@Columbo Crap like this was once a staple of trojan horse distribution. Depended on the fact that (by default) Windows hid extensions it recognized, so britney_naked.jpg.exe would be displayed as britney_naked.jpg.
@Columbo Simple. Apple didn't use file extensions at all at the time, and quite a few UI designers were convinced that "be like Apple" was a good UI design guideline.
Extreme, hardly ever - I totally expect British billionaires getting lost in the dessert all the times with nothing but bags of $5 pound notes pondering the ethical consequences of eating animal fats containing notes
@JerryCoffin You have never eaten notes before? Like ever?
@Telkitty You still seem to be missing the point. Serious vegans worry not only about what they eat, but anything and everything else containing animal products. Many years ago, I completely ruined life for a vegan photographer when I pointed out that film emulsion was made from animal fat. Fortunately, it wasn't a great loss--he wasn't a very good photographer.
@Mikhail Probably. Then again, I was never entirely convinced that either the photography or veganism was entirely genuine. I at least half-suspected it was just his idea of how to pick up women.
@Columbo The worst part of it was that he didn't have the self confidence to hit on women who actually looked like models. Pretty sure a lot of the women who turned him down thought he was being sarcastic when he told them he was going to make them supermodels.
@JerryCoffin I'm still at work too, but I have eaten supper. My team is doing overtime (paid, of course), and we're ordering food on the company's dime.
@EtiennedeMartel What is this "overtime" of which you speak? It almost sounds like you're implying the possibility of being awake, but not at work, or something like that...
@Telkitty I've walked a Samoyed many times, but never picked up any women that way (and the fact that I was less than 16 at the time shouldn't have any effect, should it?)
I remember the days where people would have to wax over pimpl implementation for days on end and still not get it right. C++11 sure made things simpler
@StackedCrooked I still use it, for hiding implementation details from headers (like library dependencies, or choices of atomic vs. thread locking)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I kind of want to do that too, but then you've gotta do another pair of brackets after the for (...). I'm trying to get the shortest, most cromulent syntax I can.
Apparently, there are protests in the US to get minimal hourly wage set to 15 USD. That is about as much I make in my fairly qualified programming job. FML.
@StackedCrooked Oh no need for cross platform. Just when I e.g. take a shortcut implementing something with Boost Multi-Index or Serialization, use use something else specific that I might not want in my header, I just stick in the proxy so I'm free to change it
E.g. recently there was some klnd of survey on programmer income (on SE somewhere?) and it was clearly stupid for me to stay in Europe. I should move to the US /immediately/ and at least triple my pay. But I'm not gonna
@sehe This is pretty true. In where I am (New York City), a shitty little apartment room can run you 1500+ in rent EASY. 2000+ for anything nice. And that's just the goddamn rent.
@sehe Obviously not. But that is not the point. The point is that the legally lowest paying jobs there would make as much as I do here. :(
@sehe Yeah, I can understand that. However I wouldn't and couldn't move there either. TBH, I do not want to visit the USA even as a tourist, let alone live there.
@wilx How much do you have in taxes? What do your bills end up looking like? Do you have to pay for your own insurance or are you compelled by the state to pay for (Home, Car, Health) insurance?
> The Windows 7 Whopper, A Whopper sandwich with seven patties that was an LTO product tie-in with Microsoft in Japan for the introduction of Windows 7.
So there's no automatic destructing of a returned tuple of tokens or a list of tokens
So instead I have to go through every place in my parser and wrap it in a [] return, JUST so I have have the ability in one or two places to return multiple tokens
Then I need to write a goddamn custom token splitting function to handle this, just so I can serialize the tokens into little itty bitty pieces
I don't get what you're talking about. I'm already doing the way that works: piecing apart the return value using pattern matching. What else do you want from me?
I can't have a runtime-polymorphic return type, is basically my problem here. I don't want to sprinkle (single_token_return, []), ((), [token_1, token_2]) all over my code just to have multiple returns, and I don't want to encapsulate every return value in [single_token_return] and [the_few, multi_token, returns_i_need].
I want to return token_1 for 1 token, token_1, token_2 for 2 tokens, and just handle it like that.
@ratchetfreak That might work. But then I'd need some global state with a ref None in it, and then set it to Some([Extra, Tokens]), and then intercept that at my toplevel call to empty out the "extra" tokens.
proper functional should be that the parser passes you a custom context variable that you modify and return and the next time it gets called you get that modified context back
Because if it was a default then I could get REALLY close to what I want with just t returns, and then also do [t1, t2] and it's Just Work™ like magic.
Don't use Firefox until an update is available.
Meanwhile, marvel at this beauty of an exploit code: https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/2016-November/042639.html
That forces a function boundary (in the case of dynamically linked library code) or forces you to match build conditions (in the case of a static lib).
(And this doesn't stop you from having module definitions that don't contain the IR and just interface information gained from compilation of that module, if you don't want to share the code.)
@ThePhD Because the compiled module can be as optimized as possible, and all type checking and other analysis can be done a priori (and once per that module, not multiple times).
@R.MartinhoFernandes I see the output, it was just not stopping when stuff failed and not propogating it up a level. It only occured ot me just now that it was bash that was hiding things, not docker.
So I have test.h which contains:
#ifndef TEST_H_
#define TEST_H_
class test {
public:
int value;
};
#endif /* TEST_H_ */
and my main.cpp:
#include "test.h"
class Magic {
test x;
x.value = 2; // Syntax error
};
int main () {
test y;
y.value = 2; // Works fine
retur...