@Rerito Oh, no harm done. And I can't blame you--their deque is a disaster. I'm not quite sure why STL or James Mcnellis hasn't just ripped it out and replaced it with entirely new code (or at least sent a bug report to Dinkumware to get them to do so). I suppose it's kind of a vicious circle though--it sucks, so nobody uses it, so it's not worth fixing it, so it continues to suck, and nobody starts to use it, and...
@nwp I suppose that's possible--the most recent thing I've seen from STL seemed to say otherwise, but that's not terribly recent, so things may easily have changed.
@Code-Apprentice AFAIK, it is--but it's pretty much just P.J. Plauger (and I think his wife keeping books and such), so it'll probably remain a thing until he retires.
@Code-Apprentice Yes. He'd written (and sold) libraries under his own name for a while, and then decided on Dinkumware as a company name (after he spent a while in Australia). Before that he ran a company named Whitesmiths Ltd., which sold the first commercial C compiler (as well as pretty much the first Unix spinoff OS, which was named Idris, if memory serves).
@Code-Apprentice SGI basically doesn't exist any more. HP bought them up late last year (well, may not have been officially complete until early this year). Not sure exactly what HP is doing in that area, or for that matter whether SGI was still doing any such development when HP bought them out.
I have not followed any C++ stuff for a long time. I just remember using the Dinkumware and SGI docs back when I was doing C++ for school assignments.
At one point, I was using Borland C++ Builder as my C++ IDE. I used it to write my very first GUI programs, too. Borlands' Visual Component Library seemed so much cleaner to me than the little I looked at Microsoft's MFC.
@Code-Apprentice By the time VCL came along, I'd pretty much given up on Borland. Its predecessor (OWL) was considerably cleaner internally than MFC, so it's easy to believe VCL was also. Unfortunately, both produced what I considered some of the most brutally ugly GUIs imaginable. Crude, ugly icons, severely over-saturated colors, etc. I lost interest in how the code looked, because I couldn't stand using the result, and wouldn't even consider letting anybody else know I'd written something so ugly.
@BartekBanachewicz I'm almost tempted to sign up just to send a reply to the moron posting the Rich Hickey video as if it somehow proved something about types. For once I'd have a reply that would fit in their character limits: "I'll see your Rich Hickey and raise you a Simon Peyton Jones."
If the problem was a simple misunderstanding of the Boost API, which I think is most likely, the numbers don't matter at all. Regardless, the snark isn't a helpful reply. I've edited the post to cater to your sensibilities so the discussion can focus on answering the question. — Chris D2 mins ago
Wat.
Geez. Who's being constructive. Or jumpy. I'm sorry I spent the time. I guess? — sehe1 min ago
@login_not_failed I don't think I agree. I think he's capable. I saw only an attitude jar, and that's an incident too :) Let's not jump to conclusions. If he needed join_miter it could still be a bug in Boost Geo
@sehe apparently he was super rude to my GF and told her that "it's a garage not a workshop" (wtf) and that either we'll pay 33% more or we're supposed to leave
I'm torn between telling him to fuck right off and being really nice
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, no need to combine "voluntary leave" with "fuck off". You could just see how he responds if you say "ok, I'll stop the rent next month".
The professor must sign for each student that they were present at least 50% of the time. Signing that when it is not true is illegal. At the same time they are not allowed to keep attendance. My professor complained about that.
for us back in the days, you can skip all the lectures which usually have 60 - 150 people in the same hall for the first two year, but you have to attend 80%-90% of the tutorials which only have 10-30 people per class ...
@ratchetfreak Not true, stackful coroutines can be implemented as a library solution, but brittle. Also the state machine transformation is precisely for stackless coroutines.
@Telkitty The lecture is about teaching you things. You can already know things or study on your own. Forcing attendance would be stupid. Maybe the tutorial is about showing that you are able to complete the tasks which is required to complete the course. (though that is called something like practice here. Tutorials are in addition for students who have trouble with the course work)
Ooook, marking unreachable code went from an [[unreachable]] attribute to an std::unreachable() function for which you don't need to include any header...
@Borgleader No, I don't. I mostly do XAML by hand. That being said, from the little I saw and used, it's far better than the Visual Studio XAML designer, which begs the question: why don't they just make the designer better? Well, because those Blend licenses aren't gonna sell themselves. You gotta segment that market.
> Reading this before I got out of bed I had to dash into my games room to check out whether I can install a figurine..... I CAN! ..... but it's directly over a 120mm intake fan. I'll have to glue a Barbie effigy of Marilyn Monroe on top and figure out which games make my fan speed oscillate between minimum and maximum to blow up her skirt. Hmmm.... priorities. Bless you for getting your mind right and throwing conventional wisdom out the window, an i9 with a 1050 - bravo!
@Borgleader To the extent that it exists at all anymore, yes, it's included with VS (or is part of VS, depending on how you view things). In any case, it doesn't exist as a standalone product any more.
@JerryCoffin Right but my point was if it comes with the community edition, then its no longer a paid product at which point why dont they make it the default editor better. OTOH, if it doesnt ship with Community Edition wel...
I'll have to see at home if I have access to Blend with VS2017
(since I have the community edition for that, and possibly 2015 as well, iirc 2013 is the last version i got from Uni that was one of the paid ones)
in books, on the web, ... every programmer warns me
Be careful with dynamic memory allocation!
I understand that it causes memory fragmentation. But I can't 'fragment' the memory with the following script. This script runs on a micro controller (Arduino Mega 2560).
struct myStruct {
...
> Edit Can anyone who don't know what memory fragmentation is, skip this question. It is not because I called delete after new, there will be no memory fragmentation.
wow the garage landlord is really a total fucking ass /cc @sehe
I asked him what his problem was "we had a different deal, the walls are destroyed"
I asked him where specifically, offered to get down there for him to show me what I destroyed, and said I can pay him up for any damage I supposedly did
and he's like "I'm done here"
and said that "either you pay 33% more or go find another place"
went to the atm, got the cash out, walked up to his apt. and said "he's your fee for this month"
I bet he didn't expect it
(the premium was ~12€)
it's monthly though so dunno, I suppose I'll still be on lookout for another place... but to see the look on his face was priceless. He didn't even say a word.
I mean it was a dick move to begin with and he could just say next month that he's rising it again for no reason
but phew at least that's settled for now
I mean if he was nicer about it and just said "hey I'd like you to pay more" it would be no problem at all
That sucks. I'd recommend not paying up, under any condition. He's clearly abusing the fact that there's a non-legal arrangement there, and he'll do it again.
Besides, the "neighbourly relationship" went to shit regardless, so I'd take the potential inconvenience and politely tell him "I think you're looking for excuses to raise the rent. I don't think that's reasonable, and at the very least dishonest. I'll return the keys by July Xth". Something like that.
I'm trying to locate a Linux distro that supplies GCC 7. I want to use it for testing a few libraries, like Botan, Crypto++ and OpenSSL. I'm aware of ubuntu-toolchain-r/test. The problem is, it does not work. Does anyone know of a distro which packages GCC 7? Ideally, it will be provided by default without need to perform additional installs or neable additional repos.
@sehe yep. So I don't mind the raise, just the way he treated my GF (I don't care) and the possibility of future conflict. That being said, for him it's probably way more money so maybe it'll shut him up for a while
@BartekBanachewicz I'd try to convert into a proper arrangement. You can have a written agreement even without official publication. It would still give you rights in case you need to exercise them. I'd consider bribing him (Sign here for €60/month)
Thanks @nwp. At the risk of sounding argumentative, I don't want Experimental or even Testing. Speaking from experience, there are too many stability problems. That's kind of why I am looking for GCC7 mostly out of the box, and not extra repos.
@nwp - This just made my radar: Fedora 26 comes with GCC 7, and F26 was released two days ago. Also see fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/GCC7. Thanks for the help.
Downvoted for attitude alone. Undid the downvote after last comment. Apology accepted, BUT no one is drive you crazy. You have to own that problem: it's in you. — sehe3 mins ago
@sehe Garage update: the wife of the guy just walked up to my door and said that he just got back from the hospital and, as she put it, "he's getting weirder with age" and told me not to worry.
@Borgleader I think so.
@sehe wait we can't reopen while it's locked? @BhargavRao why don't you come over here.
@Code-Apprentice Avoiding Microsoft's icons was fine--but couldn't they have at least hired a college kid to draw them instead of using stuff they found thrown away at a pre-school?
@R.MartinhoFernandes have you tried 3D printing your own 22x22 Rubik's cube yet? Here's how not to do it (spectacular fail though, almost enough to try it)