@sbi I'm not claiming to make sense. If someone claims that the middle finger is getting all the attention, it must mean the rest of the appearance is... not distracting enough
I mean, does mysql have open standart for sending stream tcp-packets to work with this db or you there is no way to work with mysql without special libs as connector
I was wondering who this @user guy is you're all referring to, but now I see I have him plonked. Judging from your reactions, it seems you should consider doing the same.
A leat (also lete or leet, or millstream) is the name, common in the south and west of England and in Wales, for an artificial watercourse or aqueduct dug into the ground, especially one supplying water to a watermill or its mill pond. Other common uses for leats include delivery of water for mineral washing and concentration, for irrigation, to serve a dye works or other industrial plant, and provision of drinking water to a farm or household or as a catchment cut-off to improve the yield of a reservoir.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, leat is cognate with let in the sense o...
I have actually written a business application in Turbo Pascal 6/7 (with Turbo Vision) during highschool. I'd really love to peak at my code from back then, just out of curiosity. Sadly, the lifetime of floppies isn't all that good
> You'd be suprised. Not a lot of people know Pascal or COBOL anymore, so people that do make quite a bit of money doing programming in those languages for companies that don't want to change.
seriously, knowing obsolete languages makes you richer? Awesome!
Ok, naming stuff is hard, very hard. So here's a question about language for you guys:
Consider a complex system executing tasks. Those tasks can be told to do nothing for a while, and then be told to continue to work. Currently, this is called "pausing"/"resuming".
Now I hack in some code that writes the state of parts of a task not currently in use to the disk and throws those parts out. When they are used, they are swapped back in. We've been talking about this as "suspension", so swapping stuff to disk is called "suspend". But what can I name swapping stuff back in? "Resume" is already taken.
Also, having Pause/Resume and Suspend/Whatever might be terribly confusing for the users and could require painfully detailed documentation and lots of support effort. So can you guys come up with something more snappy, that conveys the meanings of those operations immediately?
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Some people, when confronted with a problem, think "I know, I'll use TMP!". Now they have a just a TMP problem... [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
@CatPlusPlus Mhmm. Ok, here's more details: Those parts that are initialized when they are set up. When restoring them after suspension, they need to be re-initialized.
@sbi is the flow 'pause' (keep in ram, but stop working on it) 'suspend' (saving to dick disk and free ram) 'restore' (bring back into ram, but don't run), then finally 'resume' (start executing again)
@CatPlusPlus But how does this relate to pause and suspend? If you saw them close together, would you be able to tell which one does what without extensively browsing the docs?
@RMartinhoFernandes I hate to say this, but... There's already a SwapToDisk() in there, that does something complete different (swapping data out to make room). :-/
@thecoshman In principle yes, but it's much more complicated. (If not suspended, lots of code in those parts will regularly be invoked. I have written the code that skips this when the stuff gets suspended and thrown out.)
@RMartinhoFernandes Ha! I wish.
@jalf It's an API. Users need to override those functions and do the right thing.
The API started small, three years ago, and has gained weight ever since. Nobody thought it up in a single act of creation, so it does need constant cleanup. I feel like leaving "pause"/"resume" and "suspend"/whatever in there will cause trouble down the road.
@jalf I could, if it's not too sweeping. Adapting thousands of lines of code, but that might be easy with C#'s refactoring capabilities. But there's two solutions. Also, I will have to adapt the docs, too, and that's much more painful.
then again, if they actually operate on different entities (thingummies vs tasks), perhaps just making the name more explicit would do the trick? suspendThingummy()?
@thecoshman Users using this API to write, erm, modules to be used by those tasks need to store they modules' state on suspend, and restore it when woken up again. I also need to do this will data in the infrastructure for those modules.
@RMartinhoFernandes I thought about that, too, but "pause" vs. "suspend" makes me foresee lots of support issues.
@jalf Oh. Interesting idea.
@thecoshman Having to support users confused by this for years to come is well worth investing lots in code refactoring and doc changes.
@keithlayne you can employ a visitor pattern with a visitor interface that has separate overloads per accepting type. A little bit more 'work-intensive' but is quite neat and not too slow (if you don't compare static resolution a-la C++)
@keithlayne I'm not browsing. It's an old discussion, at an answer to a question that grew out of the discussions around this, and I'm still getting notified when someone replies.
@sehe Yeah, I get it, thank you. That's one drawback of that pattern though...if you can't modify the base class, it gets funky. I want to act on the vanilla base class and my subclasses too.
@thecoshman Yeah, we have that now, only it's not consistently numbered, but inconsistently synonymed. Only those <beep> here don't realize this is gonna hurt them.
Well, where was this job offer I got the other day...
No need to talk yourself down, you're smart: you asked for it. I spent time working this out for myself after abusing `enumerator blocks` (you know, `yield return`) throughout my project. Made things undebuggable
@sehe I'm so new to C#, I'm still fitting extension methods into my brain...I should have made the connection quicker. I'm not used to duck-typing type stuff.
@thecoshman Actually I got to know the guy at a Scott Meyers seminar, which is a good sign in itself. Also, I got the guy connected with two others (one a former cow-worker and one from SO) who now work there and praise the shop.
@keithlayne Well, the extension method part certainly gets resolved at compile time. It's the virtual invocation that could be less performant than in C++
@jalf What happened? I wrote an application, and started to dig for those references I hadn't touched in a while and which I wanted to attach. Then I went to London for a week. I will have to find those this weekend and send the application next week.
I was getting CV help from a (convoluted) relative. He said it was a good CV and that I probably would get hired with them but I was already set on moving over to Ireland