@sehe I s'pose I must have fired it up some time or other, but never used it enough to notice. I started using Turbo Pascal on CP/M, so by the time I moved to MS-DOS, I barely looked at BASIC (if memory serves, I actually owned a copy of Turbo Pascal for DOS before I had an MS-DOS machine of my own...)
I never "owned" Turbo Pascal (although I did enroll in a "lottery" for a copy of Turbo Pascal 6 in a national computer "fair" (event) once).
I just copied it all.
I did do turbo pascal at the time. I suppose it was curiosity to try QBasic
I even tried QuickC :) It had a very similar "IDE" Editor
@RichardHodges and you can just scan my answers for at least 3 different takes on it, with various degrees of feature completeness (including ridiculously complete) — sehe36 secs ago
Not to mention AmigaBASIC and Atari's version (which also had sound synthesis). I learned these even though I never owned any of the machines (thanks, local library)
AmigaBASIC had the übercool "Speak" (IIRC) function, which did TTS. That was... ~1990/92?
> Server semantics for GET, however, are restricted such that a body, if any, has no semantic meaning to the request. The requirements on parsing are separate from the requirements on method semantics.
:,(
Wouldn't that GET request in the elastic.co thingy, break if caching is enabled?
@Puppy It's told in first person in the style of a journal to be found by someone in the future, but it's full of silly things like "I guess I should explain how Mars missions work, for any laymanwho may be reading this."
It's a nice story, and the author clearly did the homework to make the science realistic, but everything else that makes a good book is missing.
> Good stock sliders and reasonably cheap and accessible replacement sliders > Big enough for my hand for clawgrip and occasional palmgrip > Customizable acceleration > Either wireless or with memory-less cord > Customizable lift-off
besides non-gaming wireless are more or less out of question I guess
and before you start ranting about that argument.... > weight > no hotswap > long battery life is a tradeoff for the mouse "sleeping" which is unacceptable
Unpacked it's ~400mb, with all the build folders there n stuff
ideally you shouldn't need to do anything but set up your paths to point to the proper lib folders and add the proper library references if you're building with VS15
since I left the build folders in, starting CMake and pointing it at them should also show the currently set options n stuff
note a particularity of mine: I always build against a statically-linked runtime library
so those lib files are all set up for that
if you need a shared runtime link, you'll have to rebuild them
> During Apollo 13, Apollo 14, Apollo 15, Apollo 16 and Apollo 17, the S-IVB stages were crashed into the Moon to perform seismic measurements used for characterizing the lunar interior.
.@SciencePorn Object J0023 is an old Saturn V rocket stage. 3rd repost of this Reddit scrape http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news136.html https://t.co/0PlTxTuAuG
What annoys me is that J002E3's story is interesting on its own, and there's no need to add a dramatic lie about the Moon "saving us". But idiots gonna idiot.
How could you watch and still not believe in a creator?“@SciencePorn: The moon, saving our butts. Never Forget. http://t.co/y2MB2ISvsI”
I remember discussing CCD here some time ago. Don't remember whom, but that means someone might have an interest in knowing that the beepocalypse has been delayed.
@sehe that is indeed well played, but, she's also essentially saying only men would think she's dumber than she is? cuz she doesnt do that trick to women... or am i reading too much into this? (inb4 ive committed a fallacy combo)
> As I’ve joked before, I personally think that raw milk should be legal, but perhaps every bottle should contain a picture of Louis Pasteur and the caption “Really, guys?”
> "Have I ever shown you a picture of my wife and son?" -- astronaut Jerry Linenger to the USAF technicians responsible for pressing the remote self-destruct button for the space shuttle Atlantis in case it suddenly veered towards some big population center.
I know when dealing with pointers to deallocate memory, and I recently switched from using function pointers to std::function but I am not sure whether or not I have to deallocate them and how that would be done.