> Since other U.S. tactical vehicles like the HMMWV utility vehicle and M1 Abrams tank also use JP8, adopting a scout motorcycle which runs on the same fuel would ease logistics.
they should've just made a turboshaft motorcycle engine
now that would be something
oh well, someone did it already
> McIntyre told Leno that the bikes would be sold only to select buyers, those he thought would take proper care of the turbine engine, which is warrantied for life, and not get themselves killed.
I'm wondering if its possible to have WPF Designs/Files in a C# Console app, please note I DON'T want code examples or any links, I just want an answer listing yes or no and how hard it is on a scale from 1 - 10. 1 being as simple as opening a bottle of water and 10 being as hard as making a AAA ...
Voted to reopen, now that the code is in the question and I can read it (I don't follow links) this seems (to me) like a valid question. — Borgleader8 secs ago
also my bike got the official tests done on it (how's that in english actually), the papers have been sent for translation... I should be able to pick it up soon <3
> The MOT test (Ministry of Transport, or simply MOT) is an annual test of vehicle safety, roadworthiness aspects and exhaust emissions required in Great Britain for most vehicles over three years old
@R.MartinhoFernandes easily, for example mutex m1 is used as signal "data available", m2 to lock data. thread 1 locks m1 and m2 and pushes data. thread 2 checks m1 it is locked - data available, then locks m2 and unconditionally reads data. — Slava21 mins ago
> Historically, C++ has definitely been THE language for doing graphics but if you are starting these days, you would have to have really compelling reasons to start with C++ and not JavaScript and WebGL.
@ratchetfreak exactly and as I said before mutexes have to be used properly, and that's why providing answer how to avoid deadlock with locking 2 mutexes does not provide any value to this question. — Slava2 mins ago
what.
> Hasło musi się składać z conajmniej jednej litery, liczby, oraz jego długość musi zawierać się miedzy 5 a 25 znaków. [Eng: The password must contain at least a letter, a digit, and its length must be between 5 and 25 characters.]
Or maybe the translation should read "we're bad at web security"?
@JerryCoffin ASCII usually allows more characters per byte than other encodings, therefore non-ASCII users are disadvantaged because they cannot use as many characters. In my defense it is not easy to argue that a 1MB password is insufficiently small and as stated the sense may not exist within those words.
@nwp It doesn't actually disadvantage non-ASCII users. What we care about isn't the number of characters, it's the number of bits of entropy. Using ASCII, you can use N characters, each of which adds about one bit of entropy. If you use the Canonese or Mandarin alphabet, you can't use as many characters, but the number of bits of entropy per character is higher, so you still get around 1 bit of entropy for every 8 bits of raw input.
@slaphappy I'm pretty sure it would be possible to define "bug" in a way that this was true (though, of course, that definition would be so narrow that the same would be true of most other languages as well).
@JerryCoffin Though, to be fair, this applies to any concept equally. Having <event> in <situation> is always impossible given a narrow enough definition of <event>.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No. I mean each adds about one bit. If each added 7 bits, then the best possible lossless compression program would only get about 12% compression.
@R.MartinhoFernandes English text has obviously been studied much more closely. Machine-generated passwords can and do have considerably higher rates of entropy, but those are comparatively unusual. While the mangling most people do to passwords probably does increase the rate of entropy, I doubt it changes things very much.
@ratchetfreak I haven't analyzed enough mangled text to be sure, but it wouldn't surprise me if the amount added was even less than that. To be honest, I wouldn't be terribly surprised if (at least in some cases) it actually even reduced entropy.
sorry to bother, I am curious if there are any hinches about c++ recursion, or the call stack, any interesting and hidden thing that c++ might offer if you have any ideas on mind right now!
@EtiennedeMartel sorry. I thought that would happen. So, my class teacher started teaching recursivity. The thing is she just gives stupid recursive algorithms
she asked us to print a series of numbers backwards
@Borgleader Admittedly depends on the physical characteristics of the cap, my hand, and the makeshift tools available to me. (like some cloth from my T-shirt)
There have been times where I've almost ripped the bottle before the cap budged.