@Puppy In theory. In reality, chances are something else happens first (e.g., on Linux oomkiller kills the process, on Windows the user kills it when Windows thrashes the cache for a while).
@Puppy On 32- bit you could. On 64-bit exhausting the address space would take several years (just counting from 0 to 2^64 in one thread at 5 GHz takes about a century).
@набиячлэвэлиь Not necessarily. If you try to allocate more memory than the largest chunk of contiguous address space, it's at least possible it would return NULL.
@StackedCrooked Worked great under MS-DOS. Current systems (specifically, virtual memory) pretty much break it's basic assumptions about how systems work.
@ADG Most of the time what universities call "C++", they actually mean "C, but with some addition of arbitrarily chosen features of C++ because we can't actually explain how C equivalents work. Also there's no way in hell we'll explain the features that don't exist in C, that would require significant changes in the course we didn't change in the last 10 years"
With data binding you mean binding data to HTML tags so that the controller knows when the data changes and calls the controller to update the HTML tags?
While discussing with a friend, he said, Pentium, as a marketing name, is derived from penta and pent-up. I would like to know if it is a rumor or not. I would like to learn if you have any information about that.
Thanks.
it's only really useful to do it multiple times if you have a legacy app you're converting to React, and you're converting little bits at a time, so you're basically creating several distinct React trees
@sehe tldr isn't packaged yet I think, I got it from github.com/raylee/tldr . cheat is though, since it's not in my ~/bin, but I can't find it at the moment in the Fedora repo
> JavaScript has npm, Ruby has Gems, Python has pip and now Shell has bpkg!
why is everybody and their brother introducing a package manager
Algorithmic building blocks
We begin by assembling the algorithmic building blocks from the Standard Library:
#include <algorithm> // min_element, iter_swap,
// upper_bound, rotate,
// partition,
// inplace_merge,
...
If I have a Hashmap, and for example it doesn't contain the key 3, does that mean that for key 3 the value of the Hashmap is null? Or does null imply a different thing
I checked whether any of the algorithms I had was implementable with TemplateRex requirements, but all of them were too complex. Otherwise I would have tried to submit another answer :)
Anyway, consider that I didn't implement most of the interesting algorithms and I still don't really understand many of them. I just made sure that I could improve them to match the requirements of my library.