@StackedCrooked Perhaps it should really be a single class with some template parameters to specify how it works. Primary choice is between relative and absolute, with steady = notrequried as the second parameter.
I'm finding that the greater half of my programming issues come from handling text encodings... The remainder are usually just my gripes with sound but unintuitive design
@JerryCoffin I'd keep system_clock and steady_clock a primary distinction and use highres as the param. (I'd really like to have clock_utc and clock_tai, but that requires a time synchronization source which is kind of a heavy dependency).
"I'm not sure if this is the right answer, but we can store 11 million years before the next epic, e-puck, epic". It's hard to take him seriously and I feel sorry because I respect the project :(
Clojure offers if-let as a shortcut for... Well, if and let (as well as when-let if your then branch has more than one form)
There's an else clause if you wish to use it. Otherwise you'll get nil as the else.
(if-let [t nil] t)
nil
(if-let [t 1] t)
1
(if-let [t nil] t 0)
0
(when-...
^ that guy waited for me to edit my asnwer to add some details to remove the "accept", and instead posted the answer in his own question.
@Ven I believe you may be correct. Definitely not ordinary behavioural tics, even for the more reclusive programmers. It honestly reminds me a bit of how the schizophrenic people I've met communicate
Okay then, he must be new but his rep says otherwise...
i tried to write this regex to match for a string with must contain at least 1 lower case letter, 1 upper case letter, 1 digit and of at least length 6
@Aaron3468 yes, but I want to assign the values to different variables for each iteration and I can't store in an array since one is float and others are int.
@AbhishekBhatia Check the line for . or ,, and assuming the line is a number, interpret it as float if either one is found. Otherwise interpret as int...
@AbhishekBhatia I recommend you learn more about C++ file input and strings before you continue with this problem. You don't seem ready for it (yet). What I mean is for character in line, if character == '.' || character == ',', return (float) line. Else return (int) line
@DevanshMohanKaushik It's not a difficult problem if you break it down; you have four elements to search for. You know the first, day, will be at least 3 characters of the day's full name (with varying caps). The second, date, will be a 1-2 digit number, followed by an optional suffix depending on the number, and an optional prefix 0 for 1-digit dates. The 3rd, month, is pretty much the same substring problem as day. The fourth, year, will either be 4 digits, or two with an apostrophe prefix.
And between them will always be delimiting or abbreviating characters (comma, period, or whitespaces)
@AbhishekBhatia That was for Devansh. I understand your case and I feel that you will learn the solution with more research. I've pointed you toward it, but feel free to ask a question on stackoverflow.com if you have further trouble.
Anyways, I'm off to bed. Good luck Devansh! You're off to a good start.
People who are sexists always use the dumbest of all women as example for all women ... <troll> as for slut shaming, I mean, if you could whoring yourself out for $100 an hour as a prostitute, why do you let men sleep you for free? Idiot! </troll>
additional interesting note: if you combine line 15 and 16 into return *reinterpret_cast<Struct *>(reinterpret_cast<char *>(&m) - offset); gcc's ASAN will complain about "runtime error: reference binding to misaligned address", otherwise it does not
(the point is getting the address of a parent struct that contains a member variable from the address of the member variable)
You know. Inheritance kinda allows you to do that. A derived object is implicitly convertible to the base object. The distance to the base pointer is also this - offset_of_derived.
My use case is a singly linked list that should support non-movable types and also allow transferring an object from one list to another, without moving it. The user doesn't know about nodes and only gives me a reference to the element, from which I need to get the node. Problem is that it doesn't help having the node because I need the parent too, so I need to traverse the list anyways. If it was a doubly linked list it would have actually been useful.
I think I'll make it a doubly linked list, just to play in the dirt for a while.
There's this thing I'd like to try out. Composing the object hierarchy according to a specific alignment so that children can convert their own address to the index in their parent array.
user784668
@StackedCrooked Why the __attribute__, isn't alignas enough?
It does require the root object to use static storage (it's a global variable) and it can not be resized or anything. But hey, RAM can't be resized at runtime either :P
user784668
@StackedCrooked There's the problem of 8 KB being bigger than the page size on x86, so actually allocating 8 KB aligned shit may require inordinate amounts of padding.
I could be wrong though. Never done this for real. And never seen it being done elsewhere.
user784668
1:59 PM
@StackedCrooked But the address space allocator deals in 4k-aligned blocks, so you may need to waste a single page for padding if the returned address is not 8k-aligned.
I wanted to know some beginner repositories where I can contribute to. And I am not talking about issues reporting or documentation. Some feature addition kind of work.
@Griwes Mh, I'm wondering. to use repe cmpsb, I need to set the length of the biggest string in ecx. However, to determine the length I need to loop on both strings... So it doesn't sound actually worth it (except if it's implemented internally as a much better than the loop I'd use).
But repe scasb on each twice to get the length+compare to know which of the two lengths is bigger, then repe cmpsb to actually compare the string.
Also, wtf. The armistice treaty specifically stated French casualties at Verdun were to be buried in individual graves marked with white crosses, but Germans in mass graves marked with black crosses.
Apparently encodings, file systems, gui, and pretty much everything outside of a language is a PITA full of edge-cases when I code for cross-platform... Time to buy a C64 and a mountain shack
But I'm just salty that I need to spend hours researching what seems to me simple at first (and which I eventually have a decent implementation for)
Honestly, it's the classic journalism move; advertise something as bigger than it really is. They aren't sampling 'The best programmers in the world'
> which countries do the best at programming challenges on HackerRank?
And of that, they don't seem to cull out the users who quit half-way into the challenges; ideally they should only sample users who've tried every challenge in a set. (Rather than naively taking the global average per country)
As I read further, I see that it's literally the kind of statistics I learned in my first-year course...
On one hand, they've got the benefit of consistent control over all their UI. On the other they've got the benefit of consistent control over all their UI
I wonder if that's why the view hasn't changed in 8 years ;) Shame really, because a UI library helps most when they are making more than ~3 or 4 apps each year
@redspah Pretty much. Having a currying syntax in languages that support currying makes the code more legible. I just made up pseudo code for the sake of showing how currying can be useful