If you have rules then there will always be corner cases. I believe that in case of doubt I should be lenient. However, SO seems to be on the other side of this.
If a question could maybe be argumentative then it is immediately closed.
@CheersandhthAlf I don't think that's the case. For most of them, I actually agreed with what you were saying. But your communication comes across as really elitist during debates.
Is there any decent way to say something to end a discussion that was fruitless to begin with because the person you initiated discussion with, doesn't have his facts straight?
I thought "peace out", but that seems to have mostly negative connotations :/
@CheersandhthAlf I wouldn't call you arrogant (or anything really) but sometimes I get the impression that you have looked into the Usenet abyss for too long. I hope you don't take that in a bad way.
I tell him very true and pertinent stuff, yet he completely ignores it and keeps on ranting about a problem I solved in the 1st and third emails in the thread.
Q.E.D. is an initialism of the Latin phrase , which translates as "which was to be demonstrated" or "as was to be expected". The phrase is traditionally placed in its abbreviated form at the end of a mathematical proof or philosophical argument when what was specified in the enunciation — and in the setting-out — has been exactly restated as the conclusion of the demonstration. The abbreviation thus signals the completion of the proof.
Etymology and early use
The phrase quod erat demonstrandum is a translation into Latin from the Greek (; abbreviated as ΟΕΔ). Translating fro...
Q.E.D. is an initialism of the Latin phrase , which translates as "which was to be demonstrated" or "as was to be expected". The phrase is traditionally placed in its abbreviated form at the end of a mathematical proof or philosophical argument when what was specified in the enunciation — and in the setting-out — has been exactly restated as the conclusion of the demonstration. The abbreviation thus signals the completion of the proof.
Etymology and early use
The phrase quod erat demonstrandum is a translation into Latin from the Greek (; abbreviated as ΟΕΔ). Translating fro...
@MooingDuck I know, the LLVM mailing lists are MIA. It's the patch that provides that all macro error messages use "expanded from" in Clang. To make the connection clear.
when i tried to move a message (that @deadmg then moved) i could not find the bin room that's just "bin". chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/549/bin <- how do I find that?
A few days ago I explained slicing to a colleage of mine. Today he proudly told me he shot himself in the foot with a slicing bug. I wasn't sure how to respond to that..
@StackedCrooked alright, that explains it then. The thing you have to remember is that the hyperfluid bearings under the camshafts can be miscalibrated along either axis, so regular maintanence is required to keep resonance in the titanium casing from causing abrasions against the primary sprocket joists.
@MooingDuck No, it's just because the person realized that his accept ratio was getting too low so he started to accept a bunch of answers to questions he asked in the past.
@MooingDuck I know that. But thanks, one cannot be reminded enough of that.
@JohnSmith The language imposes two size limits. One is given by size_t: divide by your element size, and you have one upper limit. The other, a little more fuzzy, is given by ptrdiff_t: it's half of the former, and it tells you how large an array can be before pointer arithmetic (and hence also indexing) becomes formally UB, but still might work with given compiler...
@CatPlusPlus Dont need that , the problems like this , there is a pointer to a selected element in my manager class , when a new element is selected , the old selected element needs to be deactivated , but when this happens the first time around , the pointer is unallocated , hence the error
@KillianDS true .. but there is such a thing as overdoing it , I dont really need a maintainable system right now , just one that works reasonably well
@manasij7479 a class maintains the element that was last clicked on and the element itself holds a bool saying that it is currently selected (double check), whenever a new element is clicked on , the old one needs to be deactivated (ie bool needs to be set to false). and then the selected elt changed to the new one
so , the first time around , there is nothing to deactivate and hence the error
@MooingDuck how .. exactly does one check if a pointer points to something ? a pointer always points to something ! it may not be what you want to point it to !
@angryInsomniac Actually, it is possible for a pointer to point at nothing. C (and C++) have a concept of NULL, which represents the address of "nothing"
char* mything = NULL; //there's no chars yet
if (mything == NULL) //check if it points at anything