I have a dilemma. I feel like Borgleaders comment quite precisely sums up my feelings about that tweet. Should I star Borg?, should I star the original?. I'm no star whore mind you.
Both these are implementation details. They're not documented, and you shouldn't be using them. Looking at the implementation, m_edges appears to exist for undirected adjacency_lists. Check this. Please use the documented interfaces. (boost::num_edges(g), docs) — sehe2 mins ago
Pro tip: You do not want to try "programming by accident" with Boost Graph library
BGL is one of those libraries that suffers from its generic design. A lot.
I found the learning curve a lot steeper than, say, Boost Spirit. Boost Spirit gets the "convenience factor" right and - at least the 80% - the right heuristics.
@sehe Some would shorten that to: "Pro top: You do not want to try programming with Boost Graph Library", and claim that it was more accurate that way. :-)
@LucDanton I did a metafunction that edit a type sequence to replace the first boost::tuples::null_type appearance with the target type to be added to the tuple
Now I'm stuck on the part where I have a boost::mpl sequence that I want to transform back into a boost::tuple
user784668
@Rerito You're stuck on VS2010 and you haven't killed yourself yet?
> The People's Liberation Army (PLA) has blamed overconsumption of fizzy drinks, excessive computer gaming and even masturbation for the poor health of young people in the country forces.net/news/…
@sehe He wrote that he didn't know anything about racial baggage when accepting the job. Employer and employee were in agreement and everything was good. Then people told him that he can't have that job because he has the wrong race, disregarding typical movie and acting techniques. Then he quit. Sounds like bullying to me.
@sehe > Hey Murray, I'll trade you my girlfriend for your scales. Whatdya say? Don't tell her if you choose no, btw. Get back to me, thx. (youtu.be/0h2uIaHwJrU)
> Conversely, a statutorily imposed obligation to use fully automated transport systems or the causation of practical inescapabilty is ethically questionable if it entails submission to technological imperatives (prohibition on degrading the subject to a mere network element).
suppose I stored "red" "yellow" , "green" in the set(i name it myset), each will be given its own bucket , now if I do myset.bucket("red") , it will give me bucket number in which it is present, but thing is if i do myset.bucket("blue") , it still gives some bucket number
@arne_mertz And here's me kick-starting my youngest on a challenge to implement base64 in javascript last Sunday. L… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/902472082348441601
I think the wording indicates the opposite: the car can NOT be programmed to go onto the pavement or crash into a shop just to avoid a head-on collision (because they people there weren't involved, didn't "opt-in" for the traffic risk)
> they cannot be standardized to a complex or intuitive assessment of the impacts of an accident in such a way that they can replace or anticipate the decision of a responsible driver with the moral capacity to make correct judgements
@sehe hah. You can see I totes made the ASCII character codes up by heart. We did this on paper because I know the computer is too much of a distraction.
@wilx Oh, I know about this. On windows only? I think McAfee has a vbscript.dll replacement that REALLY slows down JS-heavy pages
Then again, that makes no sense for those browsers. Possibly an equivalent intercept for those browsers
It turned out, I had to regsvr32 jscript.dll and regsvr32 vbscript.dll in order to get javascript in IE (we need it for testing) and the login scripts to work :)
Looking at the following code:
#include<string>
#include<iostream>
using T = std::string;
void baz(T& v) { std::cout << v << std::endl; }
void boo(const T& v) { std::cout << v << std::endl; }
int main() {
baz( T("Passing an rvalue to be assigned to a lvalue&") ); //<--- This cal...
Why is it not allowed to get non-const reference to a temporary object,
which function getx() returns? Clearly, this is prohibited by C++ Standard
but I am interested in the purpose of such restriction, not a reference to the standard.
struct X
{
X& ref() { return *this; }
};
X getx() { ...
I dupevoted. There's bound to be some complaint about "specific details in the discussion". But I checked the dupe and it specifically addresses the subtler points as well.
@Puppy A quick check indicates it was S7E22. He takes some experimental drug to try to make his leg better, and it helps for a while, but then it turns out it caused cancer in all the rats on which it was tested (and yes, in him). If memory serves, he can't get the surgery done in the hospital because he wasn't supposed to be using the drug in the first place, so he goes home, sits in his bathtub and cuts his leg open (while drinking heavily to try to deal with the pain).
@Columbo Reminds me of a line by H.L. Mencken. For many years he'd written for newspapers, and been quite well known for his sharp wit. Then he had a stroke, which did grave damage to his memory. At one point, a few years after his stroke he asked about a friend who'd died only a few weeks after he'd had the stroke, and they had to break it to him that the friend was dead. He thought about it for a few minutes, and then quipped: "Oh yes, he died the same year I did."
@Borgleader Yeah, at least the ending was fairly worthwhile. What bothered me more wasn't so much that it got depressing, as that (it seemed to me) that for the last few seasons they lost sight of the original premise of the show--the medical puzzles were almost lost, and it turned into essentially a pure soap opera.
If you are planning to display the balance between likes and dislikes - I think, these guys have done a great job. There are separate like and dislike icons, and also a meter to show balance along with views:
Note: Those who know the source of this image, please keep it to yourself. It just ...
@набиячлэвэли A friend of mine is fond of pointing out that porn sites pretty much define the cutting edge of internet technology, from UI to streaming video, and on back to payment systems and such.
@Morwenn I'll have to take your word for it (I'm only going from hearsay).
I think part of it is also that the Internet is nearly a perfect fit for porn--a huge number of people enjoy porn, but almost nobody wants it known publicly, so a medium that can (at least seem to) deliver it with little or no public visibility is essentially ideal.
@Morwenn France had Minitel. A number of other countries had (less successful) versions of their own--but interconnection between the networks was minimal, and most mandated fairly specific hardware and such.
@JerryCoffin also server availability and bandwidth, and now 360 degree/VR and 4k streaming as well
@JerryCoffin also they have a lot of freshly produced content, similar to sport broadcasts. Except their material stays current for longer than recent matches.
@BartekBanachewicz I s'pose--given that the people are mostly naked, you don't even have to worry about their clothes going out of style. I suppose hair styles change though...
@Morwenn Okay--fair enough. There are certainly a fair number of people I'd never want to see naked (but I can't say that seeing them clothed turned me on--just reduced the degree to which they repelled).
I guess it's only fair though--I doubt most women who see me really wish they could see me naked either...
@Morwenn My wife certainly thinks so--she sometimes buys clothes too small for any of our kids simply because it's too cute to resist. Fortunately, she has relatives and friends enough younger that we can give them as presents and such.
@BartekBanachewicz I can't quite imagine having even two. Those poor Jihadists have no clue what kind of punishment they're in for if they actually get 72...
As of now one of the ways to perform a point-free aggressive action against a poster is to flag the post as a duplicate leaving one more avenue that opens the system to abuse. There should be a speed-bump placed in the way of flagging questions as duplicate to force a bit of thoughtful considerat...
> @ModusTollens actually yes, in some cases you are forced to use this site as for support to certain other languages or software. I.E. Google Maps. In case you have to follow a format to post? I can understand organization but micromanagement is a bit overkill. I agree, I think it's time to drain the swamp. And yes, trust me I do have other resources. This secret society certainly isn't my first choice. – Texan78 2 days ago