Dyalog APL 16.0, 17 13 bytes
Prompts for (row, column) and character. Gives INDEX ERROR on faulty input.
⊖⍞@(⊂⎕)⊢5 5⍴0
⊖ flip upside-down the result of
⍞@(...) replacing with inputted-character
⊂⎕ at position evaluated-input (row, column)
⊢ of
5 5⍴0 5×5 grid of zeros
@R.MartinhoFernandes is that right? don’t you need those, and extend it with neologisms? don’t you need another scheme for those neologisms as well (i.e. count in Latin prefixes)?
@LucDanton It doesn't matter what system you pick to name them as long as: 1) eight is the definitely first (so "one billion" instead of "billion"), 2) zero is definitely last (easy enough).
@R.MartinhoFernandes for my purposes I was using 'neologism' to mean 'not in most dictionaries', so yes
@R.MartinhoFernandes see, if I tabulate it I get something around S×6 where S is the ordinal for whichever scheme you use for '{ε, hundred, thousand, million, billion, …}`. 6 being the ordinal for {eight, eighteen, eighty, eleven, fifteen, fifty},how does that relate to your ω?
that’s just the prefixes so there’s room for change and the traditional off-by-one error, too
@R.MartinhoFernandes I’m only counting the prefixes so far, i.e. I only went to 'eight hundred thousand'. I’m thinking it’s not a very clever approach though, cos it leads to a triangular thing if that makes sense to you
@R.MartinhoFernandes The systematic element names do not form an open-ended set. Eventually, you reach "neutron star", then "black hole", and that's the end of the list.
@thecoshman ...whereas 18/8...is a useful type of stainless steel.
@LucDanton Taking the 1pg analogy above: the game that forms the numbers in question is as follows: #1 you make a move in the 6-game; #2 you play the S-game, and reset the 6-game.
see, I was going next with S×6 where S is some P×change, where P is strictly about prefixes and we put the non-prefix into the change but I think it’s inelegant
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, it depends on your prefix scheme. in my very first attempt (i.e. neologism prefixes) I put eight billion as 2. I think we should stick to an abstract prefix scheme though
There are countably many things that start with "eight billion": you can simply add as many "trillion" bits you want, for example: "eight billion trillion trillion trillion". Agree? @Luc
@R.MartinhoFernandes at least as much, yeah. what do we do with the finite change, ignore it cos it doesn’t change the answer? I’m not that familiar with ordinal arithmetic
@LucDanton It's still countably many, i.e. we can count all of them with naturals (no Cantor's diagonal). If you want a sketch of such a numbering scheme, just consider that "trillion" fulfills a role similar to that of 0 (i.e. this is a radix system)
The prefixes are {eight, eighteen, eighty, eleven, fifteen, fifty} x {billion, million, thousand, trillion} + 1 for "eight hundred" ("eighteen hundred" is not valid in our scheme).
@R.MartinhoFernandes it’s in the order of that (if there is such a notion for ordinals), but it’s not that. which I think still makes for a fair and interesting answer, but just to make sure (ω + 1) + ω is not ω × 2 right? cos we’re interspersing a lot of change in between the ωs
@LucDanton It is. Addition is associative, so you can cancel out the 1 by changing the parens.
(ω + 1) + ω is the order of the ordered set [0, 1, ..., 0', 0'', 1'', ...] (primes to distinguish the source of the elements), which is clearly the same as ω + (1 + ω).
If you apply the renaming n'' -> (n+1)', you get [0, 1, ..., 0', 1', ...], which has obviously order type ω+ω.
since the Standard is silent on whether auto [insides] = [i=0] {}; is valid or not, is that undefined or rather unspecified behavior? we still know that the closure object e.g. is a class with a non-static data member after all
is there an official name for irrelevant things in SO question like 'p.s. […] Avoid suggesting […] to use unique pointers, it's not the point of this question.'?
> India unveils the world's largest solar power plant The country is on schedule to be the world’s third biggest solar market next year. http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/11/india-unveils-world-largest-solar-power-plant-161129101022044.html
I have no problem creating a Java or C# app to handle large text files, I'm just curious why open a 2GB text file using Notepad, Notepad++, WordPad etc, fails, even 60MB takes too long time or they don't show the content. Why all these programs can't read and show the contents? are they so poorly...
@Mgetz It does, but it's really a question (at least in the case of Notepad) about the history of Windows, not about programming as such. Not sure about Notepad++, but it wouldn't surprise me if it used a Windows RichText control, in which case it would be roughly the same as WordPad.
That uses a RichText control, so it's newer and better suited to larger amounts of text than the Edit control used in Notepad, but still pretty old and never really intended for the purpose to which it's being put. When the Edit control was originally designed, 60 MB would have been a large hard disk, so a single text file that size wasn't contemplated at all.
@JerryCoffin even if it doesn't, the overhead of just the display structures can be massive unless you ensure you're only displaying what absolutely needs to be on the screen. Forget syntax highlighting at that point, you don't have enough context. Moreover you can't render a scrollbar properly because you'd need to render the content to see how long it is to get a metric to even do that.
@Mgetz It is non-trivial, but it can be done. Really is mostly a matter of what you plan for. I first used an edit control on a 286 with a 20 MB hard drive--and I'm pretty sure that code is still pretty similar to how it was then. It just wasn't written with the idea of editing megabytes (or really even any more than a few kilobytes) of text.
@JerryCoffin I'm not arguing that. I think the more salient point is that it's completely outside of the 80/20 rule, as it's probably less than 1% of files
@Puppy line wrap gets you, you still have to calculate the number of lines. That said you could just do a rough number and then adjust later.
I want to change my key to an existing, which means I have to feed my private key to the keybase app. Thing is, I don't have access to my private key because it's in a SmartCard.
Even if I want to entrust the app with my private key, I'll have to fetch my paper printout backup and type all the bytes of the private key one-by-one, or take a picture, OCR, and fix all the wrong bytes one-by-one.
Write a console application which has N producers (N=1…10), M consumers (M=1…10) and one data queue. Each producer and consumer is a separate thread and all threads are working concurrently. Producer thread sleeps 0…100 milliseconds randomly then it wakes up and generates a random number between ...
are there coloured QR codes? That would increase the bytes-per-pixel. Unless there's problems with colour recognition, even if you limit them to not-really-ambiguous once.
Also, being commonplace and standardized is important, because, again, you don't want to go around chasing the only copy of the abandonware that can read them.
@LucDanton "Each line starts with its sequence number; followed by 21 octets encoded in hexadecimal digits, and separated by spaces; and ends with a CRC24 checksum of the octets. At the end there is a CRC24 checksum of all the octets" kinda thing.
@sehe Good point. I mean, I really appreciate the effort that you put into your answers, especially given that the askers usually don't, and the number of upvotes you receive is pitifully small
So, apparently I have successfully troubleshooted my brothers friend's issues with Linux Mint. It took only whole day and half of relaying messages between me and the dude through my brother using FB messenger, with photographs of LCD screens being relied betweens us.
@Columbo Mine was much later, if I recall. Classic case of "I need this, let's find the existing implementation - shute, that's not elegant enough, let's post my version". They ended up taking it for MoreLinq, so that's nice
By the rules in [implimits], an implementation is permitted to put a recursion depth limit on constexpr calculations. The two compilers which have complete constexpr implementations (gcc and clang) both apply such a limit, using the default of 512 recursive calls as suggested by the standard. For...
@sehe No, I think you need to stop putting more effort into your answers than the help vampires deserve. Otherwise I'll have to make the world a bit less unfair by giving you rep ;)
@Columbo I'm not sure. This is not something that affords comparison, but for the record I value the insights of some of the loungers pretty much; There are a zillion specialisms even in C++ compiler specifics
@Mikhail no, but you can tell the deduction guides to std::add_pointer_t on the int
unfortunately that is useless because std::unique_ptr<int *>(42) doesn't do anything and I cannot sneak a make_unique into there because it is only about type deduction
@sehe Depends on how you classify it. You could split by core and library. And further categorize according to evolution and consistency, and whether the wording of interest affects ABIs etc. or just front-ends...
> The design and poetic contents of this nocturne make it the most important one that Chopin created, in Karasowski's opinion it even oversteps the bounds of the nocturne style. The chief subject (A-B) is a masterly expression of a great, powerful grief, for instance at a grave misfortune by which the dear, beloved native land is visited. Upon such an occasion and in such a mood it is but a step to self-sacrificing deeds.
> The secondary subject makes upon me an impression as if heroic men had banded themselves together and solemnly went forth to the holy war to conquer or die for their native land. In correspondence with the character of a grand heroic march, the harmonic masses finally tower aloft in imposing splendor and majesty. At C the chief subject is repeated, but richly varied, enhanced in passionateness and feverishly agitated.
@sehe Well, he used to be LWG chair, but isn't any more. At the same time, I doubt that Marshall (the current LWG chair) is likely to ignore Howard's input...
It's funny how you appropriated the qualification then :) I do agree with the description. Not sure about "overstepping the bounds" because, really, what is a Nocturne, other than a peaceful fantasy opus? It might be unconventional in it's arc, but there are several of those.
@sehe Ah...well, pretty much the same--no official position, but everybody who cares much about his specialty probably knows who he is, so they'll undoubtedly listen pretty closely when he talks.
@sehe I said I think, because neither I nor the author of the above "knows" what the most important one is, because there presumably is no agreeable definition of that. But, just like you, I love this Nocturne (as I do most of his work, for a fact :) My mother also learned it after I got to Uni this term, can't wait for her interpretation once I get back