Anyone recognize the pattern in "0 11 37 69 116 175 246 329 424 531..."? I'm stuck :/ I got most of a forumula for an answer, but I'm off in each chunk by that much. The number 12 is related I think, but I can't figure out how.
hmm, if I change the 12 to a 1 it becomes 0, 0, -1, -3, -6, -10, -15, -21, -28, -36, which looks really familiar.... oh, deltas that's why it's familiar
@FredOverflow I'm trying to figure out the equation for mapping a set of numbers I have to another set of numbers for stackoverflow.com/questions/9720831/…
hmm, wonder if wolfram can figure out the equation for me
Like it has been written here Qt up to now has 8 specilized smart pointer classes.
It looks like it is all you will ever need.
However, in order to use any of these smart pointers your class must be derived from QObject which is not always convenient.
Is there other implementations of smart point...
Greetings ,
I have used Boost::shared_ptr in my previous projects and now I want to find a smarp-pointer in QT which does the same/similar thing.
Since there are many smart-pointer classes in QT I was wondering which one to use.
Is it QSharedPointer ?
Regards
@FredOverflow we had this discussion earlier this day, you have to scroll back a little. but to summerize it, it doesn't support lambdas and such properly for me, also c++11 style braces like >> don't work
@FredOverflow boost definitely predates Qt , but the real problem I have with this thing is that it is so insanely hard to configure, I cannot get a simple console program to work
@angryInsomniac "In Visual C++ .NET 2003, members of the <hash_map> and <hash_set> header files are no longer in the std namespace, but rather have been moved into the stdext namespace. "
In computing, unordered associative containers refer to a group of class templates in the standard library of the C++ programming language that implement variations of hash table. Being templates, they can be used to store arbitrary elements, such as integers or custom classes. The following containers are defined in the current revision of the C++ standard: unordered_set, unordered_map, unordered_multiset, unordered_multimap. Each of these containers differ only on constraints placed on their elements.
The unordered associative containers are similar to the associative containers in C++...
@angryInsomniac oh, I found it in the docs! "When compiling with /Ze, which is the default, the compiler will warn on the use of std for members of the <hash_map> and <hash_set> header files. "
@angryInsomniac stop ignoring the warnings
@angryInsomniac "works just fine" = "it runs, but tells me not to do this" apperently
@MooingDuck why ? my target platform is windows and this program is not meant to be rigorously tested , it only needs to run the executable properly , thats about it
"boost definitely predates Qt , but the real problem I have with this thing is that it is so insanely hard to configure, I cannot get a simple console program to work with errors like hash_map is not part of std"
@DeadMG hmm , ok ! well I just gave up on Qt for the time being , too much hassle for not enough return , going to hack together something using irrlicht
I've come across Twitto, which basically is a web framework that fits in a tweet. It is so short that I can post the code here :
require __DIR__.'/c.php';
if (!is_callable($c = @$_GET['c'] ?: function() { echo 'Woah!'; }))
throw new Exception('Error');
$c();
It basically searches for a file ...
@FredLarson that is a good one...I will try to remember that.
I always thought of kill -9 as like a level 9 kill. For when you really need it. -10 should be more deadlier then. I don't know if I've ever used anything other than KILL and HUP.
Assuming that the "mod" operator of your chosen platform is sufficiently fast, you're bounded primarily by the speed at which you can calculate n! and the space you have available to compute it in.
Then it's essentially a 2-step operation:
Calculate n! (there are lots of fast algorithms so I w...
It started with one upvote, then when I read it, I was like WTF?!?!
@CheersandhthAlf I think in Iron Sunrise by Charles Stross a future technology bomb is dropped into the system's sun, rather than into a planet. This wipes out the whole system, and, IIRC, threatens neighboring systems as well.
@sbi maybe i'm confusing with other book. i seem to remember a book about some winged beings discovering something heading towards their planet at same time as war is brewing on-planet?
Iron Sunrise is a 2004 hard science fiction novel by author Charles Stross, which follows the events in Singularity Sky. The book was nominated for both the Hugo and Locus Awards in 2005.
Singularity Sky depicts a future where human societies have been involuntarily taken from Earth and widely distributed across the Milky Way galaxy, seemingly at random, in the wake of a technological singularity which has led to the onset of strong AI, in the form of the Eschaton.
The events in both novels take place consecutively some time after the immediate aftermath of the singularity.
Plot summar...
"Robot voices" became a recurring element in popular music starting in the second half of the twentieth century. Several methods of producing variations on this effect have arisen.
__TOC__
Vocoder
The vocoder was originally designed to aid in the transmission of voices over telephony systems. In musical applications the original sounds, either from vocals or from other sources such as instruments, are used and fed into a system of filters and noise generators. The input is fed through band-pass filters to separate the tonal characteristics which then trigger noise generators. The sound...
@JohnSmith for memoizing factorial function use a vector, because arguments are integers down to zero. The pseudo pseudo code is: if argument is less than vector size, use the value in the vector, and otherwise recurse.
all I want to do is say "Oh, you want to retrieve factorial(15)? We have that stored in this vector, here you go." or "Oh, it's not in this vector. let's calculate it and store it in vector"