@Aaron3468 I've gotten neckbreakingly close in all areas. We're superior in most of them, but we still lose out to Macro macro Macro land for C++ function calls.
Still, the graphs are looking great and tell the story that pretty much everything is fast. Other frameworks are all over the place and sol2's pretty consistent by the look of it :)
Sometimes I wish instead of creating C with macros, people would develop a new language when they are clearly pushing the boundaries of what C was designed for T.T (shakes fist at Atmel's AVR division)
VMs are fun. I use them to test GUI code and check that servers are running properly. On the other hand, I still haven't found a toolchain I like using because I run windows and getting POSIX toolchains set up is a PITA
Maybe for my next machine, I'll install a linux distro as the main OS. I have a mint guest, but it's on my primary machine so there's no space for the guest
Interesting glitch.... Once a framework is set up, it plays nice until you invite new ones to play =.= That's why I'm an advocate of throwing in compiler/interpreter support for most aspects of software design. There's less library/framework conflict if minimum support for everything is natively available
Sheesh, that's a lot of space (for one project). Have you got an HDD committed to your projects at least, or is it sharing space with your personal data?
Nice! I do like the idea of a virtual development machine, if only because it can be distributed very easily without needing reconfiguration to get everything working again
> In 1996 Keith Shafer, and several others proposed a solution to the problem of broken URLs. The link to this solution is now broken. Roy Fielding posted an implementation suggestion in July of 1995. The link is now broken.
Programmer solutions #2: "I need to place binary data into an embedded machine and execute it" "I'll store it in a comma-delimited array and modify it by hand everytime the data changes, or download sketchy .exe files to do it for me"
Whereas someone with more skill might see that the compiler supports including .bin files and add IDE support for uploading them to the machine -.-
Either way, I'm realizing that the whole AVR system is a bit hacked together. On the bright side, I've got a $2 microcontroller playing a rendition of this song :D
I remember someone did a "drill down" function that went something like if (a) if (a->b) if (a->b->c) return a->b->c->d; return nullptr; and the drill down function would be like return drill(a, b, c, d); and have the same effect
@sehe I'd say it is as revolutionary as lambdas. Can't do anything you couldn't before, but it is finally convenient enough that people actually use it.
I think my biggest issue with some languages is that after a certain point, they get in the way of good abstraction. I'm just happy to see C++ getting support for some of those tools
@Xeo 19% of the leftover 60%, so it is effectively 11.4%. Doesn't make it much better though, over half sucks.
:P
And yeah, like I said, just a bit salty right now, since I actually kinda need money right now due to paying rent for two flats. But financially, it should still be good.
@R.MartinhoFernandes someone said that reason is that as a politician in power you want to have great impact and spend everything and leave your competitor next voting period with nothing. Then you can say "see how much I did and how little the other guy did?".
> Customers who like our conditions stay on the platform increasing their investments; it is a great profit for the company. It is clear that one cannot earn big money starting with such a small sum as 10 dollars.
@BartekBanachewicz Perl is clearly vastly superior. Even if it introduces a shit ton of unwieldy complexity, at least they employ complexity, proving that intellect was involved. BIG difference with PHP