@Ell You can read a lot about those in Raymond Chen's book The Old New Thing (or on his blog I think most of the book is on there, but I prefer the book format)
"Wtf Lua has a GC" sometimes I feel like writing wrappers is a bad thing, people don't understand even the basics of the language they pick as their scripting interface.
A public field is not worse than a getter/setter pair that does nothing except returning the field and assigning to it. First, it's clear that (in most languages) there is no functional difference. Any difference must be in other factors, like maintainability or readability.
An oft-mentioned adv...
Well, this seems like the right place to quote an amusing post titled "Slutty Types" from Davy Brion's blog.
Slutty Types are types which:
give you access to their privates without too many difficulties
don't really care about your intentions, or if they do, aren't very
clear on t...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because I gotta stop doing if (cond) { ... }'s after the first one gets satisfied. If I stick it into a lambda, I can return early out of that lambda, but not out of the overall scope that would be unpacking the things one by one.
I'm trying to avoid using recursion functions to expand parameter packs because it's causing a lot of huge instantiations and bloat when someone specifies a BUNCH of things for variadics.
He regained a lot of respect points on my scales (where, in fairness, most were only lost due to enduring public criticism that I never bothered to check, so assumed had some level of veritude to them)
@Ell Why? No. He wanted in-EU, he'd be untrustworthy if he would now be happy to lead that march
I honestly don't know. He could well have said a thing like that, when prompted. It's not good to influence a campaign by "threatening" with consequences also
@Ell So, you could say he went the extra mile, and respectfully bowed out when his party/camp lost
@nwp Well, basically he's saying that good art is art that could appeal to every human ever. That what's is good is the part that makes it good for everyone, right (I skipped through some parts a bit)?
@Morwenn Basically. I understood that art is not subjective like everyone says, instead it has objective quality. So while I can categorize music in like and don't like, a successful artist needs to categorize into appeals to a wide enough audience or not. I don't really know about these things.
Thing is, he was criticized for the deal he got with the EU initially. It makes sense for him to say "Well, fuck it. Let's see who gets a better deal now."
@nwp I beg to differ. The things I like the most are often things that other people don't like. The audience doesn't make the art great. To me, what makes it great is how much it can impact a single person. And there you fall back in the realm of subjective.
@Morwenn there was an argument in there that we don't just like random stuff. All human beings are attracted to faces and hard transitions. I don't know how that translates to music, but there are probably tempos, changes in tempo, repetition, volume and other stuff that can be objectively quantified and some choices appeal more than other.
@Morwenn maybe it is like drinking whiskey, you ignore the general taste of whiskey and try to identify the special flavors of that specific brand and that makes it interesting. If it just "tastes like whiskey" you are missing the point and it is just boring. Maybe you are able to hear the special notes whereas others are too distracted by the noise.
Mostly a matter of culture. The more « perfect » the music, the narrower the audience that will actually find it perfect, and we fall back to subjectivity.
Some people actually prefer « bad » beer and underproduced tracks.
@nwp Yellow is perceived as brighter than red. That's subjective, it's nearly universal, and it has nothing to do with the physics of "yellow photons" per se (i.e, the quality isn't "in the whiskey"). This is about how humans perceive things.
someone said "Sweet home Alabama" is really bad on paper, unmelodic and most people can't sing along. Still people like it a lot. There may be some things we don't understand about the quality of stuff, but it is clearly there.
maybe universally great is something to strife for instead of saying "doesn't matter what I do, some people will like it, some people won't, and there is nothing I can do"
hmm, maybe hipsters destroy the possibility of universally great art because they like art that other people don't like. Hipster is not the right word ... individualists?
@Ell In the face of everything I think his words showed good leadership. (Not detracting from the voice of the people, even if it disappointed him). Even better leadership is to allow someone who might do a good job at execution. David can't possibly; all his colleagues from other countries know him, and how could he suddenly break promises and expectations?
Now, I personally love the fact that he embraces the result and even goes to Brussel to actually explain what the people of Britain have decided. Imagine how this makes him feel. He's basically sent over groveling "Ok - you know all the plans we had? Forget about them. I'm actually just a puppet on strings and my substituents won't allow me to do what we planned on doing."
@sehe I dont know why that is clear. Politicians aren't a saviour to me, but I guess all I see on my Facebook feed & most other places are ways in which the UK is going through a tough time right now, and I feel as though people might have more hope if they were confident in their leader
@blelbach My understanding is that throwing from noexcept invokes terminate, so it's Catch-22?
@Bassie Of course not. Can't be raising expectations.
I don't exactly see why UB is bad there. It does seem to violate some reasonable preconditions. Maybe quick_exit could be a graceful fallback (haven't checked on the current specs)
Mmm. Maybe not the part where you want noexcept semantics added (which conflicts with the goal of making more guarantees about what terminate does eventually)
@Morwenn That's because it is. It's a little bit of a special case, but the argument is not used. You can std::declval<>() your way out of this, or just silence the warning
it cannot be actually noexcept. The language will be "If the execution of the terminate handler exits via uncaught exception, <insert the wording for the effects of abort()"
Yeah. That was the conflict I referred to. Good thinking. If only because it can lead to better optimizability for code that could call terminate (which should be more common in high-performance computing)