Hopefully at least they have the assumption that trailing spaces are to be ignored. "Oz " will do the trick
At the end of the day though, the keyhole problem is the result of how difficult it is to add support in comparison to how easy it is to remove. Also, communication protocols between humans are combinatorially complex, but many programming solutions approach parsing in a linear fashion.
@Aaron3468 it's about gratuitous limitations, and not being able to search for ones own TV series, is ludicrous. Even with 1 letter searches, they could easily show the top 10 most popular matches. It's a small database, not the entire IMDB (and even then, a simple trie would do the job)
user1804599
@fredoverflow Who needs polymorphic methods when you have path-dependent types? def id(a: {type T})(x: a.T): a.T = x
@TemplateRex That is true, however they're probably relying on a naive search library like the one google uses. Much of the time, the limitations like that are a result of the underlying software/hardware stack rather than the end-developer. On the other hand, not accepting alternative input conventions is often the end-developer's fault.
Software abstraction layers make computers easier to use (eventually to the point that the unskilled user may easily navigate and use it for non-technical purposes), but it's a common assumption that the end-user will be equally technical and will find trivial fixes... trivial. Especially with commercial programs, this isn't the case
Superior in the sense that we have means to control and manage them in ways they cannot control and manage us. We often have the advantage in interaction with animals as a class. In individual events, it's often the other way around; most individual people are not well socialized with wild animals or able to fight/outrun them.
Ethical superiority? Sure, we're all equal. Except that we aren't really all equal and there's rarely penalties to exploiting that disparity. It's the penalties and consequences that force behaviour. Moral obligations have little control over behaviour.
@TemplateRex You've hit the point. Ethics and morality are voluntary. Certainly they're a good sentiment because they often enforce symbiotic (mutually beneficial) relationships, but they're an opt-in system. Penalties and consequences are not an opt-in system.
@TemplateRex If I can overpower you (as a government can), and I choose to hit you every time you take money from your friend, are you able to opt out?
@TemplateRex Laws are a much more of a grey area. Examine it from a more direct perspective; two organisms that may or may not be equal. From there you can build out to the grander concepts of law, morality, etc
And naturally, a lot of our behaviour is also determined by normative influences, things which alter our perception of normal behaviour.
Thought experiments lead me to believe that normative influences have a stronger effect on most people's behaviour than their own morality (mostly because normative influences help inform that morality)
This FOIA request is one for the record books. https://www.aclumaine.org/sites/default/files/aclumaine_foaa_08252016.pdf (h/t @maloneyfiles) https://t.co/wSEmfsc0Z9
How bad is it to call delete on a pointer to a heap-allocated POD struct which you do not have the definition for? (i.e. "deletion of pointer to incomplete type 'foo'; no destructor called")
Assuming there's no behavior in the destructor, is it okay for it not to be called?
you know, I've encountered resource leaks on multiple occasions from questioners who forget to call a C-style api's resource release function in one spot or another
and I can't find a question about "how do I easily apply RAII to a c-style interface so my c-style resource is cleaned up automatically?", when the answer is something I wind up typing out in those kinds of questions
I'm wondering if I should write a question/answer pair so I can just link to it when I encounter the problem instead of typing the whole thing out again
I'm mostly proud of it because I'm pretty sure it's my best answer:upvote ratio in a tag I have more than one answer in. I'm well aware I am but a worm to the upper crust of rep society. Do you guys have soirees?
@jaggedSpire Seriously, it is a pretty high ratio. Soirees? Guys never have soirees--at the risk of sounding sexist (which I undoubtedly am), I'm pretty sure you need at least one lady involved to get a soiree. If it's all guys, you're most likely going to be sitting around a garage eating pretzels and drinking beer.
@Aaron3468 Except in Russia, where quite average people go and catch fish, and prepare caviar from the eggs. Most of the best caviar is made as a cottage industry and eaten locally.
@Ven profile>profile & settings>preferences>near the bottom
it's neat, just be aware that when they have a button labeled achievements it should be labeled destroy all my beautiful green rep that I've worked to gather for months on end without so much as a by-your-leave
@Aaron3468 Yeah--I got kind of a lecture when I hinted at the possibility of buying some caviar in a store once. My fiance of the time (who was Russian, in case that wasn't obvious) rather looked down her nose at it and told me that if we were going to have caviar, we'd get a lot better than that, and we wouldn't get it from a store either.
What kind of monster assumes I want to overwrite code on a line instead of inserting!???
@JerryCoffin I see... I can understand where that perspective comes from though when there's a cottage industry. OTOH, 'fiance of the time' has a bit of a bitter taste
@Aaron3468 It certainly did at one time, but I've had quite a bit of time to get over it...
Rereading that, the "lecture" (in particular) sounds like she was being a little nasty. The reality is quite the opposite: she was very nice about it, and really was saving an ignorant tourist from making an expensive mistake.
It takes a while to get over the inevitable sense of having betrayed expectations. Glad to hear you worked through that mess
@JerryCoffin I usually read the word as 'a long unsolicited discussion/explanation', so I don't usually see it as negative, but words are open to interpretation so the clarification is welcome
Speaking of betrayed expectations, it's so much more difficult to write code when typing in the middle of the line overwrites the code that's already okay. I was not raised on a typewriter.
@Mikhail Being fair, he's at least sort of right, given the definition of a smart pointer he uses. "Create a base class for all your objects (let's call it RefObj). This base class holds a reference count integer that tracks how many things are referencing it." Yup, a giant monolithic hierarchy is a completely broken approach to pretty much everything (exception handling being nearly the only...exception).
@JerryCoffin There is one application that might be interesting to consider. I had a problem with pointers being lost to the ether, and used the custom destruction mechanism in std::unique_pointer to patch memory leaks. If the object destroyed of its own volition that was a memory leak and I threw an exception.
@Mikhail Seems like a non sequitur to me (i.e., sounds interesting, but has nothing to do with a reference counter as the root of a monolithic hierarchy).
I like the idea, but there shouldn't be a hierarchy. It just needs to be a referenceManager that has increment and decrement functions, and perhaps pointers to objects registered. The hierarchy is bad because it tightly couples to every unrelated module you code while a separate object doesn't
Yeah, I've been battling with the demons of large memory pools for the last few years. The real thing that messed me up was that my pre-allocated memory pool needed to also lock when either the producer or consumer encountered errors.
So as optimized as the Pi program is. There is a fair amount of memcopies that are the result of defragging the heap.
@Mikhail I've recently started thinking about how to attack the problem in a NUMA-ish architecture. And the whole "preallocate/manually vs. allocate" basically fucked everything up.
I'm thinking about a "far memory" interface backed by either interleaved NUMA memory, interleaved disk, or interleaved NUMA as cache for disk. And it's a fucking nightmare.
@Aaron3468 That's why that doesn't work on the disk. When the program makes checkpoints, only a small amount of data needs to be saved. If the data is on a massive file with the data spread out in it, you'd need to either checkpoint the entire fucking file, or copy it out - which is very expensive.
So my Pi program does the contiguous/manual memory management when working in ram. But on disk, it allocates separate files for every object.
@Aaron3468 I'm not sure difficult is exactly the right word here. The problem is more that it's one program that has to work at a lot of different levels of abstraction, including a number that most programmers rarely never encounter. They're typically hidden by the OS, and for many programmers, that's hidden again by a virtual machine.
The same thing applies to files on the disk. But since disk access is slow anyways, the bookkeeping for that is negligible.
The only overhead-free solution is to design the algorithm so that it doesn't fragment.
IOW, if you're calling a function that returns 3 things, you preallocate those 3 things before you call it. That function can trash the upper part of the memory all it wants for scratch memory, but you know it will be freed when it returns.
The problem is that even though it's simple when stated generally like that, the amount of different types of memory/allocation schemes makes it incredibly difficult to manage all memory effectively.
I was gonna say that it doesn't always work that well: 1. You don't always know the size of the thing you get back. (I know because I go out of my way to precompute how big they are. Hence why I mentioned gamma-function approximations the other day.) 2. You lose some ability to reuse memory - which for some algorithms causes the memory usage to go from `O(N)` to `O(N*log(N))`. 3. When you parallelize.
@Aaron3468 That almost makes it sound like it's usually easy, and there happen to be a few corner cases that are hard. The reality is that completely manual memory management implies memory mismanagement with just short of 100% certainty (i.e., in all but utterly trivial cases).
@Mysticial If somebody asked about when it didn't work on SO, I'd vote to close as too broad. The list is endless.