@RMartinhoFernandes What about the kids? They are in school or kindergarten, I hope. I had none of their teachers call me so far. Do you know anything I don't know, or why should I think about them?
@stdOrgnlDave If only half of the programmers spend just half as much time and energy on their one kid as I spend on each of mine, this world would be a much better place.
if they ask for my facebook password I can always say "I'm sorry but giving you that would put us both in breach of the federal Computer Fraud & Abuse act and open us both to criminal charges"
just so you Americans know, it is and always had been illegal for your employers to ask for your FB password, because it is illegal for them to seek out information about your race, gender, religion, etc.
@stdOrgnlDave When I heard that this had become a common practice in the US I couldn't believe it at first. That is so unbelievably dumb. Why would anyone even submit to that?!
@sbi because it's America and everyone and everything, from our food to our fluoronated drinking water to our legal system to our basic grasp of language is completely and utterly retarded
Same difference. Too creepy Besides, if she were- indirectly - paying me, I'm not sure whether I'd like to flirt with the idea of being an adulterous male prostitute
you know what is completely retarded about American food? high fructose corn syrup. WHY? because sugar is much less unhealthy for you. so why do we use it? federal corn subsidies, and import taxes on sugar which are designed specifically to help the federal corn subsidies
@LucDanton I dunno. I haven't even looked at the paper. I just thought that there's many regulars here interested in this stuff, so I posted the link to twitter.
> Google's Go language has 'goroutines' instead of coroutines. So if it gets functional features, will it use 'gonads' instead of monads? — Peter Cooper
erm... I dare to ask... Java's enums, are they like a c++ enum class in that you must use <enum name>.<enum value> or is it just <enum vale>
@sehe I've not done threads with any other language, so I have nothing to compare with, but I did find that Java threads where fairly straightforward to use, once you work out how to use them
@thecoshman how did you drag into it? How is that related? I could drag in random statements about my family to support my views, but I somehow feel that would be rather unconvincing.
I'd argue that. To see the opportunities where math is applicable in real world problems, you usually have to both understand the concepts, and also have practiced using them sufficiently.
Great mathematicians obviously have a lot memorized, but only because it helps them apply logic quickly. Not just in order to have something memorized.
> and also have practiced using them sufficiently Thank you for completing my point
@robjb No. You use a computer to calculate it. Nobody in the real world is going to be sufficiently stupid to do it by hand, instead of using their smartphone, say.
@DeadMG Yet if you're entirely ignorant of when to use a formula to reduce your problem, you won't be able to put all your variables into Maple (or a smartphone) and press "Calculate!"
@EtiennedeMartel Because I need a component which can be trusted, unlike the UI, which can control the renderer without having to introduce a bunch of rendering code into the sim.
example: how to not render enemy units which are not in vision.
I'm a student and I'd like to apply for a summer internship at a game company. I'm going to include links to my previous projects, but those are a bit old and the quality of the code, while not bad, is not the best I could do right now (clarity, readability, documentation). Should I also link to some smaller and more recent projects that I think have better code?
I did an internship at Ubi Montreal once. Never had to show off anything, I just passed a technical test, and then an interview. But I guess if you have some projects to show them, it might help you stand out from the rest.
Even if it's not top notch quality, game code is hardly nice looking, especially at Ubi.
@EtiennedeMartel Oh, okay. Thanks for the info. I actually heard stuff like that before, that you can easily get in but that they also don't hesitate to let you go if you don't perform well.
@EtiennedeMartel I always find that idiom always striking. 'Show some respect'. It specifically doesn't request you to 'have some respect'. Just to 'show it' regardless
@PaulManta Depends on how many people they need. Games are made under the assumption that the bigger the team, the more productive it is. I've seen juniors keep their job despite consistently writing horrendous code that a senior then has to go and fix.
So should I mention those small "projects" as well? They're not even game related. One of them is a mini-bigint library written in C. I was in a competition with one of the other students at university to see who can write the best code for calculating powers of really big numbers.
And the other one is a Bloom Filter in written Python. I had to make this one when I applied to some optional courses.
@EtiennedeMartel Nope, they were perfect. We had the art team in a waterfall style of development, and the coder + designer in scrum style. One producer was our scrum master
@EtiennedeMartel To be fair, though, we were going for a AAA style game in terms of graphics, since it was the last semester for all those artists and it was basically a portfolio game for them
> But in some languages, like Polish, one plural case applies to infinitely many intervals (e.g., the paucal case applies to numbers ending with 2, 3, or 4 except those ending with 12, 13, or 14).
Holy pineapples, @Cat, you're not kidding when you say Polish is insane.