@jalf I don't think this will be very hard to get that job. I mean, he asked me to work for them. Twice. No, scratch that. Thrice. Then I told him all the unpleasant things about me. And he was still smiling and kept asking me to apply. This either means they agree with my conditions or think they can bargain me down.
@sehe I think I was understanding...of course it wouldn't resolve at compile if not defined, but there is still a vtable lookup (or whatever) at runtime, right? I don't avoid virtual functions for performance reasons so much as philosophical ones :)
@thecoshman Having a herd of kids means I work four days a week, but still need a considerable pay. It also means I will have to stay home with a sick child once in a while. And I need rather flexible working hours. And... Many potential employers have shut down their smile at that time.
@thecoshman Throwing poop is lame. I do worse now.
And the oldest and strongest kind of fear of the unknown is fear of that which is probably an angry gorilla.
@sbi yeah, I can see why some employers would be put off by that. Though, if you are good enough, I am sure they will be work hard to fit in your needs
@RMartinhoFernandes everything is a static function essentially, but a virtual one has to resolve the proper overload via vtable lookup in that case, right?
> Sometimes my Uncles calls me here in New York and tells me what beers are on tap at his pub (Witherspoon’s). I don’t know what to do with this information
lol, the Irish are inclined to do this sort of thing too
Really, reading this chat makes my head spin. The last few seconds:
the explanation for it is even better :P Sure, but there are no virtual extension methods. nonstatic functions have an implicit this parameter. Static ones don't (and extension methods don't) lol Sometimes my Uncles calls me here in New York and tells me what beers are on tap at his pub (Witherspoon’s). I don’t know what to do with this information
What I was missing in my brain was your answer to my original question about faking template specialization, which I would have understood if it had been registering that extension methods are really static
FYI, Hillsborough disaster was an incident at a football stadium where too many people where let into the standing area. The stand collapsed an loads of people died. It's a touchy subject for some reason
ISO 3103 is a standard published by the International Organization for Standardization (commonly referred to as ISO), specifying a standardized method for brewing tea, possibly sampled by the standardized methods described in ISO 1839. It was originally laid down in 1980 as BS 6008:1980 by the British Standards Institute. It was produced by ISO Technical Committee 34 (Food products), Sub-Committee 8 (Tea).
The abstract states the following:
The method consists in extracting of soluble substances in dried tea leaf, containing in a porcelain or earthenware pot, by means of freshly boiling wa...
@keith.layne: I followed steps given at gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-help/2006-09/msg00000.html. Note: I downloaded the latest version of the libraries like GMP, MPC, MPFR etc for building GCC 4.6.3
@ravika I don't remember what is in msys...if gcc is there, you should be able to build it if you've got paths right and did a proper configure. But, I say again, you probably don't want to waste those hours of your life and use a binary instead.
@keithlayne Actually I use TDM-GCC with Code::Blocks. And TDM-GCC provides GCC 4.6.1, while the latest version of GCC is 4.6.3. I always use the latest version any software.
@keithlayne Actually I use TDM-GCC with Code::Blocks. And TDM-GCC provides GCC 4.6.1, while the latest version of GCC is 4.6.3. I always use the latest version any software.
@keithlayne Ya! I have a reason. GCC says that they've fixed 70 bugs in 4.6.3. So I want to use GCC 4.6.3. I'm a software developer so compilers means a lot to me.