how did you like it; nothing happened apart from the obvious that had been indicated in the episode before that (aka. them getting the data, uuuuu, muy supriso)
also a deadline for my thesis evaluation was 2 and a half hours ago and neither my advisor nor my opponent have submitted theirs, because logic must be fucked
@Borgleader not sure if it's called that in English honestly; there is like your advisor that you consult shit with and then there is one more guy that just reads the final thing and expresses his thoughts :P
> This committee, at least in the US model, usually consists of a primary supervisor or advisor and two or more committee members, who supervise the progress of the dissertation and may also act as the examining committee, or jury, at the oral examination of the thesis (see below).
FYI, in the US you usually do a preliminary exam with the defense almost ceremonial. During the prelim, they actually tell you what you need to finish before you get the degree.
@Ming When operating on pointers, don't think multi-level. Think of whatever they point to as a black box. char** -> T*, where T just happens to be char*. (And char* -> T*, where T just happens to be char). That way, you only have to deal with one level at a time.
Not sure if it was because decided not to do it, or if there was a technical reason such as requiring computer synthesized sounds which can't be played via instrument.
She also doesn't speak English very well. (Unlike the FLOW concert from a few years back where two of the members spoke pretty good English.) So it was a bit awkward whenever she tried to talk to the crowd.
I couldn't tell since I couldn't get close to them. (they're behind the table) But they look like the smaller Japanese scrolls with fine-grained material/detail as opposed to the really large Funimation ones that have less fabric detail.
I picked up the one in the upper right corner at a different dealer. But I'm not sure how big is really is.
Ah, if you get the chance (or buy one yourself), try how they feel. There are more "plastic-y" feeling ones, and then there are those made from cloth that feel almost silk-like. Like the Nekopara one I got with Vol 1
@Xeo It definitely feels like fabric without the plastic feel. But not the super tight knots that are typical of the really expensive Japanese made scrolls.
@fredoverflow I'm coding in c++ (obviously) and I'm compiling in clang 3.8, this is the regex pattern i'm trying ( auto r { regex{ R"([0-9]{8}/g)" } }; )
@fredoverflow the flag /g doesn't work, and I wonder how Its done in c++
@fredoverflow without it it works fine, matching an 8 digit number, but I want it to match multiple 8 digit numbers on same line. And I thought the /g modifier would work
@AndreasDM I'm pretty sure the /g modifier is just for using text editors. You will probably have to use a loop or something. No expert on using regex in C++, though.
In perl, I can do this:-
$text = '1747239';
@matches = ($text =~ m/(\d)/g);
# @matches now contains ('1', '7', '4', '7', '2', '3', '9')
Using c++ regex matching, what's the best way to replicate this behaviour so
that I get a match set including all the matches?
I have this at the moment:-
...
@fredoverflow i see. ok. trying to get my head around it. want to get your advise. if i'm an beginner/intermediate programmer, trying to get into data science. is learning C/C++ worth it.
This question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year.
Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...
Data science is an interdisciplinary field about processes and systems to extract knowledge or insights from data in various forms, either structured or unstructured,[1][2] which is a continuation of some of the data analysis fields such as statistics, data mining, and predictive analytics, similar to Knowledge Discovery in Databases (KDD).
If you're just starting out, I would probably recommend Go or Clojure, because those are very simple languages. But if you're already learning Python, by all means stick with that.
i see. I thought that learning a different language will allow learner to understand different parts of programming concepts easier. Some languages are designed to be easier to understand that specific concept. Then again, I may be wrong.
Trust me, C++ is the wrong choice. Everybody in here hates it with a passion. Some people were even crazy enough to implement their own alternatives to C++ because it sucks so badly.
@Mikhail If you're talking to me, I teach C because knowing C is important in the sense that knowing Latin is important. C influenced a lot of languages, and all the imperative basics that you want are in there.
@Ming One last general word of advice: Don't fall into the trap of looking for the perfect language. There isn't one. Every languages has its merits and drawbacks.
@Mikhail I struggled a bit with not having static type checks to catch 90% of my bugs, you are supposed to offset this by writing unit tests which is trivial in python compared to C++
well, strictly speaking, I think that aliens is a valid scientific hypothesis for the origin of life, but in a much more boring, possibly actually remotely reasonable way
@doug65536 I try not to think people are dumb. It makes sense from their perspective. They have less worries, more happiness and a longer life. And you call them stupid.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that seems highly irrational to me. It is way more likely that other people had different experiences and therefore make different choices than that they are simply dumb and irrational.
@Puppy that is the only source of information (if you include reading about other people's experiences as your experience), so everything must be based on either experience or instinct/intuition, and experience feels way more rational than those
Human brains are designed (in the sense of 'this is what they are like', not from 'intelligent design') to take all kinds of irrational shortcuts. Yours too. It helps to be aware of that.
I saw an interesting video at GDC about the cost of intelligence. They said some problems are easy and you just do whatever and it gets solved so you don't need a brain. Other problems are so difficult that even with a good brain you cannot solve them. Then there are some niche problems we focus on where having a brain actually helps.
from an evolutionary point of view it makes sense to actually not think about things
reading about other people experiences is basically interpreting what others interpreted internally of what they think they experienced.. there is always the possiblity that it doesn't make sense to you and it works for them for some unknown reason
I heard about scheduling in data centers where you have to assign the work to a computer. You can ask every computer for its load and make the optimal choice or just pick a random one. It turned out choosing 2 at random and assigning it to the one with less load is optimal, so not thinking actually comes up naturally and is not stupid.
problem is you never know if not thinking about something is better without thinking about it, so you need to make an intuitive choice which sometimes is just wrong, but in the long run is the correct strategy
@nwp similar to BSP tree construction. you can limit your splitter choice to the best of a few random split planes, and you get a tree nearly as good as exhaustively picking the best one every time
Hello guys. I'm thinking that whether making headers self-sufficient will slow down the compiling? It seems to me that the compiler frontend has to scan more headers?
Traditionally, the standard and portable way to avoid multiple header inclusions in C++ was/is to use the #ifndef - #define - #endifpre-compiler directives scheme also called macro-guard scheme (see code snippet below).
#ifndef MY_HEADER_HPP
#define MY_HEADER_HPP
...
#endif
In most implementa...
> It was considered for standardization, but rejected because it cannot be implemented reliably. (The problems occur when you have files accessible through several different remote mounts.)
> I don't really give a shit what it is. If your code review tool doesn't work properly, stop complaining about it and fix it. If you can't fix it because it's shitty closed source software then have a fucking think about why Richard Stallman is literally always right about everything and choose a better solution to your problem than awful inflexible closed source software.
> [#pragma] causes the implementation to behave in an implementation-defined manner. The behavior might cause [...] the resulting program to behave in a non-conforming manner. Any pragma that is not recognized by the implementation is ignored.
The part in bold effectively allows the compiler to ignore the sentence that follows.
It sort of reads like "You can break the rules. The rules are as follows."
@R.MartinhoFernandes Doesn't the bold part just apply to the runtime behaviour? There is no "resulting program" at compile-time, no? (Being nitpicky here)