to get to phase where it 'acts like' you can use all functions. Then, when you open a medium size project, it will be two more minutes.
@sehe well, we don't actively put them into solutions at all. We use cmake, and cmake just generates it that way unless we start hacking our build system to do otherwise
but tbh, it runs well enough even with such a big solution. :)
joelonsoftware.com/articles/Unicode.html (The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!), by Joel Spolsky)
@sehe but we kind of need a cross platform build system. Messing around with VS projects/solutions directly just means it'll get out of sync with our linux port
well, ok, but that just means it is probably not a usual setup, I get the reason: I think it is fine. Normally, though, having 150 projects in a solution will trigger a few red flags with me:)