This code works with four types of messages, all of which inherit from IDataStoreItem. IDataStoreItem of course, has no member functions, despite the fact that all the derived classes have the same member functions. So I have to write a seperate function for each derived type. Gah.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, I used to have metafunctions and in a desperate bid to cajole GCC I hacked those functions in. I may go back to the metafunctions, I'm not sure.
@LucDanton I noticed you have template<typename T> using Identity = typename identity<T>::type;. When I wrote this in my code, I couldn't think of an actual use for it. While writing the previous message I remembered it works well as a type deduction inhibitor.
user868935
can anyone help me building a simple gui for a win32 project? info on the web is scarce.
I do run into some issues regarding min/max and Min/Max and I think I can safely pinpoint them to aliases once again. I'll be sticking with those constexpr functions for the time being.
@MooingDuck Well, sometimes those are marker interfaces used to say that some type has some property. Serializable is one example from the standard library (not a good one, tbh). But most of the time they're just markers of bad designs.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, I'm making widespread changes, mostly rewriting everything I see. My boss is unhappy that I'm well over my ETA and less than 40% done
@DeadMG the only members are static, I think it's still an interface in that case
Party A: Unsubstantiated, far-reaching conclusion. Party B: Accusation of technical ignorance on part of Party A. Party A: Accusation of homosexuality on part of Party B. Party B: Declaration of victory.
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user868935
1:08 AM
does anyone know how to make a listbox within a window?
@RMartinhoFernandes It can in fact be deduced. Had to make several attempts to understand what's going on, apparently GCC has some quirks in this respect.
@je4d Hmmm. I slept in today :) And I went to bed early (0:30am). I had finished my project on time (and within the ahem... extended budget) so I'm under less of a crunch.
Anyways, off to work, I'll be 'lurking' as @Mysticial calls it :)
I find myself much more productive in my dorm room than my office - mainly because I have twice as many monitors and I can blast music and have Anime in the background.
@Mysticial Oh we can do that too, it's even not that hard, but it's against company rules. If I log in over VPN with my ubuntu desktop from home to read my e-mails I even violate IT-policy (windows is fine however...).
I never read anything that we weren't allowed to use FTP or Firefox. But all FTP connections timed out. And Firefox was never able to recognize the company's network connection.
http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2012/03/reputation-and-historical-archives/ <-- Seems as reasonable a compromise that's going to be reached here. Now if only comments stopped getting all nuked...
It seems the greatest uproar I have seen on meta since the removal of the envelope icon was resolved not by stomping on the discussions, but by finding a compromise.
@Mysticial I'd say it's a big win for both sides. Most of the deletionists didn't want to delete just for the sake of deleting, they had a reason to do so. (That would be the "Broken Window" argument.) This solution addresses those arguments while preventing further deletions.
@sbi only thing that concerns me is that to me this was never really a question of mechanics, but of bad guidelines and a sick culture. As long as people want to delete anything they can lay their grubby paws on, they're going to find a way to do it
@jalf This is one of the differences between your opinion and mine: I still believe that most meta users do not want to delete for the sake of deleting. Sooth their fears, and they'll stop wanting to delete.
@sbi Maybe, maybe not. But then it's tempting to say that it's just a matter of time. I you marinate in a culture in which deletionism is the only right thing, then it's going to rub off sooner or later
But even if you're right, it doesn't necessarily matter what most meta users want, as long as a big enough critical mass want to delete
but apart from that, the blog post sounds very reasonable
@jalf Honestly, I think @sbi is right. While you have the 'framed garbage' extremist (there are always extremists), this seems like a nice compromise for the general part of the community (both pro- and contra-deletion).
@KillianDS Oh sure, I'm not objecting to the blog post. I'm just saying that for whatever reason, meta has a sick culture, and I'm not sure simply changing the mechanics of how questions are deleted and how rep is shown, is going to fix that
@jalf But there was more to this than a simple change of mechanics.
If this had gone the way Jeff used to handle these things, he would have posted a wildly unpopular answer saying "It's been that way all the time, you just didn't see it, broken windows, blahblah, shut up and go back creating rep", which would have been downvoted into oblivion, and then he would have had stomped with an iron boot heel on any dissenting view daring to raise its head.
Instead, we have had a very long and very heated discussion on meta, some level heads (not me and you, mind you) proposing a compromise, and the SO team implementing it. I see a major imrpovement there.
@jalf Yep. I said so in a comment to the blog post, but it seems they have me on the strictly moderated list. :) At least, it doesn't show up, yet when I try to post it again it says I already said that.
It's no wonder people are capable of war when they get this nasty about a few lost virtual non-existent points on the internet.
Here's my take:
Half the problem here is that mega upvoted questions can only be deleted by moderators. On that particular example, I counted elsewhere that it would ...
I normally wouldn't have noticed at all that I lost rep, if it wasn't because I'd just crossed 90k which was kind of a milestone, and suddenly I was back down to 89. Most of the time, you could take 1k rep away from me without me noticing at all. :)
@Mysticial Would have been a bitch for me, too. Plus there's only 600 chars for a comment, and most of the time I have to fight really hard to squeeze my opinions into such a limited space anyway. (I bet that comment has 598 chars or something like that.)
@ScottW I'm a C++ programmer. I expect the API to take care of that.
> Apparently, the C++ chat room also rules Twitter, where SO users were all up and in arms about this, too. (And got calm again since Shog's blog posting.) Yeah, it's a very good feeling to be that influential! — sbi
@thecoshman When I unroll loops, I often combine it with manual vectorization. (if applicable) Heck, if you're gonna micro-optimize something that matters, might as well go all the way.
So, I have to figure out what kind of tax forms I need to fill up and whatever else needs to be done so I'm not flouting Portuguese law. Who wants to bet I won't be able to obtain that information from the Internet and will have to go ask it to some clerk somewhere?
Damn. I had a hard time falling asleep last night, had the small one wake me at 2am with an earache that plagued her (and me) for the rest of the night, and have just read through dozens of comment threads on meta. The result is, of course, that now I have to fight very hard to not to have those key-shaped impressions on my forehead by lunchtime.
@wilx I never wanted to be one of those weekend dads. I have always spend a lot of time with my kids, bringing them to and picking them up from kindergarten and school, taking them to the doc's — the whole enchilada.
@wilx Except for a few years when I was in bad financial trouble, I never worked for more than 30hrs/week. Currently I spread them over 4days/week. That leaves some time to spend with the kids.
@TonyTheLion Indeed, I forgot to mention the kind of insect I was referring to.
> On the other hand, mutex and semaphores are not meant to block threads to wait for others to complete a task, they are meant to share access to resources.
does that sound correct?
thinking about it, I guess one should use a manual or autoresetevent
> Commandment 2.Thou shalt not violate the abstraction boundaries provided by synchronization primitives, nor shalt thou try to change the semantics of well-established synchronization primitives, and thou shall look with disdain upon he who does.
Anyway, after all that procrastination this morning I will have to do some work now, being tired or not. I need to leave early today, because I need to pack for my flight to London tomorrow morning.