@doug65536 Some people with XX or XY lack fingers, have extra toes, what not. It's really that simple: nature is free to fail/be creative. Don't assume
@VermillionAzure The last part's different because that's what I'm trying to emulate - there's 15 bytes of random uint8's
And then 3 bytes on their side/4 bytes on my side of tiny encoded data of longs
@ellisbben it's simply notepad - they're opened with the same instance too
Refer to maybe an hour before when I chatted "Also, hair pulling moment when my stream impl built for a library doesn't work because of a single byte of difference FML"
what OS / FS are you working with? I don't know whether anybody holds text encodings in extended attributes / resource forks / metadata, but it springs to mind
Bush hid the facts is a common name for a bug present in some Microsoft Windows applications, which causes a file of text encoded in ASCII or its superset (such as in a Windows code page) to be interpreted as if it were UTF-16LE, resulting in mojibake. When "Bush hid the facts" (without newline or quotes) is put in a new (pre-Vista) Notepad document and saved, closed, and reopened, the nonsensical Chinese characters "畂桳栠摩琠敨映捡獴" appear instead.
While "Bush hid the facts" is the sentence most commonly presented on the Internet to induce the error, the bug can be triggered by many sentences wi...
@nwp if someone complains about quota violations (exceeding limits set by admin) it is probably that. unlikely though, it isn't done often
boost might degrade gracefully anyway (use a less massive size), no idea
@JerryCoffin notepad is one of the worst programs that build with windows. It is essentially an edit control, and a menu
when wordwrap is on, it appends one character at a time, and recalculates the width of every character added so far, from the beginning O(n^2), to see if it should wrap yet
I think programs like notepad, paint and calc were meant to show off how to use the winapi and were originally intended as tutorials, people were not supposed to actually use them
@doug65536 There's quite a bit more to it than that. For example, if they included an editor that could be considered a decent editor in its own right, including it with Windows would probably qualify as bundling. As it happens, "bundling" is one of those things that's considered really bad if it's done by anybody in a monopoly position. In other words, it's (quite literally) probably illegal for Microsoft to improve Notepad too much.
sure I would be against adding features. it should be minimal. but it has a completely naive wordwrap implementation that recomputes the width of every character from the beginning for every character. that is illegal to fix? they left it like that for decades
@doug65536 Is it illegal to "fix"? If they just did an improvement to the underlying edit control (so it worked with anybody's instantiation of an edit control) almost certainly not. If they did it as work on Notepad proper...that would be tougher. Chances are pretty decent that it wouldn't be illegal--but depending on the court, it might be. "Hey boss: we want to you to spend money on a task that can't possibly make us any money--but we really think it probably is legal."
they could estimate how much time their own devs spend staring at hanging notepad windows, loading a trace, and multiply that by their salary rate. that alone would pay for it
@doug65536 If I were Microsoft, I'd spend time on analytics, creating a strong OS with extremely good performance and compatibility while being stable and conducive to development, and focus on creating developer tools and start working on VR with regards to the future web and licensing
@JerryCoffin sure, lots of people had better setups... but trust me, lots of people hilariously opened notepad, and while we waited, everyone had to listen to me say you can open it fast with something else
@CatPlusPlus Also to the people being collected in most cases. Oh, the collection itself doesn't provide them value directly, but it pays for things they do want.
They develop some analytics platform that has great support for it. They license it out, and when the supposed genetics boom comes around, Microsoft is there to reap benefit
I was working on stress and performance so I was constantly dealing with extremely large traces and sharing findings with devs and looking at traces with them
Some convolutional neural network/recurrent neural network stuff - recently they made an image classifier that was miles ahead of every other currently discovered neural network
@OneRaynyDay Additionally, it might be not so good to just simply copy the entire file into memory. You could do that, but I don't think that's memory-efficient or needed
@OneRaynyDay e.g. Parsers usually look at portions of a file, and then build a data structure slowly.
I get the vector blob from that and the vector blob from the file and compare
Yeah - pretty much same concept which is what I'm trying to do here :o Testing using vector blob comparison (One downside of having to use diff is that I don't even know if windows has diff, and also don't want to connect c++ into bash and do it
@OneRaynyDay It certainly will (though you'll probably need to use () instead of {}. To prevent MVP, you'll have to add extra parens around the first argument.