@CheersandhthAlf I swear I will get around to reading through your work soon. It's good stuff so far, I've just been actually working at work and at home :(
Are you referring to 'new[1000]' potentially allocating more than just 1000 elements? That's true, but also ludicrous. I prefer to assume the OP is sane. This sentence from the Q just about sums it up `"If I use: sizeof(buffer) then it is only 1 byte written"`. Add to that I am C# and Java programmer (22 hrs ago) and you'll realize that there is really no debate as to what he meant. — sehe43 secs ago
Anytime you propose to do something out of the ordinary, you should automatically consider what could go wrong.
It is exceedingly obvious to anyone that laundromats weren't made for this, and even if the machine didn't lock + start, it would be setting an extremely bad example on how to treat property of others.
My kids climbed into all kinds of cupboards, too, and if I had a bigger washing machine, they might have tried to climb into that, too. But I would have talked them into believing that this is dangerous, and made sure the thing is unplugged unless in use. Yeah, and closing the door of a washing machine on your child seems creepy.
I even teach my kids to never open two drawers in the same cupboard at once. Even though all our cupboards in the house are safely mounted (or not top heavy, by design).
It just helps them think about intended use. You know, stop them thinking even before they consider using the drawers as a staircase :)
Intended use --> common sense.
@sbi I bet the laundry will install that central kill switch pretty soon
@sehe the level of risk. A washing machine drum is not directly dangerous to be in, unless you get locks in and it starts. Hang over gaters is a fair bit more dangerous, and a lot easier for it go wrong
Welcome to capitalism: safety precautions cost money, laundries don't have to undergo audits like entertainment parks (heck... would there be a reason for that?)
@sbi I see what you mean, but really, principially, I don't see a difference. I'd still say the parent is a bad parent. Just that parents don't do it 'intentionally' or 'can't help it' doesn't really change that.
@sehe That's bovine excrements, really. It's not that hard to put a safety switch into the wire that provides all the machines with energy. It's more a problem of anticipating such stupidity in the first place.
@ScottW There's all kinds of parents in this world. You know, even this father might be one who jumps in front of his toddler to catch a bullet. You never know. He certainly seemed very worried about what happened.
@ScottW Debatable. It is close to my world. Just today I called the 'hard'/'socially undesired' decision to not allow my kids to go to a water-playground with a classmate.
I think that must be one of the worst feelings in the world. To have put your child in the washing machine with your child looking back through the double pane plastic door and mouth the words, "Daddy, what did I do wrong?"
@sehe I would decide that depending on the parent. I would need to know the parent well enough and trust it to be able to deal with 4 kids in such a situation.
@sbi That's basically what I thought. The immediate trigger that made me resolve to 'no' was a particular line in the SMS she texted me saying 'It's ok, there no water deeper than, say, waist height for <insert youngest name>'.
I thought that seemed to miss the point of water safety in an alarming way ^
@sehe Well, I have seen a child fall in water waist-high for it, and being unable to get up alone, so this is a height I would certainly think well about.
@sehe Yes, they'd mouth stop over and over. Took some time to be able to read their lips though since I cranked up the velocity on those spinning machines more than I should have
@Neil Yeah, I was torn on that. I can see they panicked. I can also see they didn't cope with the pressure to well (look at the amount of jumping of the father, and the senseless aggression shown by the mother. This looks like rather childish behaviour to me. Doesn't go with 'responsibilty' in my view, even after a major screw up.)
@sehe it's easy to criticise there reactions. I'd like to think I would respond better, but you honestly can't say until you get into a similar situation. Something I really hope I won't
If it had been a bear to leap out of the woods and start tearing up your kid, and for some strange reason, he managed to drop a glass wall between you and the bear, I imagine that type of frustration would be roughly the same.
@sbi Precisely. My daughter had a strange experience like that, once, in the swimming pool (toddlers section). She slipped and somehow got disoriented. I was there in a second, and her 7-y old niece already intuitively pulled her up at the same moment. My natural reaction would have been to 'downplay' it and say "See, nothing happened" (since I was in control) but, ...
... she had clearly experienced the thing as scary, and claimed her niece "rescued her". I thought that was probably a better way to remember it and opted to confirm that it was a very good thing that her niece pulled her out.
@thecoshman "I was torn on that. I can see they panicked" <-- there
And besides, she is one the Ugandan nieces, so they were over on 'invitation' spending a weekend camping. I don't think the extra /pony/ would have made an impression.
I almost drowned above water. I must have been about 12 years old at the time. I was testing my ability to dive and stay underwater as long as possible. I was actually quite good at it, staying underwater for 2 minutes at a time without breathing. I leapt out of the water out of breath and the one-piece goggles had somehow managed to collect water and cover my mouth as I was leaving the water.
I was nearly about to black out from the lack of oxygen and for some strange reason, I was out of the water and unable to breathe. It dawned on me before blacking out, and I removed the goggles from my face and started breathing again. My parents were watching me from the edge of the pool. They had no idea it happened.
@Neil I have had a blackout from falling down on my chin quite badly. I was so angry and frustrated at my big sisters who never noticed. I still remember the sensation, and the 'bewilderment' on 'coming back'. The whole thing probably lasted only seconds, which is why noone paid any attention - just another fall :)
@Neil I have the same approach, really. I never flinch. Though, somehow, I can tell from the strangest signals. Last week, I heard nothing but a soft, dull, thump in the other room, and I got there in seconds, well before my daughter even started to audibly cry. She had hit her head on the corner of the doll house (...) standing back up. My wife, who actually had a clear view of it, never even noticed it before she started crying
@thecoshman We've got a cat too. Still the same deal. Make sure he doesn't get out of the house (yet). We have a leish for the first few weeks, and we have to constantly keep an eye on it so the cat doesn't get strangled. We have to actively guide children that it is OK for a cat to walk the edge of the 'stairwell fence', but you shouldn't play or pet the cat when he's on there. Same stuff really, just different stakes.
It will be easier once he is 'domesticated' - he'll be able to go out unattended after a few more weeks.
@sehe 'Sid' is going to be an indoor kitty. So far, seems fairly easy to keep her in the downstairs so we can get in and out the house with out her escaping
Yesterday, I already let him come outside with me 'freely' when I cleaned up the stuff from the garden. I knew I could re-affirm him immediately after, since it was feeding time. You should have seen the expression on my wife's face :) "What did you just do?!"
@Neil Actually, I think that is somehow a SO feature (try working on the same post on different machines. You'll see the active edits on the other machine.
@sehe True, but you sure it does the same on different machines? It's becoming all the rage lately to put all data on the cookies since most people don't browse without cookies active and javascript on anymore.
@Michael You still need to answer the questions. I can write out the incantations in any of the four permutations there, but I won't waste my time if you don't specify the target language/libs
Only in programming would you have problems like this. It's not everyday that one says, "Should I use a knife to cut the pizza? Because technically a knife like this should cut vegetables. Isn't there like a pizza cutter I should use instead?"
yeah, any one who is obtuse enough to use bit shift to divide/multiply by powers of 2 should be slapped. Any compiler that can't tell when a bit shift can be used to a slight optimisations should be slapped.
If you wrote a program which would work only if it was written in a way that would be possible only if the compiler optimized yoru code, you've written broken code
@CatPlusPlus I bet someone, some where has done some messed up shit that requires a data type to be a represented in a certain way so the bit shift gives a certain result
@Neil I always used "C++ lets you the user make the appropriate call about what level of abstraction you want to program at and lets you mix levels as appropriate" as an argument in favour
@Neil I don't trust every fucker in the world, I still think cars are a good idea. The fact that some people write shit code does not mean I should be put in a safety cage
@awoodland I think it's a limitation to a programming language to have to work with primitives
I doubt there's a way to abstract that away, but if there were without losing your ability to program in that language, it would be a powerful language indeed
there's power in abstraction, not the other way around
Though it doesn't surprise me in the least that this is an unpopular opinion.
@Neil I more meant that if you build say a tool for expressing your problems not as bunches of data but as some more complex set of interactions between things that new set of operations/relations is your new primitive
what you really want is a tool that's intuitive and magically adapts to fit the domain you're working in, but given that semantic analysis of problem descriptions is a rather tough unsolved problem I'll take something that lets me do the hard work the most appropriate way any day.
Some things are unavoidable, however it's mostly due to the fact that a programming language must, in fact, do anything
If you wanted a programming language which could write an operating system, you couldn't, for example, do certain kinds of abstraction like file systems and threading
You'd have to build it up entirely by hand, and a programming language that doesn't let you do that is too abstract.
However, I would argue that it's not an entirely bad thing that it's too abstract
@Neil but with in that "do anything" your language can make tasks A B and C trivial to express using syntax 1, D very hard and E easy to express in a less well used syntax 2
but that's kind of the point though - I can build something that gets close to a domain specific language within the bounds of C++ if I want. But then I can integrate that within some other general-purpose things too because it's all the same language and I pick and choose the level of abstraction
Fairly sure we had this discussion less than a week ago, a programming language is not defined by concerns like being compiled to native code or run in a VM. Sure languages have there 'normally used as', but there is nothing stopping you from going against the grain. I could write a VM that JIT runs C++ equally, I could write a compile for Java to make directly executable binaries
Fairly sure we had this discussion less than a week ago, a programming language is not defined by concerns like being compiled to native code or run in a VM. Sure languages have there 'normally used as', but there is nothing stopping you from going against the grain. I could write a VM that JIT runs C++ equally, I could write a compile for Java to make directly executable binaries