@milleniumbug He seriously complains about Boost Property Tree not being a conformant JSON library (where the name actually kinda implies it might not be a JSON library at all?!)
@orlp It makes more sense now without the grand rapids to return
@orlp The only reason it catches your ear is because all the rest matches (chord voicing, bass/waltz rhythm, melody topnotes). The most notable things are arsis and sixths below the melody
@orlp Ah. That makes sense. I was mistaking it for an improvisation theme by Albert de Klerk, which was the "mandatory theme" in Haarlem's International Improvisation Concours around... 1996. Now I have to remember what that theme was.
This guy kept a girl captive for 10 years, but don't worry, he was sentenced to 4 years in prison. #math http://ktla.com/2016/04/15/man-sentenced-to-4-years-after-victim-says-she-was-held-captive-sexually-assaulted-for-a-decade-orange-county-da/
@sciencefyll the function takes a parameter (Categories const&). You wouldn't notice because you usually call it this (that was in the answer linked before).
the reason i struggle is because i need to call normal global functions with this as well, and then a class method recursivly (this from inside a lambda)
oh shiet, i should actually just rewrite the whole thing
@sehe, how would you handle a normal terminal menu? in school they tell us to just print out all the options and get the choice input and match it in a switch. however im creating the menu with std::maps.
http://pastebin.com/1uj40Fw8 it makes it simpler to add dynamic elements and functions to be ran when menu option is choosen
Thread-wakeup seems to be extra slow if the thread has been inactive for a very long time. Noticed that waking it up every ~5ms (using wait timeouts) keeps it reasonably responsive.
Of course active waiting (spinning) would make it super responsive. But consuming 100% CPU all the time is hard to defend.
Sometimes intermediate links compress the packet payload to increase throughput. In order to measure throughput without the compression the payload should be "random" enough. Using a random buffer
Rotating over a large buffer filled with random bytes surely works. But, mostly for fun, I thought that it might not be cache-friendly. So instead we could have 4 buffers of, say, 256 bytes. Which gives us 1024 bytes. But using various combinations of xor it can be made much more.
The actual use case was TCP over satellite which used some kind of proxy system. The physical bandwidth was 1Mbit/s. However, my implementation used all zeroes as payload. And since their proxies applied compression on the payload they got speeds of 100Mbit/s. They didn't expect that :D
I had a feature request for build-in screenshots. And I did it in like 10 minutes. I spent more time trying to figure how to make it user-friendly then actually taking the screenshot.
I even managed to implement an automatic update system for an IE toolbar plugin without needing user permission. That was back in 2008 on Vista (which tended to require admin for everything). Native apps can do that.
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> Indonesia Takes Explosive Approach to Illegal Fishing Fisheries Minister has seized and blown up 170 foreign vessels she says operated illegally in local waters