@JerryCoffin Just retelling what my brother said. The weatherman said "5 feet, but by the end of it this havoc we will have 7 feet", something like that.
@CaptainGiraffe It could happen--but at least the biggest number the weather service has mentioned has been 48 inches (for what's fallen so far). Last I heard, they were predicting up to 50 inches or so. This is the first I've heard of anybody thinking it would hit 7 feet, but then again, if you'd asked anybody a couple weeks ago, most would have thought you were crazy if you said they'd get 4 feet in 4 days...
Wow. That's vague as can be. And obviously subjective. What about /you/ bring the motivation before you choose to read the book :)
The examples are boring, I grant you that. What did you expect
@Horttanainen If that was near the end, I think I agree with the relative qualification. It was... 2.5 years ago I think
Disagree. It has different (very) depth of coverage. Agree that Meyer's book is probably enough for most people. Note that Meyer's book is designed to be short and on point, and Anthony's book is designed to be in-depth and boring.
@Morwenn Yeah. I didn't even notice all the issues :) I was annoyed most by the (extreme) verbosity of the descriptions. It often draws vacuous analogies that don't work at all, or just add confusion. Many sample code snippets are unnecessarily verbose.
(TBF it's clear they wanted to be unsurprising and non-cryptic. So none of the const& on every other argument etc. I think that's a good thing really, but it kinda clashes with the "Cookbook" goal: you can't really take these samples generically)
Why do people use footnotes in papers and paper-like texts? You have to jump across the document to read the full text or just accept that you miss out.
> But the researchers did find a potential way to fight this attack. While fake reviews might look identical to a real one to a human, there are subtle differences that a computer program can detect,
oh great so the only way to weed out computer-written reviews is by using more computers
robots have already taken over we just didn't notice
@BartekBanachewicz on the bright side, it's relatively easy to get training data that a detecting system can use and it can train knowing, automatically, if it's correct in it's guesses. But training a machine to fake humans is harder... I think...
Guise, I'm devising a recursive template that given a type will instantiate its child types and their child types and so on. Said child types are identified through a traits template <typename> struct child_types. Its type member can either be a Boost.MPL sequence or a common type
My question is how should I identify when a type has no child?
@thecoshman Yeah and I was also thinking of enforcing the definition of child types through a Boost.MPL sequence (this will trigger my coworkers though :D)
@BartekBanachewicz The thing about happiness is that you feel it when the change is happening. After a while the new state becomes the norm and you are not happy about it anymore
@sehe my colleague routinely has his ubuntu show the screen contents for a few seconds and then go to password prompt after waking
> History has proven a thousand times that no man has ever gained from a bargain with The Dark, yet cowards and fools continue to try, and The Dark never turns them away
@BartekBanachewicz That makes sense only if it goes standby before locking. And I've seen it happen with fullscreen applications (media players, games)
@Mgetz Yeah, well, I'm going to venture a W-i-l-d-! guess and say Linux does exactly the same. And next, an even wilder guess: systemd fucked it all up, again
@Mgetz It was never necessary. It's just that upstart/initd weren't perfect. So... like with alsa/jack/pulse/... you get these waves of fancy until something sticks
In fairness, you can't really argue against it, because Windows and OSX tend to inflict the same things on their users, without the convenient excuse of "community-driven development"
@Mgetz I was talking about randomly redesigning subsystems (though with Microsoft, the goal has often been more transparent: server market share, DRM marketability etc.)
That's how I concluded you are immune :) Immunity is a sign of sophistication, not ignorance
I guess that's also a design goal behind systemd (systemd is supposed to play into the hands of containerization. It's questionable whether that goal has been achieved, and it is clear that the modularization has at least partly backfired)
Time, off by one and naming are the only two problems in electronic, and technically mechanical, though they're not really practical, well they can be, devices of various levels of complexity, not that it matters as we can abstract it, which can both be for intercommunication between such devices and human interaction, though human interaction is it's own special field, any way, such devices can be automated and it's that getting that automation which actually does what you want that can be hard
@user3067860 You may have hit upon an answer to the original question there. Learning functional programming is useful because people who haven't can be confused by three lines of fairly trivial code. — Ray21 hours ago
@nwp It's pretty easy to explain why you should learn new tools. Yes, it is a new tool, and you are correct that it's currently not used. There was once a time where we didn't use any tools, do you really want to go back to building your mud hut by hand? Learn the tools, learn when to use them, learn when not to use them.
@Ray: For better or worse, people who have learned functional programming can still be confused by "three lines of fairly trivial code"--or often even one really short line of completely trivial code, if it uses a syntax with which they're sufficiently unfamiliar (e.g., somebody who knows functional programming extremely well will still often have difficulty reading APL). — Jerry Coffin5 mins ago
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...
Make a shop system, in which we can buy reputation packs for real money. There should be daily limit on how much of reputation we can buy a day. There could be also other features to buy. Here are my proposals:
Golden frame around questions and answers.
Bigger font of our comments or ability to...
What would be the point of reputation on SO if you could buy it? Can you think of anyone in real life that have bought their reputation and how they act? Theres one running for US president at the minute.. — SayseJun 20 '16 at 8:10
Are you a Flemish software developer who is curious about the use of functional programming in mainstream programming languages like Java and C#?
Then we kindly invite you to:
**Functional Programming in Industry
Free Industry Workshop + Optional Crash Courses
KU Leuven Department of Computer S...
@Rapptz the other role is for styling a specific link back, which I can’t do through a substitution because I want the content to vary: :my-link-back:`link` and :my-link-back:`back`
Which book should one take up on reading being an intermediate C++ user? I've been recommended both but without specifically saying which one I should read first. Or maybe just one of them?
I am aware of this great book guide but it doesn't really answer my question: The Definitive C++ Book Guid...
> The problem is that, in the vast majority of cases, that’s exactly what it means
(on zero-sumness) - there's no evidence to be had. Short term policy change can have this form, but there's no telling what the long term effect would be (maybe teams turn out to start being more autonomous and more efficient? They might grow and their members get higher rewards. Of course the opposite might happen too)
You can't say it's exactly what it means. It could accurately describe the first step. Still not a zero-sum game since the game lasts more than 1 move.
(It would be funny if including more of the underrepresented groups would lead to amazing new insight that programming is actually best left to robots and trans are the best managers for them. But I digress).
People who think they can accurately predict the outcome of this type of diversity shifts are probably the same kind of people that claim evolution cannot work because random selection is bad. They underestimate diversity as a core concept. They might think that artificial/human selection is obviously better (just look at dog breeding...)
@sehe He points at some 2004 study that shows how affirmative skews the admission likelihood. (I haven't read that study.) I also remember articles about admission medicine university(ies?) that has shown that Asians and Whites in USA have to have higher SAT score to get in than Latinos and Blacks. That's some evidence of zero sumness, IMHO.
@wilx You didn't need "some evidence". To a degree it's fact, the affirmative action is described as that action. BUT, I also explained how relatively valid that assessment is for long term.
The stupid thing is that the whole "zero-sum-ness" hinges on the idea that we know exactly what's gonna happen. And that's exactly what we can't know because we haven't been in the situation before.
It's a bit like saying "investing in a new business is by definition bad, because it costs money". It's not zero-sum. Sure, limiting the scope to day 1, it is, and it's a net loss! The game is longer. And you cannot know. "Should I have bought that other race horse"? There's no way to know. "Should I have picked another spouse?" There's no way to know. "Should we have worked harder to get more inclusion?" There's no way to know. Unless you try.
Meanwhile, there's plenty of historical and scientific evidence that diversity has many unexpected positive effects. Not to mention, there's a group of people directly benefitting from the inclusion to begin with (all the people who didn't previously feel at home). It's really not a bad bet to make.
> has shown that Asians and Whites in USA have to have higher SAT score to get in than Latinos and Blacks. That's some evidence of zero sumness, IMHO
I may be misunderstanding your intent, but that seems to be evidence of the same petty conservativism, instead.
@StackedCrooked getting Errno::EIO: Input/output error @ io_write - <STDERR> from the backdoor request now
@wilx Cherry picking for one area where it has been done (right? wrong? who knows). Fact is that google doesn't have representative female participation. So, no, no decades of affirmative action. Also, many factors at play (just google doing something doesn't magically make suitable candidates opt in to STEM studies)
etc. It's complicated and simplistic reasoning simply doesn't help.
@sehe Not directly related to race, but I had a discussion about that with some friends a few months ago. Basically back in the early-mid 2000s, there was a policy implemented in US schools where how much funding that a school got depended on how well the students scored in certain exams.
@sehe How does it not? If you can admit A+B+C+D students and and you admit (A+10), you have to reject some 10 students elsewhere. The higher SAT score necessary is the evidence of both the long term effects and the zero-sumness.
Hey guys, how do you take your C++ knowledge to next level ? For example, the prof last year gave us some example on how to write efficient C++ programs using Meta programming + Function pointers. Problem is c++ books don't teach that.