@Puppy I'm tempted to ask how anybody could possibly make PHP worse, but then, I consider the (obviously immense) capacity for making things worse that's shown in PHP today, and shudder at the thought...
@Ell Lots of people in situations where taking advantage of them is relatively easy. Most probably don't have a lot of money, which renders most typical scams (and such) irrelevant, but they still have their bodies, so...
that's just what happens when you get a lot of people and you put them in the same place.
back in Syria, there would be child rapists, you just wouldn't know about it.
another example of how this may not be even remotely notable is if those child rapists above simply would have raped some other child instead and just picked refugees because they were easier targets
you really need a bigger statistical picture to start drawing useful inferences
not that I'm not sympathetic to the plight of sexually abused child refugees
it's simply not immediately obvious that this represents any kind of unusual or worse outcome
@Puppy True, but I'd guess there's a good chance it is at least a little worse than usual. If you leave money lying around on the ground, chances are that it's going to get picked up, and probably by somebody who'd never consider stealing under normal circumstances. To somebody with an inclination toward taking advantage of the defenseless, I'd guess refugees seem pretty similar.
@JerryCoffin IIRC over there it's illegal to pick up money on the floor; only police officers are allowed to do so. Otherwise you can be held liable for theft.
@Puppy Perhaps not--but my basic point is fairly simple: many people will do wrong only when extraordinarily tempted, and the current refugee situation almost unavoidably creates an unusual level of temptation. Put those together, and it's almost inevitable that at least a few bad things will happen that wouldn't otherwise.
@Darkrifts ISIS almost undoubtedly contains an entire spectrum: true believers who honestly believe they're following the Koran, at least a few who are just psychotic (or whatever), some who don't care about religion but enjoy what ISIS lets them get away with doing, and at least a few who are just following the crowd--some voluntarily, others probably reluctantly but knowing they'll be next up for beheading if they complain.
> (Note that the rules here are actually subtly wrong: the point of instantiation for an entity referenced by the declaration of another entity actually must immediately precede that entity rather than immediately following it. This has been reported as a core issue, but it's not on the issues list yet as the list hasn't been updated for a while.)
lol
> Therefore, when the call to foo from has_foo<unsigned> looks up the partial specializatios of foo_impl, it does not find the floating-point specialization at all.
Is there a reason why std::vector's move constructor is not noexcept? I don't see any technical reason why it can't. You're aren't moving any user-defined objects that can throw.
I assume that by "move constructor for std::vector with custom allocator" you mean the allocator-extended move constructor i.e. this constructor:
vector(vector&& v, const allocator_type& a);
The main reason is that if v.get_allocator() != a then the constructor must allocate more memory, which...
@CaptainGiraffe It's complicated. I'm trying to make insertions with strong-exception guarantee. But if the insertion results in a rehash, things get a little ugly.
Coordinating multiple projects to have multiple outputs end up in one directory to be run, explicitly marking "dependency" files... all of this is a fucking trainwreck in QtCreator and there's no point to be using the IDE because it just vomits its shit out to the commandline.
For example, ninja doesn't output its errors to std::cerr, only std::cout, so when QtCreator parses its output (e.g., the errors), none of it is clickable or searchable because ninja doesn't play nice with the ecosystem.
@Xeo There's one level of indirection. The table itself is expected to be extremely sparse. So I can't inline the entire object into it since it will consume far too much memory.
@Mysticial Assuming a standard unordered_map (or similar) which has to handle collisions by chaining, you should normally be starting with a pointer to the node, in which case the rest should be pretty easy.
The thing that bugs me right now is that lookup-misses are 1 indirection best case and lookup-hits are 2 best case. I have a feeling that even that 2 is too high.
@ThePhD If you want to properly support Qt Creator you probably need to support qmake and make a .pro file. If you don't then go with cmake which is supported enough to build a project (but development is a pain. They are working on it but so far it just doesn't).