The compare function is a function that takes two arguments a and b and returns an integer describing their order. If a is smaller than b, the result is some negative integer. If a is bigger than b, the result is some positive integer. Otherwise, a and b are equal, and the result is zero.
This f...
@Borgleader More than that usually. Start with 100k. 50k goes to taxes. So you're left with 50k. Rent for anything that isn't a shit-hole is usually about 3 - 4k/month. Let's assume the upper end of that. So that's 50k - 4k*12 = 2k for the year. 2k/year isn't a lot. That's why Google provides you 3 meals a day.
@fredoverflow I'm currently paying 2.4k/month for a 750 sqft unit in a downtown high-rise. It's absurd since it's about 2.4k more than I'd like to pay. But I don't have a choice. Either I give up my 5 min. walk-commute. Or I move into a shit-hole where my view is another person's bedroom. (the chances of that being a good thing is hit-and-miss)
user406009
@Telkitty Well, you also make money on the appreciation of the property.
what I am saying is that I can spend the rents but not capital gain unless I sell it, so rent raise is much important cash flow wise than capital gain unless I sell the place
@Mysticial In fairness, I feel obliged to add that the tax brackets have (mostly intentionally, I think) gotten fairly out of date, so even if you're only making enough to barely scrape by (with half a dozen room mates) in the Bay area, you're still probably paying (at least very close to) the maximum.
I guess to be completely fair, you need to include stock and bonus as well. But the tech bonuses for entry-level developers are typically only 10-15%. As opposed to in financial services where it's usually about 100%+.
@Lalaland Their "facts" don't seem to match up very well with reality. Supporting a family of six, I'm not only paying more than they say I should be, but more than they say I should even if I was single.
@nwp I worked since my high school days, also worked 12 hour days. Once I had 2 jobs at the same time and worked 18 hours a day, 5 days a week. How do you think that I saved the deposit?
@Telkitty I've seen a study comparing us (people in the developed world) to some who still live in parts of the Brazilizian rain forest with essentially no technology. It concluded that they work about half as much as we do.
@Mysticial Depends on whether you pay them at least some semblance of a reasonable rent, I s'pose (and to some extent on how happy they are to have you there).
Also I built a (tiny) house and a bunch of apps, some has tons of reviews. So it's not like I don't do anything all day. In fact I need to complete company tax return in a couple of days so I don't cop another fine ...
@BartekBanachewicz If memory serves, it requires a slightly unusual PQ though--one where you can change the priority and rearrange the item back into the proper place quickly.
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, you can. In fact, I'm pretty sure Dijkstra originally formulated the algorithm without a PQ. A PQ where you can manipulate the priority improves performance quite a bit though.
@LucDanton Something to...run? What? Next you'll start insisting on all that other nastiness like efficient compilation and execution, and next thing you know, we're all back to writing machine code with a magnetized needle...
@johnathon No--and I doubt anybody else has either. It's purely a theoretical construct that goes with walking 10 miles to school, up-hill both ways, through 6 meters of snow in the middle of the summer.
@JerryCoffin i knew. But lets be real, punch cards are 1000 times worse than a magnetized needle.... at least with the needle you can poke the other programmer that annoys you lol
@johnathon I may have mentioned him before, but early in my mad career, I (sort of) knew a guy who'd spent years writing code on manual card punch machines. He typed with two fingers. He made a fist with each forefinger sticking out (but still curved), held the arm straight up, then swung it down to slam into the chosen key (lather, rinse, repeat). He was given a terminal with a removable keyboard (back when that was expensive) because he destroyed around 3 or 4 keyboards a year.
Because the logic with which the latex is generated is non trivial and because I would like to distribute the program to other people that would like to use it
And also because I desperately need to go back to programming
@JerryCoffin in my mad career iv'e worked with several indivduals who where previously empoloyed as COBOL and Fortran programmers. It's a rather delicate relationship when your both half their age and their boss.
@johnathon B wasn't actually all that terrible of a language, at least from what I can gather. It was pretty much exclusive to Bell Labs though. I was thinking more of things that were let out into the wild. For example, i wrote some code in a vaguely simula-like language that Control Data invented back in the '70s (or so).
@johnathon Bjarne doesn't make any secret that C++ is based pretty heavily on Simula, anyway.
@johnathon It had a system consisting of one type, which was either an integer or a pointer, depending on how you looked at it. What's not solid about that? :-)
@JerryCoffin While i certainly could work with that there's no doubt in my mind that it would be both a headache and learning experience. But really, that's not far from ASM so ... perhaps not
@JerryCoffin I wouldn't want to do anything beyond pet projects with it for sure.
@johnathon Apparently nobody did. Only a handful of programs were even written in B, and little enough value was placed on it, that (apparently) not even a single copy of the source code to its implementation survives today.
@Shoe GUI? I guess I'd try Qt or GTK+. I'd also probably end up writing the app in python even though last time I tried PyQt a 5 line program segfaulted on me.
@johnathon Depending on exactly where you draw lines, maybe (but I wouldn't be too sure of it). Although it didn't last very long, there was a "New B" between B and C, and I believe it was (at least mostly) a ground-up re-implementation. I would guess that quite a bit of the New B compiler survived into some early C compilers though.
@JerryCoffin that makes sense. Not that anyone is going to be ripping out the B compiler from the early C compiler source code for fun or novelty, but it's just cool information to me, thank you.
@АндрейБеньковский Tried it already and I remember it being boring. I think I'll go with Rust. I've been waiting for a reason to try it out for so long I can't ignore it now... even though apparently GUIs are not its strongest suits.
I have an idea for an awesome game idea that is definitely something that people would love playing but since I don't know the first thing about programming. I decided that if I was going to move forward with the idea I had, I would do it properly. I have set aside a sizable investment aside and ...
@Mysticial Just In case you are about to come up with a new language:the only three one-letter language names that seam to be still unused are I, M and X so plan accordingly.
but isn't programming an esoteric activity to begin with? I know we are working to improve this, but overall it's not easy to find say a senior systems information programmer
@АндрейБеньковский But all three of those are used in MIX. Nobody who's even attempted to study CompSci properly (l.e., using TAOCP) would dare use any of those.
@Ven that depends on your point of view, as a programmer, i would say it's not. I have more views in this world than that of just a programmer, and i can tell you that it is. Programming isn't as much of a coequally known skill such as algebra, or even calculus. There's more people in the world that know how to do calculus than there is that know how to write programs. Think about it.
@Mysticial The C#/Db thing has given rise to lots of parodies too.
Also note that long before C# came along, Al Stevens implemented a windowing system (for MS-DOS) in C that he named "d-flat" (wrote several columns about it in Dr. Dobbs around 1990 or so).
@johnathon Interesting. I guess it never occurred to me that it'd be online, though I guess I should have expected it. The resemblance to Win32 is via a common ancestor: the 16-bit Windows API. One of many such derivatives. In fact, there was one ("MEWEL", if memory serves) that let you re-compile Windows programs, and produce something that ran in text mode. Ugly, but faster than Windows usually was at the time.
@johnathon Not sure what you're asking here. Do you mean: "d-flat wasn't based on 16-bit Win, was it?" If so, I think the answer is yes, it was. Win32 became public in the beta of Windows NT 3.1, release (coincidentally enough) in October 1991.
@JerryCoffin Not so much asking, just noting some properties of these libraries your discussing. particularly some commentry in the articles. windows 3.0 lacking formatted data entry.... I believe the author was really complaining about not having spreadsheets.
@johnathon I don't think I ever used MEWEL directly, but I wrote some code for Windows that somebody else was porting to run without Windows, using MEWEL. My (distant, vague) recollection was that he said it didn't usually involve much more than re-compiling.
@johnathon Not really spreadsheets. But quite a few windowing libraries did let you (for example) specify a regex that input had to math. Windows let you specify a few simple restrictions (e.g., digits only) but for much more than that, you had to subclass a control and handle its WM_CHAR, or something on that general order.
@Mysticial Probably something on the order of: law was originally written with a $100K fine, then some years later a revision was written to adjust it for inflation, based on (for example) percentage change in the consumer price index.
@JerryCoffin and on another note, i will say restricting input to a particular format can cause havoc to users, and it's usually much easier to clean up the data in SQL than it is to expect a ton of users to quietly fight your application into doing what they need it to do.
@JerryCoffin sometimes corporate culture is too polite.
@johnathon I think that was probably Microsoft's idea as well. I note that the libraries/systems that provided "superior" formatted data entry have probably all been dead for at least a decade now...
@JerryCoffin it made it into ours.. .after i watched a sales manager try to use it i quietly ripped it out of our library, and the application she was using.
@JerryCoffin the bad part is they had used that for a year and managed to come up with ways to get the data into the system correctly......
@JerryCoffin perhaps the worst part is the intent was to help them from making mistakes , as a wrong decimal place means millions on reports....
@johnathon I've certainly fought with a few using ill-considered systems. One that particularly bothered me wanted me to enter a number between, say, 10 and 100 (and had a default of 10. Needed to enter 20, so I tried to back-space over the 1, and enter a 2--but as soon as I back-spaced, it kindly informed me that 0 wasn't allowed, and set it back to 10.
@feen Think of it as a base-8 number. You need to generate a number between 100 and 777. Convert those to decimal, and they give you your limits. Generate a number within those limits, and convert it to octal.