@Rerito I don't identify as female, but I don't really identify as male either. Since things are blurry beyond that point, I didn't try to be more specific.
I'm complaining about people dilluting the concept of gender to the point where it could be just "tell us about yourself", yet still they demand it to be treated specially
Just because you call your personality traits "gender" doesn't mean you should be addressed as Lord Grommash of Winter Bartek (that's I suppose how frostgender leviathans would like to be addressed)
To edit 2: I see no reason to implement anything at all, just alias/reference what you need: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/0a487591fbaedef4. I would probably prefer just defining the spirit_encoding in the single #ifdef: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/0a487591fbaedef4. That said, I'd always advise against making schizophrenic codebases like this these days. Just commit to UTF8 or UTF16 internally, and do conversions only when required for I/O — sehe1 min ago
Would you think the subliminal hint in the sample text was strong enough?
> ah! the author of that hwbot.org post is Alex Yee; I remember his name as he wrote that insanely upvoted (and awesome) stackoverflow answer on branch misprediction
Let's see: you can't bring in liquids and a bunch of other things on board because they might be bombs. So they get confiscated before boarding and... thrown in the garbage right there next to the security queues. Exactly where everyone wants a bomb to be, right?
Now you have laptop bombs, so what we do is... put them in the cargo hold.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you see the problem with the whole focus on terrorism... is that it's largely a law enforcement issue. We've now over-dedicated intelligence resources to something that is relatively minor in a geo-political sense. Meanwhile our traditional enemies never stopped being a threat.
But hey, at least some airports have people walking around with machine guns all the time to prevent attacks in the airport. I always feel safe around machine guns.
The Hamburg cell (German: Hamburger Zelle) or Hamburg terror cell (German: Hamburger Terrorzelle) was, according to U.S. and German intelligence agencies, a group of radical Islamists based in Hamburg, Germany that included students who eventually came to be key operatives in the 9/11 attacks. Important members included Mohamed Atta, who led the four hijacking teams in 2001 and piloted American Airlines Flight 11; Ramzi bin al-Shibh, who conspired with the other three members but was unable to enter the United States; and Marwan al-Shehhi, who piloted United Airlines Flight 175, Ziad Jarrah, who...
Active measures (Russian: активные мероприятия) is a Soviet term for the actions of political warfare conducted by the Soviet and Russian security services (Cheka, OGPU, NKVD, KGB, FSB) to influence the course of world events, in addition to collecting intelligence and producing "politically correct" assessment of it. Active measures ranged "from media manipulations to special actions involving various degrees of violence". They were used both abroad and domestically. They included disinformation, propaganda, counterfeiting official documents, assassinations, and political repression, such ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes exactly, that was my point above. So the whole thing doesn't make sense, also if I can get a first class cabin on Emirates I'm damn well taking it (insofar as I don't have to pay)
@Mgetz I'm convinced the primary motivation is purely economic, i.e., to hinder competition to US airlines in those areas. Not much else makes sense, really.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wouldn't be surprised, it's still dumb. Mind you there has been a lot of dumb from this administration. Things that the law of unintended consequences are going to bite the US hard for.
As of 2011, it is predicted that the world's Muslim population will grow twice as fast as non-Muslims over the next 20 years.[citation needed] By 2030, Muslims will make up more than a quarter of the global population.[citation needed] If current trends continue, it is predicted by the year 2100 that about 1% more of the world's population will be Muslim (35%) than Christian (34%).
> Passengers boarding flights to the UK from the countries affected will not be allowed to take any phones, laptops or tablets larger than a normal smartphone – specified as 16cm x 9.3cm x 1.5cm (6.2in x 3.6in x 0.5in).
@R.MartinhoFernandes on one hand it's incredibly frustrating, it means that russia has achieved it's goal of basically blinding the the US. On the other it's almost so absurd I just have to laugh
be very very happy the rest of "Five Eyes" are not blind
> > London-Paris electric flight 'in decade' > Oh oui ! Vivement qu'il existe un moyen de relier Londres à Paris en utilisant un véhicule à propulsion électrique !
@Mgetz I agree, but I don't think it's justification in this case.
The W3C recommends:
> The UTF-8 encoding has a highly detectable bit pattern. Documents that contain bytes with values greater than 0x7F which match the UTF-8 pattern are very likely to be UTF-8, while documents with byte sequences that do not match it are very likely not. User-agents are therefore encouraged to search for this common encoding. [PPUTF8] [UTF8DET]
@Xeo Ah, it did there too for me, but it turns out my browser was set to prefer cp1252 (lolwut, why is this a default?)
Fixed that, but this page still has the broken stuff. I'm guessing that it doesn't even detect cp1252 because the ™ in this page shows a placeholder U+0099 glyph.
What's happening on this page is, as far as I can determine: the response headers say it's UTF-8, which according to the HTML standard means it must be interpreted as UTF-8.
However, that tooltip is somehow interpreted as Latin-1 (real Latin-1, not cp1252)
This can't be happening in the browser, because the standard requires the browser to ignore requests for latin-1 and interpret them as cp1252.
I'll need to look closer later before I file bugs, but I think there's two things going on: FF erroneously defaults to cp1252 when it should pick UTF-8 (though that's only a recommendation); and SO chat servers somewhere fuck things up and send mojibake to the client.
@Mgetz That'd give U+0099 (two UTF-8 bytes), which should render properly.
This, however, means that: â is encoded properly as two UTF-8 bytes, and followed by a stray 0x99 byte (which is a UTF-8 continuation byte, so not valid), and then followed by a properly encoded «, again two UTF-8 bytes.
I'm guessing @nwp's browser simply discards the stray.
Hmm. SO servers are interpreting XKCD's response as Latin-1, and that fucks up the (TM) (It doesn't exist in real Latin-1, but does in cp1252), and somehow encodes it as UTF-8 to send back, passing along the unknown byte unchanged?
@ratchetfreak That's arguably not a bug. The HTML standard recommends picking UTF-8 if the content is valid UTF-8, which is the case. FF sucks at this, though.
If for some reason you don't want to resort to strings or doubles, you can use binary search on an array of integers:
private val limits = arrayOf(-1, 9, 99, 999, 9999, 99999, 999999, 9999999, 99999999, 999999999)
fun countDigits(x: Int): Int {
assert(x >= 0)
val result = limits.binaryS...
@rightfold @thecoshman This is probably my first SO answer with JUnit tests :)