@sehe Yeah, I guessed an amortized O(1) lookup was good. However I suspect they use integral types as vertex/edge descriptor so that lookup complexity is still O(1) with a vector?
Hello, i'm pretty new to SO, and I have questions about EPOLL and HTTP/Websocket but its more a design question than a c++ one, can you tell me if it is the right place to chat with experimented users about that? (I dont think it deserve a topic on SO, and cannot find a more appropriate room but i'm certainly wrong)
@Borgleader Ah, no wonder I missed it--I do my best to ignore there very existence of Twitter. The world would be a better place if Twitter had never existed.
@caps Twitter in general (specifically including the previously cited 140 character limit) actively discourages intelligent discourse. I think that Twitter retains the limit (in large part) because if thoughts were fully explained, many of the flamewars would disappear, and they'd lose "engagement". They knowingly inflict harm on their users for their own gain.
@EtiennedeMartel One of Joel's (I think it was Joel, anyway) early posts about designing SO was entirely about the social engineering of designing a site. Even though I think some of our complaints about SO are thoroughly justified, it's still done a much better job of encouraging decent behavior than many other sites. Twitter almost encourages bad behavior, and supplies almost no recourse except for the worst cases (and the recourse is highly problematic in itself).
@JerryCoffin Right from the get go, Twitter's founders were obsessed with a "laisser-faire" attitude towards freedom of speech. Then they probably realized that letting people hurl abuse at others is actually profitable, and so there's no real desire to change anything in that regards.
A zero-indexed array A consisting of N integers is given. We are looking for pairs of elements of the array that are equal but that occupy different positions in the array. More formally, a pair of indices (P, Q) is called
if 0 ≤ P < Q < N and A[P] = A[Q]. The goal is to calculate the number of...
For this simple code snippet:
int main()
{
int test = -1;
std::cout<<"test: " << -5 - test << std::endl;
return 0;
}
The expected result would be -6, however C++ returns -4. Why is that the case, and what is the proper way of handling this in C++?
Edit 2: Right-click -> open in new tab to see the full-size images
I have the following VTune profile for a program compiled with icc --std=c++14 -qopenmp -axS -O3 -fPIC:
In that profile, two clusters of instructions are highlighted in the assembly view. The upper cluster takes significantly ...
@JerryCoffin Interesting take. I suppose it depends on who you follow. Compressing ideas into 140 characters can be a good experiment in concision. For quite a while now, people with long thoughts have been tying them together in "threads" (sometimes numbered for order). The 140 character limit often turns my rambling thoughts into tightly expressed ones.
Don't get me wrong, I have plenty of complaints about twitter, but the 140 character limit is one of the things I like. I think it plays a big part in my twitter feed being so much more pleasant to read than my facebook feed.
But I mostly follow thoughtful people who don't tweet too much and don't typically get into fights.
What's the point of having 100k+ rep if I can't post a fucking link.
This is what the short URL expands to: https://play.rust-lang.org/?code=%23!%5Bfeature(raw)%5D%0A%0Ause%20std%3A%3Araw%3A%3ATraitObject%3B%0Ause%20std%3A%3Amem%3B%0A%0Atrait%20Foo%20%7B%0A%20%20%20%20fn%20f(%26self)%3B%0A%7D%0A%0Astruct%20Bar%3B%0A%0Aimpl%20Foo%20for%20Bar%20%7B%0A%20%20%20%20fn%20f(%26self)%20%7B%20println!(%22ok%22)%20%7D%0A%7D%0A%0Afn%20erase%3C%27a%2C%20T%3A%20%3FSized%3E(r%3A%20%26%27a%20T)%20-%3E%20TraitObject%20%7B%20unsafe%20%7B%20mem%3A%3Atransmute_copy(%26r)%20%7D%20%7D%0Afn%20recover%3C%27a%2C%20T%3A%20%3FSized%3E(r%3A%20TraitObject)%20-%3E%20%26%27a%20T%20%7B%20…
As suggested, I tried <br><b>replacing</b> the short URL with the URL it redirects to!<br>.
Sadly short the URL redirects to:
https://play.rust-lang.org/?code=%23!%5Bfeature(raw)%5D%0A%0Ause%20std%3A%3Araw%3A%3ATraitObject%3B%0Ause%20std%3A%3Amem%3B%0A%0Atrait%20Foo%20%7B%0A%20%20%20%20fn%20f...
After a little thought, I think what's really needed is a simple change in how they compute the length of a comment. Rather than counting the raw length, they should count the number of characters that will be visible as it's displayed (and possibly a separate, much larger, limit on the length of the raw text).
On which SE site should I ask the below question?
I have little experience in teaching young kids. Soon, I will present have to present my research to a class of 7 to 16 year old kids. I mainly do individual-based simulations in population genetics to investigate various evolutionary processes...
> Person: I have a problem A. How can I solve it? Me: Oh, sure, here's how I solved it, and this is what else you can do Person: No, we cannot do that because we have a problem A
@JerryCoffin I think the benefit is that the links contain all the information needed to reconstruct the resource, even if it no longer exists. (Of course, using the shortener kills that benefit)
I don't see what was ambiguous about it. We were going to compile to LLVM IR, and have LLVM IR calls into Vulkan to dispatch huge chunks of work to the GPU.
Firstly, I should tell you I come from the "civilized and organised" world of Java. There, you know how things work: Your code gets "compiled" to java byte code which is then interpreted by the JVM. Now, what I don't understand about C++, which happens to be the language we study at school, is th...
@EtiennedeMartel Oh, I should mention, while it wasn't a commission (he did it for fun), I had one of my friends drawing laminated and it has been hanging in my room for over 5 years now.
The StingRay is an IMSI-catcher, a controversial cellular phone surveillance device, manufactured by Harris Corporation. Initially developed for the military and intelligence community, the StingRay and similar Harris devices are in widespread use by local and state law enforcement agencies across the United States and possibly covertly in the United Kingdom. Stingray has also become a generic name to describe these kinds of devices.
== Technology ==
The StingRay is an IMSI-catcher with both passive (digital analyzer) and active (cell site simulator) capabilities. When operating in active mode...
> A StingRay can be used to identify and track a phone or other compatible cellular data device even while the device is not engaged in a call or accessing data services.
As if member tempaltes make templates viable. Templates are viable as given. I'd say that member templates and partial specializations mainly come in handy for meta-programming, which is certainly the next level
@nwp I'm pretty happy he realizes how ahead of its time Borland IDEs were.
I loved the consistency across Turbo {Pascal, Prolog, C++} and the keyboardability
Having to shoe horn your domain's features into some "one size fits all" thing is one of a thousand paper cuts that weighs your project down unnecessarily.
I remember this from configuring DCOM. Or ASP.NET pools (DB connection, thread, ASP workers etc).Hell, even just getting your LINQ to behave is tough business.
Let the developer choose the abstractions, where they need to sit, serving the application.
And then, facilitate the hell out of that, by implementing the stock structures/logic and making all possible combinations jive well with the APIs. That's good design.
Just grab' em by the pussy .OH NOES. Channeling the wrong guru