Accepting facts or knowing things abstractly doesn't mean internalizing or even realizing all the consequences. I don't think the surprise at finally being able to see things "directly" - or, independently - indicates a disbelief. It view it like how colorblind people react when they get these high-tech glasses and suddenly see. Or deaf people who suddenly hear for the first time.
It's just enthrallment with a new capability, I feel
I got a childhood but it was missing pokemon and now I can chase them and chase them and get nice swirly level up animations and come up with names :)
and I caught an abra today and saw a 300-something cp gloom, and caught quite a few monsters despite being unable to tell how far away any of them were :)
and I helped an elderly couple figure out their first steps to becoming trainers!
well I've walked down to the local shopping center and back probably five times since I got it Saturday, which would be 11km, and I usually spend at most 25 minutes walking there (I suspect less--when I was in high school I'd make the 1.5 mile walk home in 30-ish minutes) and then spend about 60% of my battery life pacing between the four pokestops there.
my final 20-30% of battery life would be spent walking back.
battery's died before going back twice, and halfway through once
four days this week I spent roughly two hours playing it. The other two days were Saturday and Sunday, and well I know I spent ~5 hours playing on Saturday
and on Sunday night I didn't get enough sleep because I saw an eevee and a bulbasaur when I was getting ready for bed
so yes, I'd assume walking back and forth has led to some under-estimation of my distance travelled
there are also the dozen or so times I've exhaustively searched my entire apartment complex
@Borgleader :(
assuming 3 hours Sunday, that would be 16 hours played. Frankly, walking that slow would be embarrassing, considering on a treadmill I do 3.7 miles in an hour (which, really, is also embarrassing)
One car stopped just to tell me that they couldn't fucking take me to the next roundebout even though there was nothing else on the road between us and the roundabout.
so 17 have a normal 10 default attack, and 11 have a normal 12 default attack. 15 have a dragon 15 special, and 13 have a flying 25 special
you'd think the combination of 12-25 default-special would be rarest, but that's the 12-15. I guess because dragon has fewer types it's weak attacking?
@KartikV hey - this chat is a non-programming oriented one. That is, we're mostly chit-chatting like an actual Lounge. Please post questions on the main website! There are many more people there, and other people with the same question will be able to find it
> Bramell so cuts the figure of a firefighter that he has smoke-colored eyes and hair, and a permanent hack from smoke inhalation (“I do a bag of cough drops a day”).
I feel like over 80% of the text is non-information like that
@BartekBanachewicz Well. I think you might have been.
Anyhoops, I don't know what makes glasses "brand" so I will probably never notice. I'm startled when people make remarks about brands of clothes. Of our kids. That we got second hand. I never get it
It's not really a problem, I'm just criticizing why they didn't make arrays assignable. There are a lot of costly operations, and if the coder asks for that, well, the compiler should agree to go ahead, even if it's costly.
It's nothing illogical. I want to copy this array onto another array of the same size.
@BartekBanachewicz I'm starting to consider that, yeah.
@BartekBanachewicz I was going to go with that until i discovered they don't support multiple dimensions. I know it can be solved, like @Borgleader did.
@Borgleader What's not? It's should be less braces, less magic numbers, more safe indexing, more friendly iostreaming, better separation of concerns (indexing vs. storage), more flexible interface etc.
> “What drives the throwaway culture? Well, often people want to have the newest and the latest,” he said. “But there are people who want to have the oldest and the best.”
Also the fact that the newest is way cheaper than the oldest, maybe.
@sehe Less braces: granted. less magic numers: it's an example ... More safe indexing: I dont see how its any worse than a regular array (all i wanted to show is that the operator[] was chained as usual), better separation of concerns: i guess but again, not any worse than ye olde raw array. More flexible interface, again not any worse.
The implicit assumption in getting the newest is that people wouldn't bother to make a new thing if it isn't better than the old thing. Hence newest means best. Doesn't always work out that way.
@sehe Also, the gross-ness of std::array<std::array<T, N>, N> was being complained about. The using statement helps alleviate that imo. Seeing as you write it once and use the more meaning full Matrix type later. I'm not saying its the best solution, but it's still better than raw arrays. Also you get assignment ops (which was the original point of contention).
@BartekBanachewicz I don't mind. I still learn lots. About how to discuss, e.g. Basically, I just learn to bring my learning game up a level. It doesn't stop. It changes
@sehe Ah, yeah that wasn't in the sample because when he said "why arent arrays assignable" i responded with "use std::array" so I figured I didnt need to. Perhaps I should have been more thorough.
I'm going through the binging part right now. I'm going through all of Evil Ted Smith's videos on youtube. Its going to suck waiting for new ones when I'm done with those.