So I'm thinking about UX design. I have a user interface that lets biologists controls a microscope, but often the experiments are complex. At the end of the day I want to transition the UI into some kind of block interface like LabView but I'm too lazy to write it. Is there some kind of toolkit that lets you easily embed this stuff?
@BaguetteGarlique so, all that nudging me towards Ubi Bordeaux was you trying to off load your own moral qualms about joining the empire of evil then wasn’t it
also an mmo where you play as a dolphin in the sea
possibly an alley cat
Also generate grand theft auto maps from Google earth, and put NPCs into the game through your social media/phone book. Bonus points if the people are inserted without their consent.
also a game where you wait for c++ to compile after changing "stdafx.h"
However the writing is quite brief so if you ever read it, I would advise you to take your time to appreciate the drawings and the way they render the universe of the series
Well, it's brief compared to the lengthy Blake & Mortimer for instance
The Three-Body Problem (Chinese: 三体; literally: "Three-Body") is a science fiction novel by the Chinese writer Liu Cixin. It is the first of a trilogy titled Remembrance of Earth's Past (Chinese: 地球往事), but Chinese readers generally refer to the series by the title of the first novel. The title itself refers to the three-body problem in orbital mechanics.
The work was serialized in Science Fiction World in 2006, published as a book in 2008 and became one of the most popular science fiction novels in China. It received the Chinese Science Fiction Galaxy Award in 2006. A film adaptation of the same...
not sure translation is available in your preferred language
If you split out the question about parsing till the end of the line... Asking two unrelated questions at once just makes the question unuseful to others in the future. — sehe4 hours ago
That code is exactly the same. You still don't say what your requirements are. I trust you can write a loop yourself (you're using C++ and boost, after all). — sehe2 mins ago
Passive-aggressively suffocating a man to suffocate by stuffing too much fish
@nwp It doesn't unless you enable precompiled pain headers
@nwp Apparently, it doesn't quite opt-in to all the pain :)
C++14, standard library, generic container type (87 bytes)
[](auto a){return ++*adjacent_find(begin(a),end(a),[](auto a,auto b){return a+1!=b;});}
Container type from namespace ::std is assumed (e.g. std::string, std::list or std::vector. Otherwise using namespace std; or similar would be assu...
I want all OSs to change their root directory to "⌂ " which is a unicode house followed by a space. All programs that are unable to handle unicode correctly or don't understand how spaces in paths work will die and I will be happy.
@JohanLarsson You seem to be laboring under the false assumption that Vim is an editor. It's more of a framework for building editors. Out of the box, you're just seeing the "hello world" of editor building using the Vim framework...
@JohanLarsson I can't blame you. It follows what I think of as the Starbucks philosophy: it sucks, but there are so many combinations, and other people who say it's good, that people keep experimenting until they find something they can convince themselves they really like.
In fairness, I should add that I'm not advocating for another editor here either. I'm certainly not a fan of emacs. It's pretty much a game of finding which one is least annoying for you...
@JohanLarsson I use both Windows and Linux almost daily. Contrary to what a lot of people like to believe (or at least like to claim) VS is a long ways from the most broken of the reasonably popular editors and/or IDEs.
Today I learned that cmd.exe is even worse about spaces than I thought. cmd /C "Hello World" does what one would expect whereas cmd /C "Hello World" basically does cmd /C "Hello. (2 spaces between Hello and World).
So maybe the root path should have 2 spaces in a row to make the breakage visible so it can be fixed.
@Puppy In this case there's room for argument about whether the blame the shell itself. I'm pretty sure cmd.exe just uses CommandLineToArgvW to parse the command line, so the latter is undoubtedly to blame (but you could still argue that it's "the shell", since that's in shell32.dll).
@MartinJames They get you drunk, and you're complaining?
@Puppy Well, I am comparing it to bash. Compared to bash, the lack of typing is about equal, and PowerShell's syntax is a model of clarity and cleanliness.
@Puppy That's like saying a particular model of car sucks because it doesn't include a nice woods with a stream and a couple of waterfalls so you can take a relaxing walk while it drives you to work.
@Puppy So you could. But grousing about a particular car because it doesn't include those features is still pretty silly when there's no other car that includes them either.
@JerryCoffin This analogy lacks punch since in reality, there are a number of practical situations in which a car is the best choice, whereas I have never seen any such situation for a shell.
@Puppy Given the number of people who prefer to do things in a command shell, I'd say yours is the position that's difficult to defend (but your assuming that your preferences apply to the world as a whole is really nothing new or different).
@Vamsi In that case, if you're looking for something online, I'd consider Algorithms and Data Structures, by Niklaus Wirth. If you want a physical book, I'd at least consider Introduction to Algorithms, by Cormen, Leiserson, Rivest and Stein (but be aware--it does tend toward the stiffly formal kind of writing, heavy on theorems and proofs and such).
Thanks for the recommendation @JerryCoffin . If you don't mind I have a follow up question ..From the book "we follow the theory and terminology expounded by Hoare and realized in the programming language Pascal" will I hamstrung due to the fact that I don't know Pascal ?
@Vamsi I doubt it--and that's a leftover from the earlier version ("Algorithms + Data Structures = Programs"--a fine book, but now hard to find). The linked book actually uses Oberon, a descendant of Pascal, but assuming you know C++ to at least some extent, I doubt you'll find his Oberon examples hard to follow.
`std::future::wait()` -> The implementations are encouraged to detect the case when valid == false before the call and throw a std::future_error with an error condition of std::future_errc::no_state.
But why? I think it would be better to just return if `valid==false`
"All optimizations should be turned off and only on 32-bit GCC." is a very roundabout way of saying this doesn't work (only appears to work due to UB) — sehe5 secs ago
@sehe On ppcg.se it only needs to work on 1 platform/OS/machine/version, so this works for ppcg.se. The only restriction is that the things used must be older than the challenge which it no doubt is.