but I agree with Jerry, those things are neigh impossible to do fairly. Those sites that compare prices will show different pricings for just about everything based on location, and by pricing I mean relative to income after taxes
@sbi Wouldn't surprise me at all. But it's a little difficult to say how much of that is due to locale, and how much to being single with no dependents. If it were just me, I could rent a place of a quarter what I do now.
@BartekBanachewicz FWIW, I spend 30% of my income on rent, and I am living in a subsided state-owned apartment where the last rent-raised was limited (because we raised hell and) because I cannot afford to pay more. If I wouldn't have kids, I would need to spend more on housing, which would leave not all that much more money to spend on non-essentials.
@thecoshman Most youngsters think that kids are the price you pay to have a wife. At my age, you've realized that the wife is the price you paid to have kids. I, for one, don't regret having kids at all.
@ratchetfreak Ah, I see. So that room is still alive and kicking? Wow. That's the first out of what's probably a dozen attempts to setup a C++ Q&A room.
@AldwinCheung I do not think this is true. At best it is misleading.
Binary semaphore can server as a non-recursive mutex. Mutex cannot serve as a binary semaphore.
If anything, semaphore is a mutex in this single case. In all other cases like recursive mutexes, read write mutexes, semaphores cannot be used instead. And vice versa, if semaphore is not binary then mutex cannot cover its semantics.
@wilx I think you two just mean different things with "mutex". It's one of those nouns that can stand for a category or for a particular member of that category.
> FIDO's specifications are public and available for anyone to read and analyze. But only FIDO Alliance Members benefit from “the promise” to not assert patent rights against other members’ implementations
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mutex is well defined concept both by actual implementations and by theoretical papers. The IS-A relationship only holds in one specific and very limited circumstance and only in one direction. Both mutexes and semaphores are synchronization primitives but the two are not interchangeable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It is silly to refer to it as semaphore. It clearly implements what I have described as mutex and not what I have described as semaphore.
@R.MartinhoFernandes And we are back to our previous discussions on how people cannot just use words willy nilly as if they had meanings as is convenient to them at the time.
@R.MartinhoFernandes There are also critical sections, for when you want a process-specific thingy that provides mutual exclusion semantics (struggling to avoid saying it is or is not a mutex, as such).
@wilx I guess I should have included a smiley there (but I'm perfectly fine with treating Ruby as wrong, under almost any circumstances).
@JerryCoffin No, I am dead serious. It was stupid from the authors of the Ruby manual to use the word semaphore in the example.
The only acceptable interpretation of the word semaphore in that context is if they literally meant traffic semaphore. But with the existence of synonymous synchronization primitive it was stupid to use it that way.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Us being landlocked, it is not one of the meanings that comes to mind. I know though there are/were semaphores used to rely messages.
It is tagged as C++ but it is basically C. Not sure how to tag it though as it does have a couple C++ things in it. The OP is writting C code in MSVS so they have a couple C++isms since MSVS doesn't support C.
@NathanOliver I'm doing C but people got angry at me for labelling it as C because it had a few C++ things. From what I know my lecturer considers this C. I don't really know any C++ features. Sorry — FruitJuice19 mins ago
Admittedly, I have used cout printing in an answer for a question tagged with only c. But that was for a performance question and the printing was just to print the timings - IOW, irrelevant to the question.
So I'm reading some old flamewars about whether to cast the result of malloc(). The opinions are: - You should never cast because it's unnecessary in C and it's morally wrong to do so. - You should cast if you intend to compile in for both C and C++. - You should never compile as both C and C++ because they are completely different languages and it's morally wrong to even think they are at all similar. - You should use preprocessor:
@milleniumbug Anytime I post C snippets, I feel morally obliged to do things a C++ compiler would have caught, but a C compiler wouldn't (though with the cast, it actually would in this case).
> @rmunn - Don't mistake me. I know my requirement. First of all I will work for my requirement and I implemented what I need. This is a one of the module I need in my implementation. Yes of-course I know the said JSON will produce Warning, but its not a In-valid JSON. while on parsing in JavaScript, it will take the last value. What you people are trying here.
> I know my Question and Answer is almost 40+ down votes. But I don't care about you people. Why you people are behaving like a dictator. I fully satisfied in my answer. I'm speaking in general. I don't have any wrong in-tension to hurt you – B.Balamanigandan Feb 24 at 19:46
I am facing difficulty while writing a javascript code for below HTML&CSS...
here the background color of all div elements in html code is "blue".. And all div element are having different font colors
My requirement is , if i hover( or mouseover) on fourth div element (namely ' #four ') of html t...
@Code-Apprentice I'm not all that happy about it--wanted to get a good pie, but the store was out of the ones I like, and won't have them again until Thursday.
I don't actually have any questions to discuss right now but, just so I don't litter the wrong channel, Is C (not C++) discussion also acceptable around here?