@keithlayne I was always perplexed why native speakers sometimes make the typo of using 'mute' instead. The day I looked up its pronunciation is the day I learned there is such a thing as Received Pronunciation.
@LucDanton Ok, going from the wikipedia description: our verbs have declensions for the nominative case, and we have some special constructs for accusative and dative. Everything else is done with prepositions.
@luc how do you know these things? Are you some kind of cyborg? :) I don't see that word written very often by people who don't know how to use it, but you hear that pronunciation constantly here. I've been corrected for pronouncing it properly before....by "educated" people, no less.
@unNaturhal well, you can't. If your idea is really good, you might be able to sell it to them. But they are not going to let you use their brand under any circumstances
Of course, if you're an established and successful company with a proven track record of making profitable games, then you might be able to negotiate a deal with the IP owner to license it for specific games
@rubenvb how did I not know about that site? It's genius! Now I'll make a site called lmgtfy.org and make it just like that but won't claim I copied it, and everything will be cool.
there is plenty of legal coverage there, I would think, all google has to due is have a user agreement and show due diligence regarding copyrighted material.
@unNaturhal lots of uploaded content is removed daily. Youtube is an exception, it's too big to pull down immediately. And they have agreements with the orinial authors.
There are also safe harbor provisions that mean that as long as they show due diligence in removing infringing videos when reported they're mostly in the clear. The infringing is on the uploader's part, not Youtube's.
@unNaturhal in other words, if your game didn't have the proper rights, it would be removed from all shops and stores immediately, just like a youtube video.
@unNaturhal Usually clones don't retain the IP of the original game. They may have the same mechanics, but they don't have the same characters, the same names, the same artwork, etc.
@unNaturhal (1) Youtube doesn't create infringing content, like you want to do, and (2) Youtube takes down infringing content when the rights holders ask them to. And (3) Youtube spends a lot of time and money autodetecting infringing content so they can take it down automatically
@unNaturhal I think you should read up on copyright, it's not obvious that what is covered is the mechanical rendition of a work. Not the work itself, nor the ideas in it.
@unNaturhal if you don't use the same names and other specifics, then you can make your game safely. You just can't use the same names, the same monsters, the same items, the same characters.
@unNaturhal Well, I'm sorry, but we can't change all the copyright laws of the world, no matter how much you want to use someone else's IP without their permission
@unNaturhal Has it occurred to you that perhaps the reason they don't put that on their site is that they don't want you to develop a copy of their games?
Just guessing, here. I'm sure the thousands and thousands of times they've rejected people with this kind of offers means nothing at all
Nintendo probably just had 8000 bad days in a row, but today they'll love to hear from you
@rubenvb I don't know what license the code is in (being public doesn't necessarily imply the usual open-source rights). But the assets are not available.
I got frustrated. My mother had problems with Windows Mail' silly-messages and silly-statuses so I recommended Thunderbird. The import functionality is now so buggy that it imports only one VCard at a time, and creates a separate new address list for that single address. It boggles the mind. I think programmer must have been drunk.
I tried to import CSV instead. TB did not understand UTF-8. It did not understand semicolons instead of commas (as Windows Mail insists on exporting for Norwegian). One had to manually tell it which fields in the file corresponded to what in TB, by moving them up and down with single clicks on an arrow symbol. Then a walk-through with one screen per address in the file. Argh!
@LucDanton: Do you play a MMO version of Crash Bandicoot, where the main character is called Crank Bandicooper, instead of eating Apple it eats pear, don't spin around and is black instead of orange? I don't :P
I spent the best years of my life having my mind, body, and soul abused by Uncle Sam. That is all.
And for that, my reward is $1K/month tax-free for the rest of my life and shitty care for my service-connected health problems for free. Pretty sweet deal if you ask me.
well then, having spent some time working in whitespace, I can say that despite the fact it is so low level, and that choice of characters to write it in is a silly, it is actually quite a nice well rounded language that given enough time, and a decent editor for it, could actually be used... potentially
Perchance, you could send me a link to this rule saying that once some one has shared a thought, no one is allowed to also come to same conclusion on there own?
@RMartinhoFernandes "Once some one has shared a thought, no one is allowed to also come to same conclusion on their own." It's on the internet, it must be true
@unNaturhal if you distribute it for free, that gets around several US laws. You can't make any money on it whatsoever. It doesn't get around all US laws, but some.
@CheersandhthAlf I used a plugin to do the import back when I migrated. Have been many updates to TB now, though and I don't remember quite which plugin it was. I think it was a silly name like 'more functions for address book' but I can't find it right now
Plonk is a Usenet jargon term for adding a particular poster to one's kill file such that the poster's future postings are completely ignored. It was first used in 1989, and by 1994 was a commonly used term on Usenet regarding kill file additions.
The word is an example of onomatopoeia, intended to humorously represent the supposed sound of the user hitting the bottom of the kill file (imagining perhaps the kill file as a bucket). It is also sometimes given as an acronym standing for Please Log Off, Net Kook, though this is likely a backronym. Other used expressions are "put lamer on kill...
@rubenvb “badamtish [bə.dæm.tɪʃ] (adj.): like or characteristic of a badamt; of or relating to a variable named badamt, referring to a count of ‘bad’ items.”
I have a homework, It is:
Write the code of function below, this function should count number of bytes inside of s till it is not '\0'.
The function:
unsigned len(const char* s);
Really I do not know what this homework mean, can anyone write this homework's code please?
Further more ...
@JonPurdy Actually, I take that back, sizeof(pointer) has to be fixed, but the range of values need not be (like std::string) Though I'm having trouble figuring if that makes any sense. Probably not.
@MooingDuck Sure it does. A pointer could be an index into a pool of variable-length actual pointers, each of which too might point further forward. The chains of pointers would be implicitly dereferenced, so *x would be linear in the number of dereferences, not constant.
Not that *x is necessarily constant-time anyway. :P
But we all sort of pretend it is.
Just like a+b and a*b have the same time complexity. Wink.
@MooingDuck No. Say x is a fixed-size pointer (call it level 0). If x < n0 (for some implementation-defined n0), it is an ordinary pointer. If x >= n0, then x refers to the index of a chain y of a greater size (level 1). If y < n1, stop, otherwise continue.
Suppose I have a pointer with the special value indicating I have chain. Where do I read up the rest of the chain? What if I have another pointer? Then where do I go?
@LucDanton I’m talking about an architecture that would do this transparently. The only value you ever see as a programmer would be a pointer that is either < n0 or >= n0, and you don’t even need to know what n0 is.
@rubenvb From your source: "The original specification covered numbers up to 31 bits (the original limit of the Universal Character Set). In November 2003 UTF-8 was restricted by RFC 3629 to end at U+10FFFF, in order to match the constraints of the UTF-16 character encoding. This removed all 5- and 6-byte sequences, and about half of the 4-byte sequences."
> we've been making an effort to make things better--and that takes time and causes frustration--while they have been happily ignoring the matter until they don't like the results
FWIW, I argued twice before here that C++ is Turing-complete if given an appropriate reality. I'm just trying to show you that your particular implementation trick doesn't work.
@RMartinhoFernandes sure but if each "cell" holds all values, then sizeof(void*) is one. MAX_INT is trickier, but can simply be set to the highest value (+1) actually used in the program.
Yes, CHAR_BIT is in the C++ standard (also the C standard). Yes, you can change C++ in an attempt at proving that it's equivalent to something else. What you have to do is show that the transformation was from a more general model to a more restricted one (in fact, that's the essence of many proofs -- and many mistakes are in the assumption that a change really is from more to less general).
@FredOverflow We would never do that. Crucifixion maybe, but never sarcasm.