@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, though you can always do dead-bug style if you are too cheap for any prototyping board. I recommend not using a breadboard for permanent devices (soldering is the way to go)
The cheapest way to etch is to use a sharpie marker. But I don't like etching so much; I'd prefer protoboard or to jump all the way to CNC milling
@JohnJohn It's a long story, but the underlying issue is that for most people the more they know about it, the more they hate it because they're aware of its annoyances
well it's really flexible. Before C++11/14 it was a chore really. But contemporary C++ is really usable and fun. C++17 will hopefully come soon as well
well I've never had any issues with the compiler. Sure it gives out idiotic messages time to time. And you don't know why it's complaining. But it's better than run time errors
I've hated matlab more than anything. Typeless languages aren't for me. Kind of hate the auto keyword in C++ as well. Has it's uses, but it's a hell to use / read code written autos all over
@JohnJohn Because you dislike people judging other people for their lack of knowledge (and their mistaking their wrong view on something for knowledge)?
I mean if the library you're using is updated (return type is changed etc) auto updates the types without you doing anything etc. but usually it hinders readability.
@JohnJohn Here's something useful: be humble when someone tells you you are wrong about something (like in this case of you making a connection between auto and dynamic typing).
I don't care about being right or wrong. Telling some1 that they are wrong is useless. Talk about the task at hand and talk about humbleness in your next life :)
@JohnJohn Judging completely clueless people generally makes me not have to deal with them later on, usually; and being helpful to people who show some promise makes me only have to deal with them later on (which is beneficial for both parties).
> Martinho, we've sent your application to the recruiter (...) Your CV and covering letter (if you applied with a covering letter) are attached to this email.
@JohnJohn And detecting when to do what and being adaptive in some situations yielded me the results of my, err, personal live gaining a part that was missing for a while (and also yielded in that part of it trying to convince me, against the fact that I'm trying to explain her that that's not how it really is, that I'm one of the nicest persons she's ever met, lol).
@Griwes I don't think you need to deal with anybody really. Trying to control people have made me miserable for so long. Also I've been pleasantly surprised by people that I thought were hopeless. Judging people made me closer minded. So I've stopped doing it.
So, in addition to the four other people in Portugal and one in Brazil named Martinho Fernandes that utterly fail at typing their email address, there's now another one in Goa.
@Griwes Yeah any advice, especially bad ones are gold. A chance to improve oneself. But telling people that 'they suck' hardly helps. With the added bonus on receiving a negative response. Not all people have thick skin.
@JohnJohn also, there's been a message from your friendly Footwear explaining how you're wrong, and a message from me explaining why auto actually improves readability, because you stop caring about types (that you most often shouldn't care about).
@JohnJohn Your code not compiling because the deduced type's interface changed is better than your code compiling accidentally because of an implicit conversion to the explicitly specified type. Also auto makes you type less, so I have no idea what your (1) is about.